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Die Dissertation kombiniert die Methode der funktionellen Magnetresonanztomographie (fMRT) zur genauen räumlichen Lokalisation aufgabenkorrelierter parietaler Aktivierungen mit Transkranieller Magnetstimulation (TMS) zur systematischen Untersuchung der funktionellen Relevanz dieser Aktivierungen für die tatsächliche Leistungsfähigkeit. Die experimentelle Kombination beider Methoden ermöglichte die gezielte Stimulation der im tMRT identifizierten, mit visuospatialen Fähigkeiten assoziierten Hirnareale. Durch die systematische Auswertung der TMS-induzierten visuospatialen Leistungsveränderungen wurde die spezifische funktionelle Bedeutung dieser Hirnareale für visuospatiale Leistungen experimentell untersucht. Der zugrunde gelegte Versuchsplan umfasste sowohl visuospatiale Leistungen auf der Grundlage visuell dargebotener als auch mental vorgestellter Aufgaben. Dies ermöglichte die systematische Untersuchung, ob und inwieweit mentale visuospatiale Informationsverarbeitung die gleichen oder ähnliche Aktivierungsmuster im fMRT aufweist wie visuospatiale Verarbeitung visuell dargebotener Stimuli, und ob sich diese Aktivierungsmuster vorgestellter Stimuli unter dem Einfluss von rTMS in gleicher Weise als funktionell relevant erweisen. Aufgrund der separaten unilateralen Stimulation beider Hemisphären konnten darüber hinaus die unterschiedlichen behavioralen Auswirkungen einer Aktivierungsunterdrückung des linken und rechten Parietalkortex systematisch untersucht werden. Obwohl die Ausführung visuospatialer Aufgaben, sowohl auf der Grundlage visuell dargebotener als auch mental vorgestellter Stimuli, im fMRT mit einer bilateralen Aktivierung im Parietalkortex korrelierte, führte lediglich die TMS-induzierte temporäre Unterbrechung der neuronalen Aktivierung im rechten Parietalkortex zu einer signifikanten Verschlechterung in der Leistungsfähigkeit der damit assoziierten visuospatialen Aufgaben. Auf der Grundlage dieser Ergebnisse wurde ein modulares Modell der visuospatialen Imagination formuliert, in welchem den aufgabenkorrelierten bilateralen Aktivierungen aufgrund ihrer raum-zeitlichen Separierbarkeit unterschiedliche mentale Prozesse und aufgrund der mit TMS aufgezeigten funktionellen hemisphärischen Asymmetrie parietaler Aktivierung für visuospatiale Informationsverarbeitung unterschiedliche Kompensationsmechanismen zugeordnet wurden.
Amblyopia is a developmental disorder of the visual system that leads to reduced vision in one or both eyes. People suffering from amblyopia show different perceptual deficits like reduced contrast sensitivity, reduced or no stereopsis, spatial uncertainty, and spatial and temporal distortions when viewing with the amblyopic eye. In the following thesis, different psychophysical methods are used to investigate anomalous perception of amblyopic participants in detail with the main focus on the perception of temporal instability. In the qualitative experimental paradigms it is shown that temporal instability is mainly perceived by strabismic and strabismic-anisometropic amblyopes. The temporal deficits occur only at spatial frequencies higher than 1.6 c/deg, and are perceived in addition to the spatial distortions. Illusory colours sometimes accompany the temporal distortions. There seems to be a relationship between crossed hand and eye dominance and the perception of temporal instability. In the quantitative experiments it is shown that temporal instability in amblyopic perception has a negative impact on the performance in psychophysical tasks. Amblyopes perceiving temporal instability show enhanced spatial uncertainty and spatial distortions for different types of stimulus presentation (auditive vs. visual) when compared to amblyopes without temporal instability. This might be due to deficits in auditive-visual mapping. These deficits in auditory-to-visual mapping suggest an impairment of the dorsal “where” pathway. Thus, it might be that amblyopes with temporal distortions have deficits in the dorsal pathway that come up in addition to the known deficits of the ventral “what” pathway and are related to the perception of temporal instability. The different results of the experiments found in this thesis seem to confirm this hypothesis. Studies using functional imaging techniques might be appropriate for a further investigation of amblyopic deficits involving the dorsal pathway.
Deferred imitations assess declarative memory in infants. Many cross-sectional and a few longitudinal studies revealed that, with development, infants learn faster,and retain more target actions over longer retention intervals. Longitudinal stabilities are modest and increase through the second year. To date, there are only few multivariate deferred imitation studies pointing to interactions between declarative memory, language and self-development. However, as these studies applied variable-centered data analysis approaches, the individual stance was not taken into account.Therefore, the present dissertation focuses on the explanation of inter-individual differences of deferred imitation through the second year. In the multivariate, longitudinal Frankfurt Memory Study (FRAMES), declarative memory (deferred imitation), non-declarative memory (train task), as well as cognitive, language, motor, social, emotional and body self-awareness development (Developmental Test for 6-month- to 6-year-olds, ET6-6) were assessed on three measurement occasions (12-, 18- and 24-month-olds). From a psychometric perspective, sound tests for the assessment of deferred imitation in the respective age groups were developed (Paper 1 & 2). Reliability analyses (Paper 3) indicated relatively high short-term-stability for the deferred imitation test (12-month-olds). The co-development of declarative and nondeclarative memory in 12- and 18-month-olds provided evidence for discriminative validity (Paper 4). Longitudinally, deferred imitation performance tremendously increased throughout the second year, and performance was moderately stable between 12 and 18 months and stability increased between 18 and 24 months. Using a person-centered analysis approach (relative difference scores; cluster analysis), developmental subgroups were extracted out of the total sample. These groups differed in terms of mean growth and stability. However, between the first and second measurement occasion, the groups did not differ with respect to motor, cognitive and language development (Paper 5). Using the data of three measurement occasions, subgroups were extracted showing significant differences with respect to language, motor and body self-awareness development (Paper 6). The results are discussed against the background of infancy development theories.
Synchronized neural activity in the visual cortex is associated with small time delays (up to ~10 ms). The magnitude and direction of these delays depend on stimulus properties. Thus, synchronized neurons produce fast sequences of action potentials, and the order in which units tend to fire within these sequences is stimulusdependent, but not stimulus-locked. In the present thesis, I investigated whether such preferred firing sequences repeat with sufficient accuracy to serve as a neuronal code. To this end, I developed a method for extracting the preferred sequence of firing in a group of neurons from their pair-wise preferred delays, as measured by the offsets of the centre peaks in their cross-correlation histograms. This analysis method was then applied to highly parallel recordings of neuronal spiking activity made in area 17 of anaesthetized cats in response to simple visual stimuli, like drifting gratings and moving bars. Using a measure of effect size, I then analyzed the accuracy with which preferred firing sequences reflected stimulus properties, and found that in the presence of gamma oscillations, the time at which a unit fired in the firing sequence conveyed stimulus information almost as precisely as the firing rate of the same unit. Moreover, the stimulus-dependent changes in firing rates and firing times were largely unrelated, suggesting that the information they carry is not redundant. Thus, despite operating at a time scale of only a few milliseconds, firing sequences have the strong potential to provide a precise neural code that can complement firing rates in the cortical processing of stimulus information.
Visual working memory (WM) and selective attention are fundamental cognitive mechanisms, both operating at the interface between perception and action. They are related because both are postulated to have limits with respect to how much information can be processed. Specifically, selective attention has been implicated as a limiting factor for the storage capacity of visual WM. However, visual WM and attention have been largely studied in isolation and interactions between the two have rarely been addressed. This dissertation aimed at investigating interactions between selective attention and the encoding of information into visual WM in the context of one common characteristic feature, namely their limitation in capacity. An experimental task was used that combined visual search with delayed discrimination and the demands on selective attention and WM encoding were manipulated orthogonally. In each trial participants were presented with a search array consisting of nine different grey geometric shapes. A small L-shaped item that appeared in one of four different orientations and that was coloured either blue or red was placed in the centre of each shape. Participants were instructed to search for predefined target items (Ls oriented 90°) and to memorise the shapes associated with these target items. After a delay phase a probe was presented and participants decided whether it did or did not match one of the memorised shapes. Attentional demand was manipulated by changing the search efficiency in the visual search component of the task (easy vs. difficult search) and WM load was manipulated by the number of targets (1 to 5). A behavioural study was conducted to isolate the processes that allowed participants to successfully encode complex shapes into WM while engaging spatial attention for a visual search task. The data provided evidence for a two-step encoding strategy. In the first step participants selected and memorised only the locations of all target items and only then they encoded the associated shapes at a later step. This strategy allowed them to cope with the interference between WM and attention that would otherwise take place. In the second part of this dissertation interference between visual attention and the encoding into visual WM was investigated on the level of neural activation using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Specifically, the hypothesis was tested that the capacity limitation of visual WM is due to common limited-capacity neural resources shared by visual WM and attention. Two separate fMRI experiments were conducted that combined visual search and delayed visual discrimination for either objects (experiment 1) or locations (experiment 2). The results revealed overlapping activation for attention-demanding visual search and object WM encoding in distributed posterior and frontal regions. In the right prefrontal cortex and bilateral insula BOLD activation additively increased with increased WM load and attentional demand. Conversely, the analysis revealed an interaction effect in several visual, parietal, and premotor areas. These regions showed overlapping activation for the two task components and were severely reduced in their WM load response under the condition with high attentional demand. This interaction effect was found in similar frontal and posterior regions when combining visual search and spatial WM encoding in experiment 2. In contrast, regions in the prefrontal cortex were selectively responsive to WM load and differed to some degree depending on the WM domain. Here, activation associated with increased WM load was delayed rather than reduced under high attentional demand. The fMRI results provide convergent evidence that visual selective attention and the encoding of information into WM share, to a high degree, common neural resources. The findings indicate that competition for resources shared by visual attention and WM encoding can limit processing capabilities in distributed posterior brain regions but not the prefrontal cortex. The findings support the view that WM evolves from the recruitement of attentional mechanisms (Cowan, 2001; Wheeler und Treisman, 2002) the very same that act upon perceptual representations as well (Slotnick, 2004; Jonides et al., 2005; Pasternak and Greenlee, 2005; Postle, 2006; Ranganath, 2006). The similarity in the effects of interference between attention and the encoding of objects or locations into WM indicates that the attention-based model of WM encoding is valid across different WM domains. The capacity of visual WM can be limited at various stages of processing. The behavioural and fMRI data presented in this dissertation illustrate that one major bottleneck of information processing arises from the common demands on neural and cognitive resources shared between visual WM and selective attention during the encoding stage.
The present study consists of two parts: The first part is made up of questions concerning the cognitive underpinnings of auditory verbal hallucinations in schizophrenia. As this thesis framed schizophrenia as a multivariate problem, neural correlates to auditory verbal and visual hallucinations were investigated in the second part. The main finding is that vividness of mental imagery was increased in all putative high-risk groups as well as the patients themselves, compared with low-schizotypy controls. Therefore, it seems that vivid imagery is a trait rather than a state marker, and may be related to the genetic liability to develop schizophrenia. However, no evidence was found for a linear relationship between vividness of mental imagery and predisposition to hallucinate. Self-reported imagery vividness and predisposition to hallucinate did not depend on psychomotor speed or intelligence. In addition, individual psychopathology ratings did not correlate significantly with the mental imagery scores. Furthermore, the analysis of the control orientation and the degree of dysfunctional psychopathological status across the schizophrenia spectrum, showed an independence of control orientation and dysfunctional status from each other, as well as from other markers of schizophrenia or schizophrenic-like individuals. As a conclusion, external control orientation seems to be a symptom or a trait marker of schizophrenia. The results lead to the assumption that, beside schizophrenic individuals, first-degree relatives and schizotypy controls have some impairments and visible signs without suffering from the illness directly. This would lead to the further assumption that the illness schizophrenia is not only genetic but also dependent on environmental factors. In the second part of the study, we investigated anatomical and functional brain abnormalities in the schizophrenia patients compared with first-degree relatives and healthy controls. Here, the results followed the continuum of healthy controls, first-degree relatives and schizophrenic patients in the functional and anatomical data sets, and in the language lateralization. The decrease of lateralisation correlated with the severity of symptoms in the patient group. The investigation of visual hallucinations showed activity in higher visual areas during the experience of visual hallucinations in a schizophrenia patient and in a blindfolded subject. The activity in higher visual areas followed the boundaries of category-selective areas in both subjects. In contrast to the memory-related areas found in the schizophrenic patient experiencing visual hallucinations, we did not observe memory-related areas during visual hallucinations induced by blindfolding. This suggests that the neural mechanisms underlying hallucinations in schizophrenia are at least partly distinct from those operational in cortical deafferentation. It is proposed that individual differences in psychopathology, as well as neuropsychological and psychosocial functioning may provide further means to understand the complex and highly dynamic aspects of hallucinations specifically and schizophrenia in general. The enlargement of the subject sample to high-schizotypy controls and first-degree relatives of patients allowed new insights into the mental imagery debate and the dysfunctional connectivity pattern known to be responsible for psychotic symptoms. Further topics of research are discussed.
‘The whole is more than the sum of its parts.’ This idea has been brought forward by psychologists such as Max Wertheimer who formulated Gestalt laws that describe our perception. One law is that of collinearity: elements that correspond in their local orientation to their global axis of alignment form a collinear line, compared to a noncollinear line where local and global orientations are orthogonal. Psychophysical studies revealed a perceptual advantage for collinear over non-collinear stimulus context. It was suggested that this behavioral finding could be related to underlying neuronal mechanisms already in the primary visual cortex (V1). Studies have shown that neurons in V1 are linked according to a common fate: cells responding to collinearly aligned contours are predominantly interconnected by anisotropic long-range lateral connections. In the cat, the same holds true for visual interhemispheric connections. In the present study we aimed to test how the perceptual advantage of a collinear line is reflected in the anatomical properties within or between the two primary visual cortices. We applied two neurophysiological methods, electrode and optical recording, and reversibly deactivated the topographically corresponding contralateral region by cooling in eight anesthetized cats. In electrophysiology experiments our results revealed that influences by stimulus context significantly depend on a unit’s orientation preference. Vertical preferring units had on average a higher spike rate for collinear over non-collinear context. Horizontal preferring units showed the opposite result. Optical imaging experiments confirmed these findings for cortical areas assigned to vertical orientation preference. Further, when deactivating the contralateral region the spike rate for horizontal preferring units in the intact hemisphere significantly decreased in response to a collinear stimulus context. Most of the optical imaging experiments revealed a decrease in cortical activity in response to either stimulus context crossing the vertical midline. In conclusion, our results support the notion that modulating influences from stimulus context can be quite variable. We suggest that the kind of influence may depend on a cell’s orientation preference. The perceptual advantage of a collinear line as one of the Gestalt laws proposes is not uniformly represented in the activity of individual cells in V1. However, it is likely that the combined activity of many V1 neurons serves to activate neurons further up the processing stream which eventually leads to the perceptual phenomenon.
Der zentrale Aspekt der vorliegenden Arbeit ist die Untersuchung psychophysiologischer Konsequenzen von Emotionsregulationsanforderungen und deren Beeinflussung durch individuelle Differenzen. Hierbei wurden in Studie 1 subjektive, verhaltensbezogene und physiologische Konsequenzen von Emotionsregulation und deren Beeinflussung durch individuelle Differenzen untersucht. Die Studien 2, 3 und 4 fokussieren auf Emotionsregulation in einem Service-Kontext (Emotionsarbeit). Während in der Emotionsregulationsforschung der Einfluss individueller Differenzen bisher wenig untersucht wurde, existieren insbesondere in der Emotionsarbeitsforschung kaum experimentelle Studien, die kausale Rückschlüsse auf den Zusammenhang von emotionalen Regulationsanforderungen mit subjektiven, verhaltensbezogenen und physiologischen Reaktionen erlauben. Hierbei fanden insbesondere physiologische Parameter und individuelle Differenzen keine bzw. wenig Berücksichtigung. Studie 1 zeigte, dass individuelle Differenzen eine moderierende Wirkung auf den Zusammenhang von Emotionsregulationsinstruktionen und verhaltensbezogenen sowie physiologischen Reaktionen aufweisen. In den Studien 2 und 3 konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Vorgabe, emotionale Zustände darzustellen, die nicht in der Arbeitssituation empfunden werden (emotionale Dissonanz), in einer simulierten Interaktion mit einem unzufriedenen Kunden mit mehr Emotionsregulation und mit einer verstärkten physiologischen Belastung des Service-Angestellten einherging. Ebenso waren in den Studien 2, 3 und 4 Versuchsteilnehmer mit einer geringen negativen Affektivität (hier: Trait-Ärger bzw. Neurotizismus) durch geringere psychophysiologische Belastungsreaktionen gekennzeichnet, sofern starke Regulationsanforderungen an sie gestellt wurden. Zudem zeigte sich in Studie 4, dass die Vorgabe, positive emotionale Zustände 40 darzustellen, zu einer organisational vorteilhafteren Expressionsleistung gegenüber der Vorgabe negative emotionale Zustände nicht zu zeigen, führte. Zusammenfassend sprechen diese Ergebnisse dafür, dass häufige Konfrontationen mit starken Regulationsanforderungen die Belastung von Service-Angestellten erhöhen und die Entwicklung von kardiovaskulären Erkrankungen begünstigen können. Die vorliegenden Moderatoreffekte implizieren, dass Personen mit geringer negativer Affektivität weniger vulnerabel gegenüber den negativen Konsequenzen starker emotionaler Regulationsanforderungen in unangenehmen Kundeninteraktionen sind.
"The whole is more than the sum of its parts." This idea has been brought forward by psychologists such as Max Wertheimer who formulated Gestalt laws that describe our perception. One law is that of collinearity: elements that correspond in their local orientation to their global axis of alignment form a collinear line, compared to a noncollinear line where local and global orientations are orthogonal. Psychophysical studies revealed a perceptual advantage for collinear over non-collinear stimulus context. It was suggested that this behavioral finding could be related to underlying neuronal mechanisms already in the primary visual cortex (V1). Studies have shown that neurons in V1 are linked according to a common fate: cells responding to collinearly aligned contours are predominantly interconnected by anisotropic long-range lateral connections. In the cat, the same holds true for visual interhemispheric connections. In the present study we aimed to test how the perceptual advantage of a collinear line is reflected in the anatomical properties within or between the two primary visual cortices. We applied two neurophysiological methods, electrode and optical recording, and reversibly deactivated the topographically corresponding contralateral region by cooling in eight anesthetized cats. In electrophysiology experiments our results revealed that influences by stimulus context significantly depend on a unit’s orientation preference. Vertical preferring units had on average a higher spike rate for collinear over non-collinear context. Horizontal preferring units showed the opposite result. Optical imaging experiments confirmed these findings for cortical areas assigned to vertical orientation preference. Further, when deactivating the contralateral region the spike rate for horizontal preferring units in the intact hemisphere significantly decreased in response to a collinear stimulus context. Most of the optical imaging experiments revealed a decrease in cortical activity in response to either stimulus context crossing the vertical midline. In conclusion, our results support the notion that modulating influences from stimulus context can be quite variable. We suggest that the kind of influence may depend on a cell’s orientation preference. The perceptual advantage of a collinear line as one of the Gestalt laws proposes is not uniformly represented in the activity of individual cells in V1. However, it is likely that the combined activity of many V1 neurons serves to activate neurons further up the processing stream which eventually leads to the perceptual phenomenon.
The purpose of this thesis was to investigate different aspects of the promotion of selfregulated learning in primary and secondary school education by focussing on its effectiveness, and on its assessment from different perspectives. Theoretically, the thesis is based on contemporary social-cognitive and constructivist theories of self-regulated learning. Two meta-analyses were conducted, an observation instrument was developed which was tested and employed in two observation studies, and a multi-method study was conducted to investigate different perspectives on the topic. Common to all studies is the evaluation of different aspects of the promotion of self-regulated learning among students. The results of this investigation are reported in four research articles (Studies 1-4), which have been accepted for publication (Study 1 and 2) or submitted to scientific peer reviewed journals (Study 3 and 4). The data are analyzed by applying a multi-method approach, using several sources of data (primary studies, self-reports, video data, interviews) and diverse methods (meta-analysis, observation analysis, survey analysis). The present data generally indicate that self-regulated learning can be enhanced both at primary and secondary school. The results of the first and the second study showed that primary and secondary school students partly benefit from different training characteristics. However, there were also common aspects of effective training characteristics that hold for both school levels. Moreover, the third study revealed that it was possible to develop an instrument to observe teachers’ promotion of self-regulated learning in a reliable way, which can be applied in several contexts. The results indicated that the stability of teachers’ promotion of selfregulated learning varies among the school subjects. Furthermore, the results showed that only little instruction of self-regulated learning takes place in primary and secondary school mathematics lessons. Yet, secondary school teachers showed more promotion of cognitive strategies than primary school teachers did, although the former included more constructivist characteristics in the learning environment. The observation studies produced a rich pool of data, serving as pilot studies for future studies with a larger sample sizes that are needed to further strengthen the results. As the fourth study indicated, teacher ratings differ significantly from video-based observations in perceiving their promotion of self-regulated learning. However, for some aspects they agree with their students’ perception. Finally, it was found that students’ perception on their teachers’ promotion of self-regulated learning had the highest impact on their self-regulation competence. In the future, it will be crucial to include the instruction of self-regulated learning from a theoretical and a practical perspective in the teacher training curriculum. Moreover, in future research the implementation of the promotion of self-regulated learning should be investigated, and in experimental settings different ways of supporting such an implementation should be examined. A close collaboration with teachers would be helpful to get deeper insights into teachers’ behaviour and attitudes. The promotion of self-regulated learning should start as early as in primary school as students are already able to learn it then and as it takes many years to develop it fully. In addition, when investigating teachers’ promotion of self-regulated learning, the school subject should be taken into account during assessment. Long-term measurements could acknowledge such a potential instability. Moreover, in further studies, observation data of a large sample of teachers should be gathered in order to get a representative overview of teachers’ promotion of self-regulated learning. Furthermore, research on the promotion of self-regulated learning should account for the impact of students’ perspectives referring on this.