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Imitation paradigms are used in various domains of developmental psychological research to assess various cognitive processes such as memory (deferred imitation), action perception and action understanding (mainly direct imitation), as well as categorization and learning about objects (deferred imitation with a change in target objects and generalized imitation). Although these processes are most likely not independent from each other, their relations are still largely unclear. On the one hand, deferred imitation studies have shown that infants' performance improves with increasing age, resulting in the reproduction of more target actions after longer delay intervals. On the other hand, imitation studies focusing on infants' action understanding have found that infants do not necessarily imitate the model's exact actions – actions or action steps that seem to be irrational or irrelevant are omitted by infants under certain circumstances (selective imitation). Additionally, findings of imitation studies that require a transfer of the target actions to novel objects have demonstrated that infants do not only learn about actions, but also about objects, when they engage in imitation.
The present dissertation aims at integrating different perspectives of imitation research by testing 12- and 18-month-old infants in deferred imitation tests consisting of functional vs. arbitrary target actions, and by combining deferred imitation with eye tracking in half of the experiments. A deferred imitation paradigm was chosen to assess memory performance. Systematic variation of target action characteristics enabled the assessment of infants' imitation pattern, i.e., if they would imitate one kind of target actions more frequently than the other. Functionality was chosen as the action characteristic in focus because function is an object's most important property, thus this variation might shed some light on infants' learning about objects in the context of an imitation test. The main goal of the eye tracking experiments was to tackle the relations between infants' visual attention to, and deferred imitation of, different kinds of target actions.
The behavioral experiments revealed that both 12- and 18-month-olds imitated significantly more functional than arbitrary target actions after a delay of 30 minutes. In addition, while 12-month-olds showed a memory effect only for functional actions, 18-month-olds showed a memory effect for both kinds of actions. Thus, 12-month-olds imitated strictly selectively, and 18-month-olds imitated more exactly. This shows that the well established memory effect is modulated by target action functionality, which affects 12- and 18-month-olds' imitation differently. Furthermore, when retested after a two weeks delay, 18-month-olds' performance rates of functional and arbitrary target actions decreased parallel. This suggests that selective imitation is not affected by the duration of the retention interval, and that selection of target actions takes place at an earlier stage of action perception and memory processes.
In the eye tracking experiments, both 12- and 18-month-olds' imitation patterns replicated the findings of the behavioral experiments, showing consistently higher imitation rates of functional than arbitrary target actions. Contrary to this, infants' fixation times to the target actions were not affected by target action functionality. This contrast was supported by statistical analyses that found no clear correspondence between visual attention to and deferred imitation of target actions. This suggests that selective imitation cannot be explained by selective visual attention. Nevertheless, finer-grained analyses of gaze and imitation data in the 18 months old group suggested that infants' increased attention to the social-communicative context of the imitation task was related to more exact imitation, i.e. imitation of not only functional, but also arbitrary target actions.
The findings are discussed against the background of imitation theories, with regard to the relations between different cognitive processes underlying infants' imitation, such as memory, action perception and learning about objects.
The purpose of this study was to identify distinctive mental health profiles for industrial psychologists based on the Mental Health Continuum. Further, it aimed to determine how these profiles differ with respect to work-role fit, meaningfulness and work engagement. It also aimed to investigate whether industrial psychologists within managerial or specialist differ in respect of different types of mental health. An online cross-sectional survey design was employed to draw a census sample (n = 274) from all South African industrial psychologists. A biographical questionnaire, the Work-Role Fit Scale, the Psychological Meaningfulness Scale, the Work Engagement Scale, and the Mental Health Continuum–Short Form were administered. Descriptive statistics, correlations, latent profile analysis, MANOVAs and ANOVAs were computed. Three mental health profiles for industrial psychologists were identified: languishing, moderately mentally healthy and flourishing. Significant differences between the three mental health profiles and experiences of meaningful work-role fit and work engagement were found, but not between experiences of managerial roles. The results show that individuals with different mental health profiles, experience work and its related outcomes, differently. Therefore, in order to enhance meaningful work-role fit and work engagement of industrial psychologists, a one-size-fits-all model may not be appropriate.
Editorial: Positive organizational interventions: contemporary theories, approaches and applications
(2020)
Despite the popularity of the term Positive Psychological Coaching within the literature, there is no consensus as to how it should be defined (framed) or what the components of a positive coaching “model” should include. The aim of this systematic review was to define positive psychological coaching and to construct a clear demarcated positive psychological coaching model based on the literature. A systematic literature review led to the extraction of 2,252 records. All records were screened using specific inclusion/exclusion criteria, which resulted in the exclusion of records based on duplicates (n = 1,232), titles (n = 895), abstracts (n = 78), and criteria violations (n = 23). Twenty-four academic, peer-reviewed publications on positive psychological coaching were included. Data relating to conceptual definitions and coaching models/phases/frameworks were extracted and processed through thematic content analysis. Our results indicate that positive psychological coaching can be defined as a short to medium term professional, collaborative relationship between a client and coach, aimed at the identification, utilization, optimization, and development of personal strengths and resources in order to enhance positive states, traits and behaviors. Utilizing Socratic goal setting and positive psychological evidence-based approaches to facilitate personal growth, optimal functioning, enhanced wellbeing, and the actualization of people's potential. Further, eight critical components of a positive psychological coaching model were identified and discussed. The definition and coaching process identified in this study will provide coaches with a fundamental positive psychological framework for optimizing people's potential.
The information and communication technology (ICT) sector within the Netherlands is a major driver of globalization, the country’s economic growth and innovation. The Dutch ICT sector’s performance is increasingly becoming dependent upon employee driven innovations in order to address the needs of the sectors they service. In other words, the ICT sector within the Netherlands is largely dependent upon the performance and innovative capacity of its employees; both of which are functions of employee engagement. Given the high demand, and low supply of talent within this sector, ICT organizations need to develop innovative ways to enhance the performance capacities of its people. Developing an engaged and highly innovative workforce seems to be an efficient way to activate employees’ performance. As such, the aim of this paper was to investigate the mediating function of employee driven innovative work behaviors in the relationship between work engagement and task performance within the a Dutch ICT consulting firm. A cross-sectional survey-based research design, employing a census-based sampling method, was employed to obtain data from a global ICT consulting firm within the Netherlands (n = 232). The Utrecht Work Engagement Scale, the Innovative Work Behavior Scale and the Task Performance Scale was used to assess the associative subjective experiences of ICT employees. The results showed that work engagement is a significant driver for innovative work behaviors, which in turn affects the task performance of employees. Further, innovative work behaviors are therefore important to translate the engaging energies of employees into performance. This paper discusses the theoretical and practical implications of these findings.
The purpose of this study was to examine the psychometric properties (i.e., factorial validity, measurement invariance, and reliability) of the Grit-Original scale (Grit-O) within the Netherlands. The Grit-O scale was subjected to a competing measurement modeling strategy that sequentially compared both independent cluster model confirmatory factor analytical- and exploratory structural equation modeling approaches. The results showed that both a two first order, bi-factor structure as well as a less restrictive two factor ESEM factorial structure best-fitted the data. The instrument showed to be reliable at both a lower- (Cronbach’s alpha) and upper-level (composite reliability) limit. However, measurement invariance between genders could only be established for the B-ICM-CFA model. Finally, concurrent validity was established through relating the GRIT-O to task performance. The linear use of the Grit-O scale should therefore carefully be considered.
Orientation: Lack in congruence amongst industrial and organisational psychologists (IOPs) as to the conceptualisation of its profession poses a significant risk as to the relevance, longevity and professional identity of the profession within the South African context. Research purpose: This study aimed to explore the professional identity of IOPs within the South African context. Specifically, the aim of this study was four-fold: (1) to develop a contemporary definition for IOP, (2) to investigate IOP roles, (3) to determine how the profession should be labelled and (4) to differentiate IOP from human resource management (HRM) from IOPs’ perspectives within South Africa. Motivation for the study: IOPs do not enjoy the same benefits in stature or status as other professions such as medicine, finances and engineering in the world of work. IOPs need to justify its relevance within organisational contexts as a globally shared understanding of ‘what it is’, ‘what it does’ and ‘what makes it different from other professions’, which is non-existent. In order to enhance its perceived relevance, clarity as to IOPs professional identity is needed. Research design, approach and method: A post-positivistic qualitative content analytic and descriptive research design was employed in this study. Data from practising industrial and organisational psychology (IOP) within South Africa (N = 151) were gathered through an electronic web-based survey and were analysed through thematic content analysis. Main findings: The results indicate that IOP in South Africa seeks to optimise the potential of individuals, groups, organisations and the community by implementing scientific processes to support both individual and organisational wellness and sustainability. ‘Work Psychology’ was considered a more fitting professional designation or label than industrial and/or organisational psychology. The industrial psychologist’s major roles related to the well-being and development of employees. A clear distinction between a more dynamic, pro-active approach of IOP compared to a more transactional approach of HRM was also evident. IOP within South Africa appears to have a community development function. Practical/managerial implications: The longevity, relevance and impact of IOP as a profession requires alignment amongst practitioners as to shared common professional identity. Contribution/value-add: This study provides a contemporary understanding of the roles, functions, labels and unique value proposition of industrial and organisational psychology within the South African context.
Academic self-efficacy (ASE) refers to a student’s global belief in his/her ability to master the various academic challenges at university and is an essential antecedent of wellbeing and performance. The five-item General Academic Self-Efficacy Scale (GASE) showed promise as a short and concise measure for overall ASE. However, of its validity and reliability outside of Scandinavia is limited. Therefore, this paper aimed to investigate the psychometric properties, longitudinal invariance, and criterion validity of the GASE within a sample of university students (Time 1: n = 1056 & Time 2: n = 592) in the USA and Western Europe. The results showed that a unidimensional factorial model of overall ASE fitted the data well was reliable and invariant across time. Further, criterion validity was established by finding a positive relationship with task performance at different time stamps. Therefore, the GASE can be used as a valid and reliable measure for general ASE.
Problematisation: The credibility and transparency of industrial and organisational psychological (IOP) research within South Africa was recently challenged by Efendic and Van Zyl (2019). The authors briefly showed inconsistencies in statistical results reported by authors of the South African Journal of Industrial Psychology (SAJIP), that various studies were insufficiently powered, that best-practice guidelines for the reporting of results were mostly only partially followed and that no transparency exists with regard to the research process. They demonstrated that authors of the SAJIP may knowingly or unknowingly be engaging in questionable research practices, which directly affects the credibility of both the discipline and the journal. Furthermore, they suggested practical guidelines for both authors and the SAJIP on how this could be managed.
Implications: Based on these suggestions, the authors invited prominent members of the IOP scientific community to provide scholarly commentary on their paper in order to aid in the development of ‘a clear strategy on how [the confidence crisis in IOP] could be managed, what the role of SAJIP is in this process and how SAJIP and its contributors could proactively engage to address these issues’. Seven members of the editorial board and two international scholars provided commentaries in an attempt to further the debate about the nature, causes, consequences and management of the credibility crisis within the South African context.
Purpose: The purpose of this final rebuttal article was to summarise and critically reflect on the commentaries of the nine articles to advance the debate on the confidence crisis within the South African IOP discipline.
Recommendations: All SAJIP’s stakeholders (authors, editors, reviewers, the publication house, universities and the journal) can play an active role in enhancing the credibility of the discipline. It is suggested that SAJIP should develop a clear and structured strategy to promote credible, transparent and ethical research practices within South Africa.
Orientation: The work of industrial/organisational (I/O) psychologists presents an interesting and relevant context for studying meaning and engagement as components of happiness. Research purpose: The aim of this study was to determine how I/O psychologists experience the meaning of their work and to investigate the relationships between their experiences of work-role fit, meaning of work, psychological meaningfulness and work engagement, utilising the happiness framework proposed by Seligman (2002). Motivation for the study: I/O psychologists spend more than 88% of their working day with people, and they are primary role models for happiness in the workplace. Information about their work engagement and experiences of meaning is therefore needed. Research design, approach and method: A survey design was used. A convenience sample (n = 106) was taken of I/O psychologists in South Africa. A biographical questionnaire, the Work-Role Fit Scale, the Work-Life Questionnaire, the Psychological Meaningfulness Scale, the Work Engagement Scale and a survey measuring the actual and desired time spent on six broad categories of work were administered. Main findings: Work-role fit predicted psychological meaningfulness and work engagement. The calling orientation to work predicted both psychological meaningfulness and work engagement. Work-role fit mediated the relationship between the meaning of work and psychological meaningfulness. Work-role fit partially mediated the relationship between a calling orientation to work and work engagement. Practical implications: A calling orientation to work should be fostered in I/O psychologists because it contributes to experiences of work-role fit, psychological meaningfulness and work engagement. Contribution/value-add: The results of this study contribute to scientific knowledge about work-role fit, engagement and meaning as components of happiness of I/O psychologists.
Orientation: The purpose of this editorial was to provide an introduction and a general overview of the special issue on Open Science Practices: A Vision for the Future of SAJIP, as hosted in the 45th edition of the South African Journal of Industrial Psychology (SAJIP). Specifically, the aim was to provide a viable, practical and implementable strategy for enhancing the scientific credibility, transparency and international stature of SAJIP.
Social identification has been shown to be a protective resource for mental health. In this study, the relationships between social identification and emotional, as well as cognitive symptoms of test anxiety are investigated. Participants were university students diagnosed with test anxiety (N = 108). They completed questionnaires regarding a range of psychopathologic stress symptoms, and their social identification with fellow students and with their study program. Results reveal negative relations between social identification and almost all investigated emotional and cognitive symptoms of test anxiety. Based on this study, interventions could be developed that strengthen the social identity of university students.
In the COVID-19 pandemic, human solidarity plays a crucial role in meeting this maybe greatest modern societal challenge. Public health communication targets enhancing collective compliance with protective health and safety regulations. Here, we asked whether authoritarian/controlling message framing as compared to a neutral message framing may be more effective than moralizing/prosocial message framing and whether recipients’ self-rated trait autonomy might lessen these effects. In a German sample (n = 708), we measured approval of seven regulations (e.g., reducing contact, wearing a mask) before and after presenting one of three Twitter messages (authoritarian, moralizing, neutral/control) presented by either a high-authority sender (state secretary) or a low-authority sender (social worker). We found that overall, the messages successfully increased participants’ endorsement of the regulations, but only weakly so because of ceiling effects. Highly autonomous participants showed more consistent responses across the two measurements, i.e., lower response shifting, in line with the concept of reactive autonomy. Specifically, when the sender was a social worker, response shifting correlated negatively with trait autonomy. We suggest that a trusted sender encourages more variable responses to imposed societal regulations in individuals low in autonomy, and we discuss several aspects that may improve health communication.
Background: Chronic autoimmune demyelinating polyneuropathies (CADP) result in impaired sensorimotor function. However, anecdotal clinical observations suggest the development of cognitive deficits during the course of disease.
Methods: We tested 16 patients with CADP (11 patients with chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy, 4 patients with multifocal motor neuropathy and 1 patient with multifocal acquired demyelinating sensory and motor neuropathy) and 40 healthy controls (HC) with a neuropsychological test battery. Blood-brain-barrier dysfunction (BBBd) in patients was assessed retrospectively by analysing the cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) status at the time the diagnosis of CAPD was established.
Results: CADP patients failed on average in 1.7 out of 9 neuropsychological tests (SD ± 1.25, min. 0, max. 5). 50% of the CADP patients failed in at least two neuropsychological tests and 44.3% of the patients failed in at least two different cognitive domains. CADP patients exhibiting BBBd at the time of first diagnosis failed in more neuropsychological tests than patients with intact integrity of the BBB (p < 0.05). When compared directly with the HC group, CADP patients performed worse than HC in tests measuring information processing ability and speed as well as phonemic verbal fluency after adjusting for confounding covariates.
Conclusions: Our results suggest that mild to moderate cognitive deficits might be present in patients with CAPD. One possible tentative explanation, albeit strong evidence is still lacking for this pathophysiological mechanism, refers to the effect of autoimmune antibodies entering the CNS via the dysfunctional blood-brain barrier typically seen in some of the CADP patients.
Objective: To determine whether the performance of multiple sclerosis (MS) patients in the sound-induced flash illusion (SiFi), a multisensory perceptual illusion, would reflect their cognitive impairment.
Methods: We performed the SiFi task as well as an extensive neuropsychological testing in 95 subjects [39 patients with relapse-remitting MS (RRMS), 16 subjects with progressive multiple sclerosis (PMS) and 40 healthy control subjects (HC)].
Results: MS patients reported more frequently the multisensory SiFi than HC. In contrast, there were no group differences in the control conditions. Essentially, patients with progressive type of MS continued to perceive the illusion at stimulus onset asynchronies (SOA) that were more than three times longer than the SOA at which the illusion was already disrupted for healthy controls. Furthermore, MS patients' degree of cognitive impairment measured with a broad neuropsychological battery encompassing tests for memory, attention, executive functions, and fluency was predicted by their performance in the SiFi task for the longest SOA of 500 ms.
Conclusions: These findings support the notion that MS patients exhibit an altered multisensory perception in the SiFi task and that their susceptibility to the perceptual illusion is negatively correlated with their neuropsychological test performance. Since MS lesions affect white matter tracts and cortical regions which seem to be involved in the transfer and processing of both crossmodal and cognitive information, this might be one possible explanation for our findings. SiFi might be considered as a brief, non-expensive, language- and education-independent screening test for cognitive deficits in MS patients.
Developmental differences in the structure of executive function in middle childhood and adolescence
(2013)
Although it has been argued that the structure of executive function (EF) may change developmentally, there is little empirical research to examine this view in middle childhood and adolescence. The main objective of this study was to examine developmental changes in the component structure of EF in a large sample (N = 457) of 7–15 year olds. Participants completed batteries of tasks that measured three components of EF: updating working memory (UWM), inhibition, and shifting. Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) was used to test five alternative models in 7–9 year olds, 10–12 year olds, and 13–15 year olds. The results of CFA showed that a single-factor EF model best explained EF performance in 7–9-year-old and 10–12-year-old groups, namely unitary EF, though this single factor explained different amounts of variance at these two ages. In contrast, a three-factor model that included UWM, inhibition, and shifting best accounted for the data from 13–15 year olds, namely diverse EF. In sum, during middle childhood, putative measures of UWM, inhibition, and shifting may rely on similar underlying cognitive processes. Importantly, our findings suggest that developmental dissociations in these three EF components do not emerge until children transition into adolescence. These findings provided empirical evidence for the development of EF structure which progressed from unity to diversity during middle childhood and adolescence.
Die vorliegende Arbeit beschäftigt sich mit den Arbeitsgedächtnisleistungen zweier sprachlicher Sondergruppen und der Möglichkeit über die Leistung des Arbeitsgedächtnisses validere Prognosen des weiteren sprachlichen bzw. schriftsprachlichen Entwicklungsverlaufs zu erreichen, als dies über eine ausschließliche Erhebung der Sprachleistung möglich ist. Die Basis dieser Untersuchungen bilden zwei Längsschnittstudien. Die Daten der sprachlichen Sondergruppe der Late Talker (kognitive Aspekte) wurden in Heidelberg an der Universität und dem Frühinterventionszentrum (FRIZ) zwischen dem zweiten und dem neunten Lebensjahr der Kinder (N=93 mit n1=59 Late Talkers und n2=34 Kontrollkindern) in bestimmten Abständen erhoben. Neben den sprachlichen und kognitiven Leistungstests wurde zum letzten Messzeitpunkt zusätzlich die Arbeitsgedächtnisleistung erfasst. Dabei sollte untersucht werden, ob die Leistungen im Arbeitsgedächtnis valide unterscheiden können zwischen Kindern mit persistierenden Sprachentwicklungsproblemen und Kindern, die das Defizit im weiteren Entwicklungsverlauf aufholen (Late Bloomer). Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass mithilfe der Leistungen in der Phonologischen Schleife eine sehr gute Trennung der Late Bloomer von den Kindern, die weiter eine Sprachproblematik aufweisen, vorgenommen werden kann. Ein Hinzuziehen der zentral-exekutiven Leistungen bringt hingegen keine Verbesserung in der Vorhersagegenauigkeit.
Der zweiten Untersuchung liegen zum einen die Daten der Normierung der Arbeitsgedächtnistestbatterie für Kinder von fünf bis zwölf Jahren (AGTB 5-12 {Hasselhorn et al., 2012}) zugrunde (N=1.669 davon 243 Kinder mit Migrationshintergrund), anhand derer überprüft wurde, ob Kinder mit Migrationshintergrund in irgendeiner Weise durch die Nutzung der Testbatterie benachteiligt werden, sei es 1. Durch die ungeprüfte Übernahme des Arbeitsgedächtnismodells (nach dem Vorbild von Baddeley (1986)), dass für Muttersprachler bereits bestätigt werden konnte, 2. Durch Benachteiligungen in bestimmten Untertests und 3. Durch die Testbatterie im Allgemeinen, die Art der Testung und die Wahl bestimmter Items. Zur Überprüfung, inwieweit Prädiktoren, die bei Muttersprachlern valide Prognosen der späteren schriftsprachlichen Leistungen erlauben, auch bei Kindern mit Migrationshintergrund genutzt werden können, wird ein weiterer längsschnittlicher Datensatz herangezogen. Von den 127 Kindern der Längsschnittstudie des Projekts ANNA „Gedächtnis und Schulfähigkeit“ (Individual Development and Adaptive Education of Children at Risk am Deutschen Institut für internationale pädagogische Forschung - DIPF) weisen 60 Kinder einen Migrationshintergrund auf. Auf Basis beider Datensätze konnte nachgewiesen werden, dass das Modell des Arbeitsgedächtnisses auch bei Kindern mit Migrationshintergrund Anwendung findet und die Benachteiligungen bei der Testung besonders gering ausfallen, je früher die Kinder untersucht werden. Es zeigt sich aber auch, dass die AGTB 5-12 an manchen Stellen überarbeitet werden sollte, um mögliche Benachteiligungen noch weiter zu verringern. Außerdem konnte gezeigt werden, dass sich auch bei Kindern mit Migrationshintergrund valide Prognosen späterer schriftsprachlicher Leistungen anhand ihrer Arbeitsgedächtnisleistungen treffen lassen und hier hauptsächlich auf Basis der phonologischen Gesamtleistungen (alle Untertests).
Our ability to select relevant information from the environment is limited by the resolution of attention – i.e., the minimum size of the region that can be selected. Neural mechanisms that underlie this limit and its development are not yet understood. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was performed during an object tracking task in 7- and 11-year-old children, and in young adults. Object tracking activated canonical fronto-parietal attention systems and motion-sensitive area MT in children as young as 7 years. Object tracking performance improved with age, together with stronger recruitment of parietal attention areas and a shift from low-level to higher-level visual areas. Increasing the required resolution of spatial attention – which was implemented by varying the distance between target and distractors in the object tracking task – led to activation increases in fronto-insular cortex, medial frontal cortex including anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and supplementary motor area, superior colliculi, and thalamus. This core circuitry for attentional precision was recruited by all age groups, but ACC showed an age-related activation reduction. Our results suggest that age-related improvements in selective visual attention and in the resolution of attention are characterized by an increased use of more functionally specialized brain regions during the course of development.
Thema der vorliegenden Arbeit ist die systematische Darstellung und methodische Bewertung von wissenschaftlichen Publikationen zu psychosozialen Aspekten von Herzrhythmusstörungen. Thematisch ergaben sich zwei Hauptrichtungen: 1. Das Befinden und die Lebensqualität von Patienten mit Herzrhythmusstörungen. 2. Das Problem der psychischen Beteiligung an der Auslösung von ventrikulären Arrhythmien und dem plötzlichen Herztod. Mit der Eignungsbewertung nach Hermann-Lingen und Buss (2002), mit der der Hauptteil der Studien bewertet wurde, konnten die Studien meist gut eingeteilt werden. Die Klassifizierung erfolgte anhand zweier Aspekte: der Fallzahl und der methodischen Qualität (entsprechend der Fragestellung der vorliegenden Arbeit). Die Gesamt-Eignung einer Studie errechnet sich aus dem Produkt von Fallzahl und dem Mittelwert der methodischen Qualität. Eine Ausnahme von der o.g. Bewertung stellen Studien dar, die Fragen zur Lebensqualität nur als ein weiteres Kriterium zusätzlich zu kardiologischen Parametern untersuchen, welche das größere Gewicht haben. Die Eignung ergibt sich hier als die Summe aus Fallzahl und Nutzung eines validierten Messinstrumentes. Da sie trotzdem meist als „weniger geeignet“ bewertet wurden, haben sie in dieser Arbeit kaum Gewicht. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurden die gesichteten Originalarbeiten entsprechend ihrem Design in 3 Subgruppen unterteilt und bewertet: Querschnitts-, Verlaufs- und Prädiktorstudien. Die Verlaufsstudien befassen sich hauptsächlich mit Fragen der Lebensqualität und dem Befinden, die Prädiktorstudien ausschließlich mit dem Problem der psychischen Beteiligung an der Auslösung von ventrikulären Arrhythmien und dem plötzlichen Herztod, die Querschnittstudien bearbeiten beide Schwerpunkte. Die methodische Qualität der Studien war bei den o.g. Hauptthemen sehr unterschiedlich. Dabei ist das Niveau der Studien zur eher jungen Forschungsrichtung Lebensqualität bei den Verlaufsstudien mit 10 von 17 oder 59% Studien mit guter Bewertung eher mäßig, bei den Querschnittstudien mit 6 von 7 oder 86% gut. Bei den Studien die eher andere, einzelne Parameter zum Befinden von Patienten abfragen wie Distress, Angst, Depression, Schmerz, Anpassung an die Krankheit, Sorge um die Krankheit oder Unsicherheit wegen der Krankheit und sie mit der Lebensqualität in Beziehung setzen, ist das Niveau schlechter mit formal 11 von 11 als „weniger geeignet“ bewerteten Studien bei den Querschnittstudien und 4 von 4 bei den Verlaufsstudien, was hauptsächlich an kleinen Fallzahlen lag. Beim schon älteren Thema der psychischen Beteiligung an der Auslösung von ventrikulären Arrhythmien und dem plötzlichen Herztod ist das Niveau wesentlich besser. Das Niveau der 13 Prädiktorstudien ist hier formal hoch mit 9 von 12 also 75% als „gut“ oder „besonders gut“ geeignet bewerteten Studien. 7 Querschnittstudien befassen sich ebenfalls mit dem Thema. Davon sind 6, also 86% als „gut“ oder „besonders gut geeignet“ bewertet worden. Probleme ergaben sich durch die Änderung der Forschungsmeinung im Laufe der Zeit, was eine relevante Arrhythmie darstellt und was behandelt wird. So maß man noch 1990 Herzrhythmusstörungen ab Lown Klasse III so viel Bedeutung zu, dass man bei Symptomen eine Behandlungsindikation sah. Insbesondere die CAST-Studie von 1987 bis 1991 führte zu Veränderungen in der Sicht von Arrhythmien. Ab 1993 wird der Wandel dann auch in Lehrbüchern ersichtlich. 2004 werden unter ventrikulären Herzrhythmusstörungen nur noch Tachykardien mit einer Herzfrequenz von > 120/min. mit breitem QRS-Komplex angesehen. Vereinzelten VES wird keine Bedeutung mehr zugemessen. Als Risikofaktor für den plötzlichen Herztod wird heutzutage hauptsächlich eine eingeschränkte linksventrikuläre Ejektionsfraktion (EF) angesehen. Man geht heute davon aus, dass komplexe VES eher eine linksventrikuläre Dysfunktion anzeigen und nur für die Prognose von Patienten mit struktureller Herzerkrankung bedeutsam sind. Es wird in der vorliegenden Arbeit die neuere Definition von 2004 gewählt und bei Betrachtung von vereinzelten VES ein relevanter arrhythmischer Endpunkt (z.B. anhaltende Tachykardien, lebensbedrohliche Rhythmusstörungen) gefordert. Zum ersten Schwerpunkt zeigte sich bei den Studien zur Lebensqualität, dass Patienten mit ventrikulären und supraventrikulären Herzrhythmusstörungen eine eingeschränkte Lebensqualität aufweisen. Eine „kurative“ Therapie mit Ablation, die ohne weitere Medikamentengabe auskommt, führt dabei zu einer starken, stabilen Verbesserung der Lebensqualität, der Symptome, des psychologischen Distress und die Lebensqualität nach Ablation gleicht der von Gesunden. Bei Betrachtung der Studien zu nicht-kurativen Therapien von supraventrikulären Herzrhythmusstörungen drängt sich der Verdacht auf, dass sich eine vom Patienten empfundene Verbesserung des Befindens aus verschiedenen Komponenten zusammensetzt. Die Symptomkontrolle ist wichtig, und korrelierte gut mit Verbesserungen im sozialen Bereich und körperlichen Wohlbefinden, aber darüber hinaus scheinen auch psychische Mechanismen beteiligt zu sein. Hier könnte sich die weitere Forschung stärker und mit höheren Fallzahlen mit den psychischen Komponenten beschäftigen und versuchen, sie von den kardiologischen abzutrennen. Die objektiven, kardiologischen Parameter korrelierten nur schlecht mit den erhobenen Parametern der Lebensqualität und der Aktivität des täglichen Lebens bei supraventrikulären Arrhythmien. Die Studien zu ventrikulären Arrhythmien beschränken sich thematisch meist auf den Vergleich der Lebensqualität bei Therapie mit ICD oder Antiarrhythmika. Allgemein gaben jüngere Patienten mit ventrikulären Arrhythmien eine schlechtere Lebensqualität an als ältere. Eine größere Gesundheitsstörung und stärkerer Distress hatten eine geringere Lebensqualität zur Folge, und stärkere Medikamentennebenwirkungen hatten stärkeren Distress zur Folge. Die Sorgen wg. der Krankheit waren bei Baseline für Arrhythmiepatienten erhöht und führten zu einer schlechteren Lebensqualität. Problematisch bei den Originalarbeiten zu ventrikulären Arrhythmien war, dass meist gemischte Kollektive von Patienten nach Reanimation und ohne Reanimation untersucht wurden. Bei Bearbeitung der Originalarbeiten gewann man den Eindruck, dass diese beiden Untergruppen sich zu stark voneinander unterscheiden, als dass eine gemeinsame Betrachtung sinnvoll erscheint. Dies müssten geeignete Studien überprüfen. Zum zweiten Schwerpunkt unterscheidet man akute von chronischen psychischen Auslösern von ventrikulären Arrhythmien und dem plötzlichen Herztod. Von den akuten psychischen Zuständen scheinen 15 min. vor einer Herzrhythmusstörung bei einem hohen Prozentsatz der Patienten Ärger zu bestehen. Oft gingen vielfältige psychische Ausnahmezustände bis 24 Stunden einer ventrikulären Herzrhythmusstörung voraus. Dabei war Wut der Hauptaffekt, andere waren Depression, Angst, ängstliche Erwartung und Trauer. An chronischen Zuständen wurden folgende Konstrukte untersucht: psychischer Distress, Depression, Angst, Typ A/B-Verhalten, unterdrückter Ärger, soziale Unterstützung, der Wunsch nach Kontrolle und vitale Erschöpfung. Dabei ist die Depression am besten untersucht. Nach der Datenlage scheint es eine Korrelation mit arrhythmischen Ereignissen zu geben. Der psychische Distress, ein aus verschiedenen Variablen zusammengesetzter Parameter, ist nach Datenlage ebenfalls von Bedeutung. Für die Konstrukte Angst, unterdrückter Ärger, soziale Unterstützung, Wunsch nach Kontrolle und vitale Erschöpfung kann keine definitive Aussage gemacht werden, da sie zum Teil nur von einer Studie untersucht werden. Sie zeigen jedoch alle eine positive Korrelation zur Auslösung von Herzrhythmusstörungen. Von einer Relevanz des Typ A-Verhaltens kann man eher nicht ausgehen. Bei den Randthemen ist das Verhältnis von funktionellen Herzrhythmusstörungen zu relevanten Herzrhythmusstörungen erwähnenswert. So gibt es Hinweise, dass Patienten mit funktionellen Herzbeschwerden ängstlicher sind und sie erschienen hysterischer und stärker entfremdet im gesellschaftlichen Bereich. Jedoch werden bei Patienten mit relevanten Herzrhythmusstörungen ebenfalls oft die Beschwerden als psychisch abgetan. Als Forschungsdefizit fiel auf, dass die meisten guten Arbeiten zur Lebensqualität das Ziel haben, die Lebensqualität unter bestimmten Therapien zu bewerten. Originalarbeiten, die psychische Aspekte untersuchen, die bei Arrhythmiepatienten Einfluss nehmen auf die Lebensqualität oder das Befinden, gibt es nur wenige und es wird nur mit sehr kleinen Fallzahlen untersucht. Insgesamt fehlen größere, aussagekräftigere Studien dazu. Außerdem entsteht der Eindruck, dass viele Studien zur Lebensqualität Placebo-Effekte, z.B. der stärkeren Hinwendung zum Patienten bei bestimmten Therapien, nicht kontrollieren und schon gar nicht thematisieren. Es fehlen Untersuchungen, wo ausdrücklich geforscht wird, welche Komponenten bei hochsymptomatischen sowie auch mäßig symptomatischen Patienten mit supraventrikulären Rhythmusstörungen zur Besserung der Lebensqualität beitragen. Speziell zu den Arbeiten zu ventrikulären Arrhythmien wäre eine Untersuchung wünschenswert, inwieweit sich Patienten mit lebensbedrohlichen Herzrhythmusstörungen nach Reanimation von Patienten mit lebensbedrohlichen Herzrhythmusstörungen ohne Reanimation im Befinden, im kognitiven Erleben und in der Lebensqualität voneinander unterscheiden. Es müsste geklärt werden, ob die Reanimation ein so stark dominierender Faktor ist, dass er die kleineren Unterschiede zwischen Gesunden und Arrhythmiepatienten überlagert und verdeckt, wie es bei der vorliegenden Arbeit den Anschein hatte. Die Unterschiede von Frauen und Männern wurden von nur einer hochwertigen Arbeit zum Vorhofflimmern bearbeitet. Hier besteht noch Forschungsbedarf, da in anderen Feldern der Kardiologie durchaus Unterschiede im Erleben der Krankheit festgestellt wurden.
Much is known about when children acquire an understanding of mental states, but few, if any, experiments identify social contexts in which children tend to use this capacity and dispositions that influence its usage. Social exclusion is a common situation that compels us to reconnect with new parties, which may crucially involve attending to those parties’ mental states. Across two studies, this line of inquiry was extended to typically developing preschoolers (Study 1) and young children with and without anxiety disorder (AD) (Study 2). Children played the virtual game of toss “Cyberball” ostensibly over the Internet with two peers who first played fair (inclusion), but eventually threw very few balls to the child (exclusion). Before and after Cyberball, children in both studies completed stories about peer-scenarios. For Study 1, 36 typically developing 5-year-olds were randomly assigned to regular exclusion (for no apparent reason) or accidental exclusion (due to an alleged computer malfunction). Compared to accidental exclusion, regular exclusion led children to portray story-characters more strongly as intentional agents (intentionality), with use of more mental state language (MSL), and more between-character affiliation in post-Cyberball stories. For Study 2, 20 clinically referred 4 to 8-year-olds with AD and 15 age- and gender-matched non-anxious controls completed stories before and after regular exclusion. While we replicated the post regular-exclusion increase of intentional and MSL portrayals of story-characters among non-anxious controls, anxious children exhibited a decline on both dimensions after regular exclusion. We conclude that exclusion typically induces young children to mentalize, enabling more effective reconnection with others. However, excessive anxiety may impair controlled mentalizing, which may, in turn, hamper effective reconnection with others after exclusion.
In today’s "new world of work," knowledge workers are often given considerable flexibility regarding where and when to work (i.e., time-spatial flexibility) and this has become a popular approach to redesigning work. Whilst the adoption of such practices is mainly considered a top-down approach to work design, we argue that successful utilization of time-spatial flexibility requires proactivity on the part of the employee in the form of time-spatial job crafting. Previous research has demonstrated that time-spatial flexibility can have both positive and negative effects on well-being, performance, and work-life balance; yet remains mute about the underlying reasons for this and how employees can handle the given flexibility. Drawing on research from work design, we posit that in order for employees to stay well and productive in this context, they need to engage in time-spatial job crafting (i.e., a context-specific form of job crafting that entails reflection on time and place), which can be considered a future work skill. We propose a theoretical model of time-spatial job crafting in which we discuss its components, shed light on its antecedents, and explain how time-spatial job crafting is related to positive work outcomes through a time/spatial-demands fit.
Expression, perception and recognition of intense emotions in healthy and depressed individuals
(2017)
Die Fähigkeit die Gefühle anderer zu erkennen und einzuordnen ermöglicht es soziale Situationen richtig einzuschätzen und soziale Beziehungen aufzubauen. Da Emotionen also in unserem Leben eine wichtige Rolle spielen, kann eine Dysregulation der Emotionsverarbeitung auch zu elementaren Einschränkungen führen. Menschen, die unter depressiven Episoden leiden, durchleben beispielsweise regelmäßig Phasen intensiver und anhaltender Traurigkeit. Jedoch ist noch nicht vollständig erklärt, wie es zu dieser verzerrten Emotionswahrnehmung kommt. Diese Dissertation hatte deshalb das Ziel, den Ausdruck, die Wahrnehmung und das Erkennen extremer Emotionen genauer zu beleuchten.
In Studie 1 wurden der Ausdruck und das Erkennen extremer Emotionen untersucht.
Hierbei dienten aus dem Internet bezogene Videosequenzen von Kindern und Erwachsenen als Basis, in denen diese sich in Situationen befanden, die sie extrem negative oder extrem positive Emotionen durchleben ließen. Die Gesichtsausdrücke der Kinder und Erwachsenen wurden dann zum Zeitpunkt der stärksten emotionalen Erregung in ein Bild umgewandelt und von unabhängigen Ratern auf ihre Valenz und ihr Arousal eingeschätzt. Es wurde beobachtet, dass - entgegen der Vorhersage etablierter Emotionstheorien (z.B. Ekman, 1993) – Emotionen hoher positiver und negativer Intensität schwer auseinander zu halten sind. Tatsächlich wurden positive Emotionsausdrücke häufig als negativ eingeschätzt. Eine mögliche Erklärung dafür liefern Aragón und Kollegen (2015). Sie schätzen den Ausdruck negativer Emotionen in positiven Situationen als Emotionsregulationsstrategie ein, die dazu dient ein emotionales Equilibrium wieder herzustellen, das durch die überwältigenden positiven Emotionen aus dem Gleichgewicht gebracht wurde.
In Studie 2 und 3 wurde die Wahrnehmung negativer Emotionen bei depressiven Menschen im Vergleich zu gesunden Kontrollprobanden auf subjektiver und physiologischer Ebene untersucht. Hierbei wurde zunächst im Rahmen von Studie 2 untersucht, ob Parameter des autonomen Nervensystems (ANS) sich zwischen depressiven und gesunden Probanden unterscheiden. ANS-Parameter umfassten Hormone (Cortisol und DHEA), Herzratenvariabilität (HRV), Hautleitfähigkeit (GSR), Hauttemperatur (TEMP) und Atemfrequenz (RSP). Es konnten erhöhte DHEA-Werte, eine erhöhte Hauttemperatur und eine reduzierte Atemfrequenz in der Patientengruppe gefunden werden. Eine erhöhte Hauttemperatur korrelierte zudem mit der Ausprägung depressiver Symptome und der aktuellen Stimmung. Reduzierte HRV-Werte wurden hauptsächlich auf antidepressive Medikation zurückgeführt.
In Studie 3 wurde dann die Reaktion der Probanden auf emotionsevozierende Stimuli verschiedener Valenzkategorien (neutral, leicht negative, hoch negative) untersucht. Hierbei wurden sowohl physiologische Parameter (TEMP, HRV, GSR, RSP) als auch die subjektive Einschätzung der Stimuli bezüglich ihrer Valenz und ihres Arousal erhoben. Die Befunde bezüglich Hauttemperatur und HRV-Werte aus Studie 2 konnten in Studie 3 repliziert
werden. Zudem zeigte sich eine akzentuierte Reaktion der RSP sowie höhere Valenz- und Arousalratings in der Patientengruppe. Das subjektiv intensivere Empfinden der Stimuli bei den Patienten hing zusätzlich mit emotionaler und sozialer Kompetenz zusammen.
In dieser Dissertation konnte gezeigt werden, dass Ausdrücke intensiver Emotionen im Gesicht oft als zweideutig wahrgenommen werden. Um ein genaueres Verständnis der Emotionswahrnehmung bei depressiven Menschen zu erlangen, konnten zudem mehrere Parameter des ANS identifiziert werden, die teils noch nicht untersucht wurden und einer intensiveren Emotionswahrnehmung bei depressiven Patienten zugrunde liegen könnten.
Hierbei wurden zusätzlich Zusammenhänge zu weiteren Aspekten der Depression, wie Defiziten in sozialen Kompetenzen, aufgezeigt. Damit gibt diese Dissertation umfassende Aufschlüsse über Emotionsverarbeitungsprozesse bei gesunden und depressiven Menschen.
Free gaze and moving images are typically avoided in EEG experiments due to the expected generation of artifacts and noise. Yet for a growing number of research questions, loosening these rigorous restrictions would be beneficial. Among these is research on visual aesthetic experiences, which often involve open-ended exploration of highly variable stimuli. Here we systematically compare the effect of conservative vs. more liberal experimental settings on various measures of behavior, brain activity and physiology in an aesthetic rating task. Our primary aim was to assess EEG signal quality. 43 participants either maintained fixation or were allowed to gaze freely, and viewed either static images or dynamic (video) stimuli consisting of dance performances or nature scenes. A passive auditory background task (auditory steady-state response; ASSR) was added as a proxy measure for overall EEG recording quality. We recorded EEG, ECG and eye tracking data, and participants rated their aesthetic preference and state of boredom on each trial. Whereas both behavioral ratings and gaze behavior were affected by task and stimulus manipulations, EEG SNR was barely affected and generally robust across all conditions, despite only minimal preprocessing and no trial rejection. In particular, we show that using video stimuli does not necessarily result in lower EEG quality and can, on the contrary, significantly reduce eye movements while increasing both the participants’ aesthetic response and general task engagement. We see these as encouraging results indicating that — at least in the lab — more liberal experimental conditions can be adopted without significant loss of signal quality.
Aim: There is ongoing debate about the role of cortical and subcortical brain areas in force modulation. In a whole-brain approach, we sought to investigate the anatomical basis of grip force whilst acknowledging interindividual differences in connectivity patterns. We tested if brain lesion mapping in patients with unilateral motor deficits can inform whole-brain structural connectivity analysis in healthy controls to uncover the networks underlying grip force.
Methods: Using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and whole-brain voxel-based morphometry in chronic stroke patients (n=55) and healthy controls (n=67), we identified the brain regions in both grey and white matter significantly associated with grip force strength. The resulting statistical parametric maps (SPMs) provided seed areas for whole-brain structural covariance analysis in a large-scale community dwelling cohort (n=977) that included beyond volume estimates, parameter maps sensitive to myelin, iron and tissue water content.
Results: The SPMs showed symmetrical bilateral clusters of correlation between upper limb motor performance, basal ganglia, posterior insula and cortico-spinal tract. The covariance analysis with the seed areas derived from the SPMs demonstrated a widespread anatomical pattern of brain volume and tissue properties, including both cortical, subcortical nodes of motor networks and sensorimotor areas projections.
Conclusion: We interpret our covariance findings as a biological signature of brain networks implicated in grip force. The data-driven definition of seed areas obtained from chronic stroke patients showed overlapping structural covariance patterns within cortico-subcortical motor networks across different tissue property estimates. This cumulative evidence lends face validity of our findings and their biological plausibility.
Background: Scientifically evaluated cognitive intervention programs are essential to meet the demands of our increasingly aging society. Currently, one of the “hottest” topics in the field is the improvement of working memory function and its potential impact on overall cognition. The present study evaluated the efficacy of WOME (WOrking MEmory), a theory-based working memory training program, in a double-blind, placebo-controlled, and randomized controlled trial (www.drks.de, DRKS00013162).
Methods: N = 60 healthy older adults were allocated to (1) the WOME intervention, (2) an active low-level intervention, or (3) a passive control group. Overall, the intervention groups practiced twelve sessions of 45 min within 4 weeks of their respective training. Transfer effects were measured via an extensive battery of neuropsychological tests and questionnaires both pre-/post-training and at a 3-month follow-up.
Results: WOME led to a significant improvement in working memory function, demonstrated on a non-trained near transfer task and on two different composite scores with moderate to large effect sizes. In addition, we found some indication of relevant impact on everyday life. The effects were short-term rather than stable, being substantially diminished at follow-up with only little evidence suggesting long-term maintenance. No transfer effects on other cognitive functions were observed.
Conclusion: WOME is an appropriate and efficient intervention specifically targeting the working memory system in healthy older adults.
Trial Registration: German Clinical Trials Register (DRKS), Identifier: DRKS00013162.
Human functional brain connectivity can be temporally decomposed into states of high and low cofluctuation, defined as coactivation of brain regions over time. Rare states of particularly high cofluctuation have been shown to reflect fundamentals of intrinsic functional network architecture and to be highly subject-specific. However, it is unclear whether such network-defining states also contribute to individual variations in cognitive abilities – which strongly rely on the interactions among distributed brain regions. By introducing CMEP, a new eigenvector-based prediction framework, we show that as few as 16 temporally separated time frames (< 1.5% of 10min resting-state fMRI) can significantly predict individual differences in intelligence (N = 263, p < .001). Against previous expectations, individual’s network-defining time frames of particularly high cofluctuation do not predict intelligence. Multiple functional brain networks contribute to the prediction, and all results replicate in an independent sample (N = 831). Our results suggest that although fundamentals of person-specific functional connectomes can be derived from few time frames of highest connectivity, temporally distributed information is necessary to extract information about cognitive abilities. This information is not restricted to specific connectivity states, like network-defining high-cofluctuation states, but rather reflected across the entire length of the brain connectivity time series.
How much data do we need? Lower bounds of brain activation states to predict human cognitive ability
(2022)
Human functional brain connectivity can be temporally decomposed into states of high and low cofluctuation, defined as coactivation of brain regions over time. Despite their low frequency of occurrence, states of particularly high cofluctuation have been shown to reflect fundamentals of intrinsic functional network architecture (derived from resting-state fMRI) and to be highly subject-specific. However, it is currently unclear whether such network-defining states of high cofluctuation also contribute to individual variations in cognitive abilities – which strongly rely on the interactions among distributed brain regions. By introducing CMEP, an eigenvector-based prediction framework, we show that functional connectivity estimates from as few as 20 temporally separated time frames (< 3% of a 10 min resting-state fMRI scan) are significantly predictive of individual differences in intelligence (N = 281, p < .001). In contrast and against previous expectations, individual’s network-defining time frames of particularly high cofluctuation do not achieve significant prediction of intelligence. Multiple functional brain networks contribute to the prediction, and all results replicate in an independent sample (N = 831). Our results suggest that although fundamentals of person-specific functional connectomes can be derived from few time frames of highest brain connectivity, temporally distributed information is necessary to extract information about cognitive abilities from functional connectivity time series. This information, however, is not restricted to specific connectivity states, like network-defining high-cofluctuation states, but rather reflected across the entire length of the brain connectivity time series.
Human functional brain connectivity can be temporally decomposed into states of high and low cofluctuation, defined as coactivation of brain regions over time. Rare states of particularly high cofluctuation have been shown to reflect fundamentals of intrinsic functional network architecture and to be highly subject-specific. However, it is unclear whether such network-defining states also contribute to individual variations in cognitive abilities – which strongly rely on the interactions among distributed brain regions. By introducing CMEP, a new eigenvector-based prediction framework, we show that as few as 16 temporally separated time frames (< 1.5% of 10min resting-state fMRI) can significantly predict individual differences in intelligence (N = 263, p < .001). Against previous expectations, individual’s network-defining time frames of particularly high cofluctuation do not predict intelligence. Multiple functional brain networks contribute to the prediction, and all results replicate in an independent sample (N = 831). Our results suggest that although fundamentals of person-specific functional connectomes can be derived from few time frames of highest connectivity, temporally distributed information is necessary to extract information about cognitive abilities. This information is not restricted to specific connectivity states, like network-defining high-cofluctuation states, but rather reflected across the entire length of the brain connectivity time series.
Highlights
• Brain connectivity states identified by cofluctuation strength.
• CMEP as new method to robustly predict human traits from brain imaging data.
• Network-identifying connectivity ‘events’ are not predictive of cognitive ability.
• Sixteen temporally independent fMRI time frames allow for significant prediction.
• Neuroimaging-based assessment of cognitive ability requires sufficient scan lengths.
Abstract
Human functional brain connectivity can be temporally decomposed into states of high and low cofluctuation, defined as coactivation of brain regions over time. Rare states of particularly high cofluctuation have been shown to reflect fundamentals of intrinsic functional network architecture and to be highly subject-specific. However, it is unclear whether such network-defining states also contribute to individual variations in cognitive abilities – which strongly rely on the interactions among distributed brain regions. By introducing CMEP, a new eigenvector-based prediction framework, we show that as few as 16 temporally separated time frames (< 1.5% of 10 min resting-state fMRI) can significantly predict individual differences in intelligence (N = 263, p < .001). Against previous expectations, individual's network-defining time frames of particularly high cofluctuation do not predict intelligence. Multiple functional brain networks contribute to the prediction, and all results replicate in an independent sample (N = 831). Our results suggest that although fundamentals of person-specific functional connectomes can be derived from few time frames of highest connectivity, temporally distributed information is necessary to extract information about cognitive abilities. This information is not restricted to specific connectivity states, like network-defining high-cofluctuation states, but rather reflected across the entire length of the brain connectivity time series.
Hypochonder gelten gemeinhin als Simulanten. Doch mit diesem Vorurteil
versuchen Psychologen seit Jahren aufzuräumen: Denn die Betroffenen
leiden erheblich darunter, dass sie sich intensiv mit selbst
beobachteten körperlichen Symptomen beschäftigen und oft über Jahre
Ängste oder die Überzeugung entwickeln, ernsthaft erkrankt zu sein.
Verhaltenstherapeutisch orientierte Behandlungsansätze, die sich speziell
mit diesen Formen der Angst beschäftigen, zeigen erste gute Erfolge.
This article reports an investigation of how inhibition contributes to fluid reasoning when it is decomposed into the reasoning ability, item-position, and speed components to control for possible method effects. Working memory was also taken into consideration. A sample of 223 university students completed a fluid reasoning scale, two tasks tapping prepotent response inhibition, and two working memory tasks. Fixed-links modeling was used to separate the effect of reasoning ability from the effects of item-position and speed. The goodness-of-fit results confirmed the necessity to consider the reasoning ability, item-position, and speed components simultaneously. Prepotent response inhibition was only associated with reasoning ability. This association disappeared when working memory served as a mediator. Taken together, these results reflect the inhomogeneity of what is tapped by the fluid reasoning scale on one hand and, on the other, suggest inhibition as an important component of working memory.
Infants' poor motor abilities limit their interaction with their environment and render studying infant cognition notoriously difficult. Exceptions are eye movements, which reach high accuracy early, but generally do not allow manipulation of the physical environment. In this study, real-time eye tracking is used to put 6- and 8-month-old infants in direct control of their visual surroundings to study the fundamental problem of discovery of agency, i.e. the ability to infer that certain sensory events are caused by one's own actions. We demonstrate that infants quickly learn to perform eye movements to trigger the appearance of new stimuli and that they anticipate the consequences of their actions in as few as 3 trials. Our findings show that infants can rapidly discover new ways of controlling their environment. We suggest that gaze-contingent paradigms offer effective new ways for studying many aspects of infant learning and cognition in an interactive fashion and provide new opportunities for behavioral training and treatment in infants.
Using the method or time-delayed embedding, a signal can be embedded into higher-dimensional space in order to study its dynamics. This requires knowledge of two parameters: The delay parameter τ, and the embedding dimension parameter D. Two standard methods to estimate these parameters in one-dimensional time series involve the inspection of the Average Mutual Information (AMI) function and the False Nearest Neighbor (FNN) function. In some contexts, however, such as phase-space reconstruction for Multidimensional Recurrence Quantification Analysis (MdRQA), the empirical time series that need to be embedded already possess a dimensionality higher than one. In the current article, we present extensions of the AMI and FNN functions for higher dimensional time series and their application to data from the Lorenz system coded in Matlab.
A variety of joint action studies show that people tend to fall into synchronous behavior with others participating in the same task, and that such synchronization is beneficial, leading to greater rapport, satisfaction, and performance. It has been noted that many of these task environments require simple interactions that involve little planning of action coordination toward a shared goal. The present study utilized a complex joint construction task in which dyads were instructed to build model cars while their hand movements and heart rates were measured. Participants built these models under varying conditions, delimiting how freely they could divide labor during a build session. While hand movement synchrony was sensitive to the different tasks and outcomes, the heart rate measure did not show any effects of interpersonal synchrony. Results for hand movements show that the more participants were constrained by a particular building strategy, the greater their behavioral synchrony. Within the different conditions, the degree of synchrony was predictive of subjective satisfaction and objective product outcomes. However, in contrast to many previous findings, synchrony was negatively associated with superior products, and, depending on the constraints on the interaction, positively or negatively correlated with higher subjective satisfaction. These results show that the task context critically shapes the role of synchronization during joint action, and that in more complex tasks, not synchronization of behavior, but rather complementary types of behavior may be associated with superior task outcomes.
Switching between reading tasks leads to phase-transitions in reading times in L1 and L2 readers
(2019)
Reading research uses different tasks to investigate different levels of the reading process, such as word recognition, syntactic parsing, or semantic integration. It seems to be tacitly assumed that the underlying cognitive process that constitute reading are stable across those tasks. However, nothing is known about what happens when readers switch from one reading task to another. The stability assumptions of the reading process suggest that the cognitive system resolves this switching between two tasks quickly. Here, we present an alternative language-game hypothesis (LGH) of reading that begins by treating reading as a softly-assembled process and that assumes, instead of stability, context-sensitive flexibility of the reading process. LGH predicts that switching between two reading tasks leads to longer lasting phase-transition like patterns in the reading process. Using the nonlinear-dynamical tool of recurrence quantification analysis, we test these predictions by examining series of individual word reading times in self-paced reading tasks where native (L1) and second language readers (L2) transition between random word and ordered text reading tasks. We find consistent evidence for phase-transitions in the reading times when readers switch from ordered text to random-word reading, but we find mixed evidence when readers transition from random-word to ordered-text reading. In the latter case, L2 readers show moderately stronger signs for phase-transitions compared to L1 readers, suggesting that familiarity with a language influences whether and how such transitions occur. The results provide evidence for LGH and suggest that the cognitive processes underlying reading are not fully stable across tasks but exhibit soft-assembly in the interaction between task and reader characteristics.
Background: This article reports on the relationship between cultural influences on life style, coping style, and sleep in a sample of female Portuguese immigrants living in Germany. Sleep quality is known to be poorer in women than in men, yet little is known about mediating psychological and sociological variables such as stress and coping with stressful life circumstances. Migration constitutes a particularly difficult life circumstance for women if it involves differing role conceptions in the country of origin and the emigrant country.
Methods: The study investigated sleep quality, coping styles and level of integration in a sample of Portuguese (N = 48) and Moroccan (N = 64) immigrant women who took part in a structured personal interview.
Results: Sleep quality was poor in 54% of Portuguese and 39% of Moroccan women, which strongly exceeds reports of sleep complaints in epidemiologic studies of sleep quality in German women. Reports of poor sleep were associated with the degree of adoption of a German life style. Women who had integrated more into German society slept worse than less integrated women in both samples, suggesting that non-integration serves a protective function. An unusually large proportion of women preferred an information-seeking (monitoring) coping style and adaptive coping. Poor sleep was related to high monitoring in the Portuguese but not the Moroccan sample.
Conclusion: Sleep quality appears to be severely affected in women with a migration background. Our data suggest that non-integration may be less stressful than integration. This result points to possible benefits of non-integration. The high preference for an information-seeking coping style may be related to the process of migration, representing the attempt at regaining control over an uncontrollable and stressful life situation.
Dreams and psychosis share several important features regarding symptoms and underlying neurobiology, which is helpful in constructing a testable model of, for example, schizophrenia and delirium. The purpose of the present communication is to discuss two major concepts in dreaming and psychosis that have received much attention in the recent literature: insight and dissociation. Both phenomena are considered functions of higher order consciousness because they involve metacognition in the form of reflective thought and attempted control of negative emotional impact. Insight in dreams is a core criterion for lucid dreams. Lucid dreams are usually accompanied by attempts to control the dream plot and dissociative elements akin to depersonalization and derealization. These concepts are also relevant in psychotic illness. Whereas insightfulness can be considered innocuous in lucid dreaming and even advantageous in psychosis, the concept of dissociation is still unresolved. The present review compares correlates and functions of insight and dissociation in lucid dreaming and psychosis. This is helpful in understanding the two concepts with regard to psychological function as well as neurophysiology.
Theoretischer Hintergrund: Für die Behandlung der Posttraumatischen Belastungsstörung (PTBS) im Jugend- und jungen Erwachsenenalter liegen diverse evidenzbasierte Interventionen (EBIs) vor. Fragestellung: Inwiefern sind EBIs für Jugendliche und junge Erwachsene mit PTBS nach sexualisierter und physischer Gewalt in Deutschland verfügbar? Methode: Es wurden die Daten von 39 Teilnehmenden einer multizentrischen Behandlungsstudie analysiert, die für die Diagnose einer PTBS ambulante Behandlungsempfehlungen erhalten hatten. Ergebnisse: In den folgenden sieben Monaten erhielten 21 der Teilnehmenden eine Behandlung; bei nur acht wurden in deren Rahmen die traumatischen Erfahrungen adressiert. Alle Teilnehmenden verbesserten sich hinsichtlich der PTBS-Symptomatik unabhängig von der Art der Behandlung. Diskussion und Schlussfolgerung: Die Ergebnisse weisen auf Barrieren für den Zugang zu EBIs in unserer Stichprobe hin. Künftige Forschung sollte die Hintergründe für diese Barrieren fokussieren.
Children with reading and/or spelling disorders have increased rates of behavioral and emotional problems and combinations of these. Some studies also find increased rates of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), conduct disorder, anxiety disorder, and depression. However, the comorbidities of, e.g., arithmetic disorders with ADHD, anxiety disorder, and depression have been addressed only rarely. The current study explored the probability of children with specific learning disorders (SLD) in reading, spelling, and/or arithmetic to also have anxiety disorder, depression, ADHD, and/or conduct disorder. The sample consisted of 3,014 German children from grades 3 and 4 (mean age 9;9 years) who completed tests assessing reading, spelling as well as arithmetic achievement and intelligence via a web-based application. Psychopathology was assessed using questionnaires filled in by the parents. In children with a SLD we found high rates of anxiety disorder (21%), depression (28%), ADHD (28%), and conduct disorder (22%). Children with SLD in multiple learning domains had a higher risk for psychopathology and had a broader spectrum of psychopathology than children with an isolated SLD. The results highlight the importance of screening for and diagnosing psychiatric comorbidities in children with SLD.
Background: A growing number of studies are questioning the validity of current DSM diagnoses, either as "discrete" or distinct mental disorders and/or as phenotypically homogeneous syndromes. In this study, we investigated how symptom domains in patients with a main diagnosis of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), panic disorder (PD) and social anxiety disorder (SAD) coaggregate. We predicted that symptom domains would be unrelated to DSM diagnostic categories and less likely to cluster with each other as severity increases.
Methods: One-hundred eight treatment seeking patients with a main diagnosis of OCD, SAD or PD were assessed with the Dimensional Obsessive-Compulsive Scale (DOCS), the Social Phobia Inventory (SPIN), the Panic and Agoraphobia Scale (PAS), the Anxiety Sensitivity Index-Revised (ASI-R), and the Beck Depression and Anxiety Inventories (BDI and BAI, respectively). Subscores generated by each scale (herein termed "symptom domains") were used to categorize individuals into mild, moderate and severe subgroups through K-means clusterization and subsequently analysed by means of multiple correspondence analysis.
Results: Broadly, we observed that symptom domains of OCD, SAD or PD tend to cluster on the basis of their severities rather than their DSM diagnostic labels. In particular, symptom domains and disorders were grouped into (1) a single mild "neurotic" syndrome characterized by multiple, closely related and co-occurring mild symptom domains; (2) two moderate (complicated and uncomplicated) "neurotic" syndromes (the former associated with panic disorder); and (3) severe but dispersed "neurotic" symptom domains.
Conlusion: Our findings suggest that symptoms domains of treatment seeking patients with OCD and anxiety disorders tend to be better conceptualized in terms of severity rather than rigid diagnostic boundaries.
Dual coding theories of knowledge suggest that meaning is represented in the brain by a double code, which comprises language-derived representations in the Anterior Temporal Lobe and sensory-derived representations in perceptual and motor regions. This approach predicts that concrete semantic features should activate both codes, whereas abstract features rely exclusively on the linguistic code. Using magnetoencephalography (MEG), we adopted a temporally resolved multiple regression approach to identify the contribution of abstract and concrete semantic predictors to the underlying brain signal. Results evidenced early involvement of anterior-temporal and inferior-frontal brain areas in both abstract and concrete semantic information encoding. At later stages, occipito-temporal regions showed greater responses to concrete compared to abstract features. The present findings shed new light on the temporal dynamics of abstract and concrete semantic representations in the brain and suggest that the concreteness of words processed first with a transmodal/linguistic code, housed in frontotemporal brain systems, and only after with an imagistic/sensorimotor code in perceptual and motor regions.
In the present work, mismatch negativity (MMN) was used to examine the contribution of spectral vs. temporal perceptual features to vowel length discrimination in children and adults. Three age groups (adults vs. 9-10 years vs. 10-11 years olds) have been taken to examine developmental effects on vowel length perception. Natural (i.e., spectrotemporal) vowel length differences were compared with (artificially modified) stimulus pairs varying only in temporal or spectral characteristics to contrast spectral, temporal and spectrotemporal processing.
The result indicates that, while adults integrate spectral and temporal aspects of the speech signal in an additive way, children of 9-10 years of age sequentially process both features. However, vowel length processing is found to become adultlike at the age of 10-11 years.
Aktuell werden im Bund-Länder-Programm für bessere Studienbedingungen und mehr Qualität in der Lehre hochschuldidaktische Programme vieler deutscher Universitäten und Hochschulen auf 5+5 Jahre gefördert. Nach Abschluss der ersten fünf Jahre müssen die hochschuldidaktischen Maß-nahmen in einer Wirksamkeitsmessung bestehen, wenn sie weitere fünf Jahre Förderung erhalten wollen. Dieser Beitrag berichtet über einige bekannte Wirksamkeitsstudien der hochschuldidaktischen Forschung, zeigt messmethodische Ansätze auf und beleuchtet Empfehlungen zur Generierung weiterer Messmethoden, die zur Evaluation der ersten fünf Jahre eingesetzt werden könnten.
Während der wissenschaftliche Nachwuchs im Forschungsbereich strategisch und wissenschaftlich fundiert samt diversen Prüfungen (Bachelor, Master, Promotion, ggf. auch Habilitation) ausgebildet wird, existiert im Bereich der Lehre nichts auch nur annährend Vergleichbares. Die übliche „Qualifizierung“ des Nachwuchslehrenden findet meist nur „On-the-job“ (vgl. Conradi, 1983) statt, d.h. durch eigenes Ausprobieren nach Beobachtung anderer Lehrender während des eigenen Studiums. Unter guten Bedingungen hat der Lehrende vorab oder begleitend Weiterbildungen zu guter Lehre besucht. Eine strategische Einbettung dieser Personalentwicklungsmaßnahmen, wie es seitens der Forschung intendiert wird, ist nicht vorhanden. Dieser Beitrag stellt mögliche Formen vor und führt exemplarisch eine darunter näher aus.
Cognitive stability and flexibility are core functions in the successful pursuit of behavioral goals. While there is evidence for a common frontoparietal network underlying both functions and for a key role of dopamine in the modulation of flexible versus stable behavior, the exact neurocomputational mechanisms underlying those executive functions and their adaptation to environmental demands are still unclear. In this work we study the neurocomputational mechanisms underlying cue based task switching (flexibility) and distractor inhibition (stability) in a paradigm specifically designed to probe both functions. We develop a physiologically plausible, explicit model of neural networks that maintain the currently active task rule in working memory and implement the decision process. We simplify the four-choice decision network to a nonlinear drift-diffusion process that we canonically derive from a generic winner-take-all network model. By fitting our model to the behavioral data of individual subjects, we can reproduce their full behavior in terms of decisions and reaction time distributions in baseline as well as distractor inhibition and switch conditions. Furthermore, we predict the individual hemodynamic response timecourse of the rule-representing network and localize it to a frontoparietal network including the inferior frontal junction area and the intraparietal sulcus, using functional magnetic resonance imaging. This refines the understanding of task-switch-related frontoparietal brain activity as reflecting attractor-like working memory representations of task rules. Finally, we estimate the subject-specific stability of the rule-representing attractor states in terms of the minimal action associated with a transition between different rule states in the phase-space of the fitted models. This stability measure correlates with switching-specific thalamocorticostriatal activation, i.e., with a system associated with flexible working memory updating and dopaminergic modulation of cognitive flexibility. These results show that stochastic dynamical systems can implement the basic computations underlying cognitive stability and flexibility and explain neurobiological bases of individual differences.
Event-related potentials (ERPs) are widely used in basic neuroscience and in clinical diagnostic procedures. In contrast, neurophysiological insights from ERPs have been limited, as several different mechanisms lead to ERPs. Apart from stereotypically repeated responses (additive evoked responses), these mechanisms are asymmetric amplitude modulations and phase-resetting of ongoing oscillatory activity. Therefore, a method is needed that differentiates between these mechanisms and moreover quantifies the stability of a response. We propose a constrained subspace independent component analysis that exploits the multivariate information present in the all-to-all relationship of recordings over trials. Our method identifies additive evoked activity and quantifies its stability over trials. We evaluate identification performance for biologically plausible simulation data and two neurophysiological test cases: Local field potential (LFP) recordings from a visuo-motor-integration task in the awake behaving macaque and magnetoencephalography (MEG) recordings of steady-state visual evoked fields (SSVEFs). In the LFPs we find additive evoked response contributions in visual areas V2/4 but not in primary motor cortex A4, although visually triggered ERPs were also observed in area A4. MEG-SSVEFs were mainly created by additive evoked response contributions. Our results demonstrate that the identification of additive evoked response contributions is possible both in invasive and in non-invasive electrophysiological recordings.
Generating predictions about environmental regularities, relying on these predictions, and updating these predictions when there is a violation from incoming sensory evidence are considered crucial functions of our cognitive system for being adaptive in the future. The violation of a prediction can result in a prediction error (PE) which affects subsequent memory processing. In our preregistered studies, we examined the effects of different levels of PE on episodic memory. Participants were asked to generate predictions about the associations between sequentially presented cue-target pairs, which were violated later with individual items in three PE levels, namely low, medium, and high PE. Hereafter, participants were asked to provide old/new judgments on the items with confidence ratings, and to retrieve the paired cues. Our results indicated a better recognition memory for low PE than medium and high PE levels, suggesting a memory congruency effect. On the other hand, there was no evidence of memory benefit for high PE level. Together, these novel and coherent findings strongly suggest that high PE does not guarantee better memory.
When experienced in-person, engagement with art has been associated with positive outcomes in well-being and mental health. However, especially in the last decade, art viewing, cultural engagement, and even ‘trips’ to museums have begun to take place online, via computers, smartphones, tablets, or in virtual reality. Similarly, to what has been reported for in-person visits, online art engagements—easily accessible from personal devices—have also been associated to well-being impacts. However, a broader understanding of for whom and how online-delivered art might have well-being impacts is still lacking. In the present study, we used a Monet interactive art exhibition from Google Arts and Culture to deepen our understanding of the role of pleasure, meaning, and individual differences in the responsiveness to art. Beyond replicating the previous group-level effects, we confirmed our pre-registered hypothesis that trait-level inter-individual differences in aesthetic responsiveness predict some of the benefits that online art viewing has on well-being and further that such inter-individual differences at the trait level were mediated by subjective experiences of pleasure and especially meaningfulness felt during the online-art intervention. The role that participants' experiences play as a possible mechanism during art interventions is discussed in light of recent theoretical models.
A hypothesis regarding the development of imitation learning is presented that is rooted in intrinsic motivations. It is derived from a recently proposed form of intrinsically motivated learning (IML) for efficient coding in active perception, wherein an agent learns to perform actions with its sense organs to facilitate efficient encoding of the sensory data. To this end, actions of the sense organs that improve the encoding of the sensory data trigger an internally generated reinforcement signal. Here it is argued that the same IML mechanism might also support the development of imitation when general actions beyond those of the sense organs are considered: The learner first observes a tutor performing a behavior and learns a model of the the behavior's sensory consequences. The learner then acts itself and receives an internally generated reinforcement signal reflecting how well the sensory consequences of its own behavior are encoded by the sensory model. Actions that are more similar to those of the tutor will lead to sensory signals that are easier to encode and produce a higher reinforcement signal. Through this, the learner's behavior is progressively tuned to make the sensory consequences of its actions match the learned sensory model. I discuss this mechanism in the context of human language acquisition and bird song learning where similar ideas have been proposed. The suggested mechanism also offers an account for the development of mirror neurons and makes a number of predictions. Overall, it establishes a connection between principles of efficient coding, intrinsic motivations and imitation.
Numerous studies reported a strong link between working memory capacity (WMC) and fluid intelligence (Gf), although views differ in respect to how close these two constructs are related to each other. In the present study, we used a WMC task with five levels of task demands to assess the relationship between WMC and Gf by means of a new methodological approach referred to as fixed-links modeling. Fixed-links models belong to the family of confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) and are of particular interest for experimental, repeated-measures designs. With this technique, processes systematically varying across task conditions can be disentangled from processes unaffected by the experimental manipulation. Proceeding from the assumption that experimental manipulation in a WMC task leads to increasing demands on WMC, the processes systematically varying across task conditions can be assumed to be WMC-specific. Processes not varying across task conditions, on the other hand, are probably independent of WMC. Fixed-links models allow for representing these two kinds of processes by two independent latent variables. In contrast to traditional CFA where a common latent variable is derived from the different task conditions, fixed-links models facilitate a more precise or purified representation of the WMC-related processes of interest. By using fixed-links modeling to analyze data of 200 participants, we identified a non-experimental latent variable, representing processes that remained constant irrespective of the WMC task conditions, and an experimental latent variable which reflected processes that varied as a function of experimental manipulation. This latter variable represents the increasing demands on WMC and, hence, was considered a purified measure of WMC controlled for the constant processes. Fixed-links modeling showed that both the purified measure of WMC (β = .48) as well as the constant processes involved in the task (β = .45) were related to Gf. Taken together, these two latent variables explained the same portion of variance of Gf as a single latent variable obtained by traditional CFA (β = .65) indicating that traditional CFA causes an overestimation of the effective relationship between WMC and Gf. Thus, fixed-links modeling provides a feasible method for a more valid investigation of the functional relationship between specific constructs.
In transferring the concept of flow to the context of fiction reading a new approach to understanding the evolvement of reading pleasure is provided. This study presents the Reading Flow Short Scale (RFSS), the first reading-specific flow measurement tool. The RFSS was applied to 229 readers via online survey after 20 min of reading in self-selected novels. In a systematic analysis of psychometric properties, the RFSS’ factorial structure, reliability, and associations with theoretically related constructs were examined. As expected, the RFSS showed a two-factor structure, positive correlations with variables related to reading pleasure and flow, and an inverted U-shaped association with perceived fit between reader skills and text challenge. Comparisons of confirmatory factor analysis model confirmed that RFSS items loaded on different latent variables than items assessing other narrative engagement concepts, namely presence, identification, suspense, and cognitive mastery, and hence distinctly capture flow states in fiction reading. In sum, our findings indicate that the RFSS is a useful instrument for assessing flow states in fiction reading, thereby enriching the portfolio of measurement instruments in reading research.
Spontaneous brain activity builds the foundation for human cognitive processing during external demands. A huge number of neuroimaging studies identified specific characteristics of spontaneous (intrinsic) brain dynamics to be associated with individual differences in general cognitive ability, i.e., intelligence. However, respective research is inherently limited by low temporal resolution, thus, preventing conclusions about neural fluctuations within the range of milliseconds. Here, we used resting-state electroencephalographical (EEG) recordings from 144 healthy adults to test whether individual differences in intelligence (Raven’s Advanced Progressive Matrices scores) can be predicted from the complexity of temporally highly resolved intrinsic brain signals. We compared different operationalizations of brain signal complexity (multiscale entropy, Shannon entropy, Fuzzy entropy, and specific characteristics of microstates) in regard to their relation to intelligence. The results indicate that associations between brain signal complexity measures and intelligence are of small effect sizes (r ~ .20) and vary across different spatial and temporal scales. Specifically, higher intelligence scores were associated with lower complexity in local aspects of neural processing, and less activity in task-negative brain regions belonging to the default-mode network. Finally, we combined multiple measures of brain signal complexity to show that individual intelligence scores can be significantly predicted with a multimodal model within the sample (10-fold cross-validation) as well as in an independent sample (external replication, N = 57). In sum, our results highlight the temporal and spatial dependency of associations between intelligence and intrinsic brain dynamics, proposing multimodal approaches as promising means for future neuroscientific research on complex human traits.
Significance Statement Spontaneous brain activity builds the foundation for intelligent processing - the ability of humans to adapt to various cognitive demands. Using resting-state EEG, we extracted multiple aspects of temporally highly resolved intrinsic brain dynamics to investigate their relationship with individual differences in intelligence. Single associations were of small effect sizes and varied critically across spatial and temporal scales. However, combining multiple measures in a multimodal cross-validated prediction model, allows to significantly predict individual intelligence scores in unseen participants. Our study adds to a growing body of research suggesting that observable associations between complex human traits and neural parameters might be rather small and proposes multimodal prediction approaches as promising tool to derive robust brain-behavior relations despite limited sample sizes.
Spontaneous brain activity builds the foundation for human cognitive processing during external demands. Neuroimaging studies based on functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) identified specific characteristics of spontaneous (intrinsic) brain dynamics to be associated with individual differences in general cognitive ability, i.e., intelligence. However, fMRI research is inherently limited by low temporal resolution, thus, preventing conclusions about neural fluctuations within the range of milliseconds. Here, we used resting-state electroencephalographical (EEG) recordings from 144 healthy adults to test whether individual differences in intelligence (Raven’s Advanced Progressive Matrices scores) can be predicted from the complexity of temporally highly resolved intrinsic brain signals. We compared different operationalizations of brain signal complexity (multiscale entropy, Shannon entropy, Fuzzy entropy, and specific characteristics of microstates) regarding their relation to intelligence. The results indicate that associations between brain signal complexity measures and intelligence are of small effect sizes (r ~ .20) and vary across different spatial and temporal scales. Specifically, higher intelligence scores were associated with lower complexity in local aspects of neural processing, and less activity in task-negative brain regions belonging to the defaultmode network. Finally, we combined multiple measures of brain signal complexity to show that individual intelligence scores can be significantly predicted with a multimodal model within the sample (10-fold cross-validation) as well as in an independent sample (external replication, N = 57). In sum, our results highlight the temporal and spatial dependency of associations between intelligence and intrinsic brain dynamics, proposing multimodal approaches as promising means for future neuroscientific research on complex human traits.
Significance Statement Spontaneous brain activity builds the foundation for intelligent processing - the ability of humans to adapt to various cognitive demands. Using resting-state EEG, we extracted multiple aspects of temporally highly resolved intrinsic brain dynamics to investigate their relationship with individual differences in intelligence. Single associations were of small effect sizes and varied critically across spatial and temporal scales. However, combining multiple measures in a multimodal cross-validated prediction model, allows to significantly predict individual intelligence scores in unseen participants. Our study adds to a growing body of research suggesting that observable associations between complex human traits and neural parameters might be rather small and proposes multimodal prediction approaches as promising tool to derive robust brain-behavior relations despite limited sample sizes.
Spontaneous brain activity builds the foundation for human cognitive processing during external demands. Neuroimaging studies based on functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) identified specific characteristics of spontaneous (intrinsic) brain dynamics to be associated with individual differences in general cognitive ability, i.e., intelligence. However, fMRI research is inherently limited by low temporal resolution, thus, preventing conclusions about neural fluctuations within the range of milliseconds. Here, we used resting-state electroencephalographical (EEG) recordings from 144 healthy adults to test whether individual differences in intelligence (Raven’s Advanced Progressive Matrices scores) can be predicted from the complexity of temporally highly resolved intrinsic brain signals. We compared different operationalizations of brain signal complexity (multiscale entropy, Shannon entropy, Fuzzy entropy, and specific characteristics of microstates) regarding their relation to intelligence. The results indicate that associations between brain signal complexity measures and intelligence are of small effect sizes (r ∼ 0.20) and vary across different spatial and temporal scales. Specifically, higher intelligence scores were associated with lower complexity in local aspects of neural processing, and less activity in task-negative brain regions belonging to the default-mode network. Finally, we combined multiple measures of brain signal complexity to show that individual intelligence scores can be significantly predicted with a multimodal model within the sample (10-fold cross-validation) as well as in an independent sample (external replication, N = 57). In sum, our results highlight the temporal and spatial dependency of associations between intelligence and intrinsic brain dynamics, proposing multimodal approaches as promising means for future neuroscientific research on complex human traits.
Amblyopie (griech.: amblyopia = stumpfes Auge) bezeichnet eine nichtorganische Sehschwäche eines, oder deutlich seltener beider, Augen, die durch eine beeinträchtige Seherfahrung während der frühkindlichen Entwicklung des visuellen Systems entsteht. Die durch die Amblyopie entstehenden Beeinträchtigungen sind sehr gravierend und können die Sehschärfe, die binokulare Interaktion sowie die Kontrastsensitivität betreffen. Darüber hinaus können auch Fehllokalisationen visueller Reize sowie ausgeprägte räumliche Verzerrungen und zeitliche Instabilitäten beobachtet werden (Sireteanu, 2000a). Zielsetzung der vorliegenden Arbeit war es, die funktionellen Defizite in der amblyopen Sicht in drei verschiedenen Studien zu untersuchen und Hinweise auf die Beeinträchtigungen des ventralen und auch dorsalen kortikalen Verarbeitungspfades zu finden. Die erste Untersuchung, an der 22 amblyope bzw. alternierende Versuchspersonen teilnahmen, befasst sich mit der qualitativen Erfassung der amblyopen visuellen Wahrnehmung bei vier standardisierten Reizmustern. Bei allen Versuchsteilnehmern treten Verzerrungen auf, die jedoch schwächer sind, als in der Literatur bislang beschrieben. Die ausgeprägtesten Verzerrungen finden sich bei der Gruppe der Schielamblyopen. Unabhängig von der Ätiologie zeigt sich jedoch, dass das Ausmaß der Verzerrung bei stärkerer Amblyopie größer ist. Die von Barrett et al. (2003) vorgeschlagenen Kategorien konnten weitgehend repliziert werden und erweiter werden (Schattierungen, partiell vergrößerte bzw. verkleinerte Wahrnehmungen sowie Farbwahrnehmungen). In der zweiten Studie, an der 22 amblyope bzw. alternierende Versuchspersonen und neun normalsichtige Kontrollprobanden teilnahmen, wurde das zweidimensionale Verzerrungsmuster anhand einer Punkt-Lokalisations-Aufgabe im zentralen visuellen Feld untersucht. Schieler mit und ohne Anisometropie zeigen konsistente Verzerrungen, in Form von Erweiterung, Einschrumpfung oder Drehung von Bereichen des getesteten visuellen Feldes. Reine anisometrope Amblyope und Schieler mit alternierender Fixation weisen eine erhöhte räumliche Unsicherheit, jedoch keine konsistenten Verzerrungen auf. In der dritten Studie, einem Streckenteilungsparadigma, nahmen 23 amblyope bzw. alternierende Versuchspersonen sowie sieben normalsichtige Kontrollprobanden teil. Die Aufgabe bestand darin, eine horizontale Strecke in der Mitte zu teilen. Normalsichtige Kontrollprobanden weisen eine konsistente Linksverschiebung („Pseudoneglect“), Schieler mit und ohne Anisometropie hingegen eine konsistente Rechtsverschiebung („Minineglect“) auf. Die Rechtsverschiebung ist bei beiden Augen vorhanden, jedoch beim amblyopen Auge stärker ausgeprägt. Reine anisometrope Amblyope zeigen ähnliche Effekte das amblyope Auge betreffend. Die Gruppe der Schieler mit alternierender Fixation unterscheidet sich nicht signifikant von der Kontrollgruppe. Die Ergebnisse der durchgeführten Studien bestätigen und ergänzen die bekannten Beeinträchtigungen des ventralen visuellen Pfades und liefern darüber hinaus Hinweise auf eine funktionelle Dysfunktion des dorsalen visuellen Pfades.
Can prediction error explain predictability effects on the N1 during picture-word verification?
(2023)
Do early effects of predictability in visual word recognition reflect prediction error? Electrophysiological research investigating word processing has demonstrated predictability effects in the N1, or first negative component of the event-related potential (ERP). However, findings regarding the magnitude of effects and potential interactions of predictability with lexical variables have been inconsistent. Moreover, past studies have typically used categorical designs with relatively small samples and relied on by-participant analyses. Nevertheless, reports have generally shown that predicted words elicit less negative-going (i.e., lower amplitude) N1s, a pattern consistent with a simple predictive coding account. In our preregistered study, we tested this account via the interaction between prediction magnitude and certainty. A picture-word verification paradigm was implemented in which pictures were followed by tightly matched picture-congruent or picture-incongruent written nouns. The predictability of target (picture-congruent) nouns was manipulated continuously based on norms of association between a picture and its name. ERPs from 68 participants revealed a pattern of effects opposite to that expected under a simple predictive coding framework.
Can prediction error explain predictability effects on the N1 during picture-word verification?
(2024)
Do early effects of predictability in visual word recognition reflect prediction error? Electrophysiological research investigating word processing has demonstrated predictability effects in the N1, or first negative component of the event-related potential (ERP). However, findings regarding the magnitude of effects and potential interactions of predictability with lexical variables have been inconsistent. Moreover, past studies have typically used categorical designs with relatively small samples and relied on by-participant analyses. Nevertheless, reports have generally shown that predicted words elicit less negative-going (i.e., lower amplitude) N1s, a pattern consistent with a simple predictive coding account. In our preregistered study, we tested this account via the interaction between prediction magnitude and certainty. A picture-word verification paradigm was implemented in which pictures were followed by tightly matched picture-congruent or picture-incongruent written nouns. The predictability of target (picture-congruent) nouns was manipulated continuously based on norms of association between a picture and its name. ERPs from 68 participants revealed a pattern of effects opposite to that expected under a simple predictive coding framework.
To prepare for an impending event of unknown temporal distribution, humans internally increase the perceived probability of event onset as time elapses. This effect is termed the hazard rate of events. We tested how the neural encoding of hazard rate changes by providing human participants with prior information on temporal event probability. We recorded behavioral and electroencephalographic (EEG) data while participants listened to continuously repeating five-tone sequences, composed of four standard tones followed by a non-target deviant tone, delivered at slow (1.6 Hz) or fast (4 Hz) rates. The task was to detect a rare target tone, which equiprobably appeared at either position two, three or four of the repeating sequence. In this design, potential target position acts as a proxy for elapsed time. For participants uninformed about the target’s distribution, elapsed time to uncertain target onset increased response speed, displaying a significant hazard rate effect at both slow and fast stimulus rates. However, only in fast sequences did prior information about the target’s temporal distribution interact with elapsed time, suppressing the hazard rate. Importantly, in the fast, uninformed condition pre-stimulus power synchronization in the beta band (Beta 1, 15–19 Hz) predicted the hazard rate of response times. Prior information suppressed pre-stimulus power synchronization in the same band, while still significantly predicting response times. We conclude that Beta 1 power does not simply encode the hazard rate, but—more generally—internal estimates of temporal event probability based upon contextual information.
Die vorliegende quasiexperimentelle Studie geht der Frage nach, welche kognitiven Merkmale sich im hohen Alter als trennscharf für die Abgrenzung einer beginnenden Alzheimer-Demenz von einer Major-Depression erweisen. 186 hochaltrige Patienten, die von April 2001 bis April 2007 in einer geriatrischen Abteilung eines Akutkrankenhauses stationär aufgenommen waren, wurden nach einem bewährten Prozedere fünf Untersuchungsgruppen (Kontrollgruppe, Gruppe der Major-Depression, Gruppe der leichten kognitiven Beeinträchtigung, Gruppe der Alzheimer-Demenz und Gruppe der Alzheimer-Demenz mit einer gleichzeitig bestehenden Major-Depression) zugewiesen. Eine sich anschließende neuropsychologische Untersuchung erfasste kognitive Leistungen wie die verzögerte Reproduktion von verbalem Material, Intrusionsfehler, visuell-räumliche Leistungen, formallexikalische und semantische Wortflüssigkeitsleistungen sowie Benennleistungen. Es zeigte sich, dass kognitive Merkmale wie das mittelfristige verbale Neugedächtnis, geprüft über die verzögerte Reproduktionsrate, die semantische Wortflüssigkeit sowie visuelle Benennleistungen wirksam zwischen einer beginnenden Alzheimer-Demenz und einer Major-Depression unterscheiden. Wenig aussagefähig sind dagegen eine quantitative Analyse von Intrusionsfehlern und eine Prüfung visuell-räumlicher Leistungen mit oder ohne expliziten Sprachbezug. Das in der Literatur vielfach beschriebene spezifische kognitive Profil der Depression der deutlich verminderten exekutiven Leistungen konnte in der hier zugrunde liegenden Studie nicht nachgewiesen werden. Kognitive Plastizitätskennwerte wie Retest- oder Trainingseffekte haben sich im Funktionsbereich des Benennens als differenzialdiagnostisch nicht bedeutsam erwiesen. Auch weisen Trainingseffekte keine größere prognostische Validität auf als Retesteffekte. Interessanterweise konnten bei Alzheimer-Patienten im Funktionsbereich des Benennens erwartungskonträre Retest- und Trainingseffekte nicht unerheblichen Ausmaßes gefunden werden. Diese sind auf weitgehend erhaltene perzeptive Priming-Effekte zurückzuführen und weisen bei Alzheimer-Patienten auf Lernressourcen hin, die rehabilitativ genutzt werden sollten. Verminderte konzeptuelle Priming-Effekte deuten auf eine beginnende Alzheimer-Erkrankung hin, was der Differenzialdiagnostik eine neue Perspektive eröffnet. Da ein zufälliges, gemeinsames Auftreten der beiden Krankheitsbilder Major-Depression und beginnende Alzheimer-Demenz nicht auszuschließen ist, bleibt trotz einer sorgfältigen evidenzbasierten Diagnostik insbesondere bei älteren oder hochbetagten Patienten die Abgrenzung von einer beginnenden Alzheimer-Demenz und einer Major-Depression schwierig.
Treatment outcomes of a CBT-based group intervention for adolescents with internet use disorders
(2021)
Background and aims: Instances of Internet use disorders (IUD) including Internet gaming disorder (IGD) and non-gaming pathological Internet use (ng-PIU) have the extent that they are now a growing mental health issue. Individuals suffering from IUD show a large range of symptoms, high comorbidities and impairments in different areas of life. To date there is a lack of efficient and evidence-based treatment programs for such adolescents. The present registered single-arm trial (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT03582839) aimed to investigate the long-term effects of a brief manualized cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) program for adolescents with IUD. Methods: N = 54 patients (16.7% female), aged 9–19 years (M = 13.48, SD = 1.72) received the CBT group program PROTECT+. IUD symptom severity (primary outcome variable) as well as comorbid symptoms, risk-related variables and potentially protective skills (secondary outcome variables) were assessed at pretest, posttest, as well as 4 and 12 months after admission. Results: Patients showed a significant reduction in IUD symptom severity at the 12-month follow-up. Effect sizes were medium to large depending on the measure. Beyond the statistical significance, the clinical significance was confirmed using the reliable change index. Secondary outcome variables showed a significant reduction in self-reported depression, social anxiety, performance anxiety and school anxiety as well as in parental-reported general psychopathology. Discussion and conclusions: The present study shows long-term effects of a manual-based CBT treatment for adolescents suffering from IUD. The results indicate that even a 4-session brief intervention can achieve a medium to large effect over 12 months. Future work is needed to confirm the efficacy within a randomized controlled trial (RCT).
Recognizing individual faces is an important human ability that highly depends on experience. This is reflected in the so called other-race effect; adults are better at recognizing faces from their own ethnic group, while very young infants do not show this specialization yet. Two experiments examined whether 3-year-old children from two different cultural backgrounds show the other-race effect. In Experiment 1, German children (N = 41) were presented with a forced choice paradigm where they were asked to recognize female Caucasian or African faces. In Experiment 2, 3-year-olds from Cameroon (N = 66) participated in a similar task using the same stimulus material. In both cultures the other-race effect was present; children were better at recognizing individual faces from their own ethnic group. In addition, German children performed at a higher overall level of accuracy than Cameroonians. The results are discussed in relation to cultural aspects in particular.
Objectives: Within a randomized controlled trial contrasting the outcome of manualized cognitive-behavioral (CBT) and short term psychodynamic therapy (PDT) compared to a waiting list condition (the SOPHO-Net trial), we set out to test whether self-reported attachment characteristics change during the treatments and if these changes differ between treatments.
Research design and methods: 495 patients from the SOPHO-Net trial (54.5% female, mean age 35.2 years) who were randomized to either CBT, PDT or waiting list (WL) completed the partner-related revised Experiences in Close Relationships Questionnaire (ECR-R) before and after treatment and at 6 and 12 months follow-up. The Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale (LSAS) was administered at pre-treatment, post-treatment, and at 6-month and 1-year follow-up. ECR-R scores were first compared to a representative healthy sample (n = 2508) in order to demonstrate that the clinical sample differed significantly from the non-clinical sample with respect to attachment anxiety and avoidance.
Results: LSAS scores correlated significantly with both ECR-R subscales. Post-therapy, patients treated with CBT revealed significant changes in attachment anxiety and avoidance whereas patients treated with PDT showed no significant changes. Changes between post-treatment and the two follow-ups were significant in both conditions, with minimal (insignificant) differences between treatments at the 12- month follow-up.
Conclusions: The current study supports recent reviews of mostly naturalistic studies indicating changes in attachment as a result of psychotherapy. Although there were differences between conditions at the end of treatment, these largely disappeared during the follow-up period which is line with the other results of the SOPHO-NET trial.
Trial registration: Controlled-trials.com ISRCTN53517394
Background: Prolonged Grief Disorder (PGD) is a distinct syndrome that follows bereavement. It is different from other mental disorders and is characterized by symptoms such as yearning for the bereaved, or intense emotional pain or distress. Violent loss is one major risk factor for the development of PGD.
Objectives: PGD has been studied in different populations, mostly in small samples, with only a few of them being representative. Although research highlighted that traumatic experiences paired with challenges related to migration make refugees particularly vulnerable to PGD, PGD has only rarely been studied in refugees. Thus, this article a) examines the prevalence of PGD in female refugees in Germany according to the criteria proposed by Prigerson and colleagues in 2009, and b) associates PGD with other common psychopathology (e.g. anxiety, depression, somatization and trauma).
Method: A total of 106 female refugees were assessed for bereavement and PGD. Of these 106 individuals, 85 were interviewed using the Prolonged Grief Disorder Scale (PG-13). Symptoms of anxiety and depression were assessed by the Hopkins Symptom Checklist-25 (HSCL-25), somatization was assessed by the Somatization Subscale of the Symptom-Checklist-90 (SCL-90), and the number of witnessed and experienced trauma was assessed by the Posttraumatic Diagnostic Scale (PDS/HTQ).
Results: Ninety of the 106 participants had experienced bereavement, and among those, 9.41% met criteria for PGD. The most frequent PGD symptoms were bitterness, longing or yearning for the bereaved, and lack of acceptance of the loss. Furthermore, grief symptoms were significantly associated with symptoms of depression, anxiety, somatization, and the number of experienced traumatic events.
Conclusion: The PGD prevalence rate found corresponds with previous studies, demonstrating that prevalence rates for PGD are especially high in refugees. High prevalence rates of bereavement as well as PGD highlight the need for assessment and specifically tailored treatment of PGD in refugees. PGD goes along with significant psychopathology, which further emphasizes the need for treatment.
The construct diversity describes the collective amount of differences among members within a social unit. The present dissertation is based on the assumption that, through engagement with diversity, people acquire an understanding of what role diversity plays in the societies, organizations, work groups, or other social units they are part of. This understanding of the role diversity plays in a given social unit provides a vantage point from which people will engage with diversity in the future. These vantage points from which people engage with diversity are the general subject matter of the present dissertation. Two main research questions are addressed in this regard: First, whether the role diversity is given in a particular context does have effects on groups and the individual members therein. Second, if such effects exist, it seeks to explore the processes and mechanisms they are based on. Both questions are addressed from different perspectives in the three main chapters of this dissertation. Chapter 5 contains two meta-analyses on the effects of diversity beliefs and diversity climates. Diversity beliefs are individual attitudes that describe the degree to which diversity is ascribed an instrumental value for achieving beneficial outcomes or avoiding detrimental ones. Diversity climates depict such a value of diversity on the group-level. Building on the social identity approach, I explain how diversity beliefs and climates can obviate diversity’s detrimental effects and foster beneficial ones. As both diversity beliefs and climates can cause such effects, they are considered together in the main analyses in the chapter. In the first part of the chapter, a meta-analysis on these moderator effects of diversity beliefs/climates is presented (k = 23). The majority of studies that addressed such effects reported significant results. The patterns of these results showed that, in general, diversity will be more positively related to beneficial outcomes the more it is valued. However, the analysis also revealed that there are at least two types of patterns of this moderation. So far, it cannot be explained which pattern will occur under what circumstances. In the second part of the chapter, a meta-analysis on the main effects of diversity beliefs/climates on beneficial outcomes is presented (k = 71). These effects did not receive much attention in the primary studies. Based on the social identity approach and the fact that diversity is a ubiquitous feature of modern organizations, I argue that they are important nonetheless. The meta-analysis revealed a significant positive main effect of diversity beliefs on beneficial outcomes (r = .25; p < .0001). However, the effect sizes varied considerably across studies. Both moderator and main effects were found across a broad array of outcomes, study designs, levels of analysis, and operationalizations of the constructs involved. They were found irrespective of whether diversity beliefs or diversity climates were considered. The heterogeneity of results in the meta-analyses suggests that there is still much to be learned about when differences in vantage points from which people engage with diversity will have an effect and about the processes that underlie these effects. Chapter 6 is, therefore, predominantly concerned with these underlying processes. Most of the previous research has treated pro-diversity beliefs and pro-similarity beliefs as opposite poles of one underlying continuum. There is, however, evidence that people can hold both types of beliefs simultaneously. Therefore, I propose that both diversity in certain aspects and similarity in other aspects can simultaneously constitute valid and valued parts of an organization’s identity, and that, hence, identifying with the organization can create two forms of solidarity among the employees: organic solidarity – based on meaningfully and synergistically interrelated differences, and mechanic solidarity – based on the common ground that all employees share. Furthermore, I propose that both forms of solidarity can coexist and that both are positively related to the quality of collaboration within the organization. Thus, organizational identification is proposed to influence quality of collaboration indirectly through both organic and mechanic solidarity. These propositions were tested with regard to the collaboration of different teams within two organizations: a German university (Study 1, N = 699) and a Taiwanese hospital (Study 2, N = 591). The results from both studies confirm the predictions. However, the relative importance of each form of solidarity varied across study contexts and across different facets of the quality of collaboration. Chapter 7 also builds on the findings from the meta-analyses and is again predominantly focussed on the processes underlying the effects of diversity beliefs and diversity climates, yet from a different angle. Previously, diversity beliefs and climates have often been discussed with regard to their potential to influence whether diversity will lead to more and deeper elaboration of information within the group. In chapter 7 a theoretical model is developed that complements these cognitive processes by addressing the emotional side of diverse groups. Central to the model is the assumption that group diversity can stimulate group members to engage with each other emotionally, resulting in higher levels of state affective empathy: an emotional state which arises from the comprehension and apprehension of fellow group members’ emotional state. State affective empathy, in turn, is known to lead to a variety of beneficial team processes that can ultimately enhance individual and group-level performance. Thus, the central proposition of the model is that the relationship between diversity and performance is mediated through state affective empathy. The other propositions in the model specify moderators that determine when diversity will indeed have this empathy-stimulating effect. Diversity beliefs and climates are considered second-order moderators that shape the relationship between diversity and empathy through their influence on the first-order moderators. In general, it is proposed that diversity is related to empathy more positively if it is valued by the group or its members. In summary, the results from the meta-analyses in chapter 5, the results from the field studies in chapter 6, and the theoretical arguments presented in chapter 7 can be interpreted such that differences in vantage points from which people engage with diversity can indeed affect groups and their members. Therefore, the first research question of the present dissertation can be answered affirmatively from three different perspectives. However, it also became clear that there is still much uncertainty about the mechanisms underlying these effects. In line with the second research question of the present dissertation, these mechanisms were examined more closely in chapter 6 and 7. The field studies in chapter 6 highlighted the role of identification as the driving force behind the effects of different vantage points on diversity. Furthermore, they also corroborate the proposition that valuing diversity and valuing similarity can be co-occurring phenomena that both influence the collaboration within the group positively. The theoretical model presented in chapter 7 opens up a new emotional way in which diversity beliefs and climates can influence whether diversity will lead to better or worse performance. In sum, therefore, also with regard to the second research question of the present dissertation, progress has been made.
Recent research has identified significant correlations between traumatic events and depression in refugees. However, few studies have addressed the role of acculturation strategies in this relationship. This study explored the relationship between cultural orientation, traumatic events and depression in female refugees from Syria, Afghanistan, Eritrea, Iran, Iraq, and Somalia living in Germany. We expected acculturation strategies to moderate the effect of traumatic experiences on depression. The sample included 98 female refugees in Germany. The depression scale of the Hopkins Symptom Checklist (HSCL) represented the dependent measure. The trauma checklists derived from the Post-traumatic Diagnostic Scale (PDS) and the Harvard Trauma Questionnaire (HTQ) as well as the Frankfurt Acculturation Scale (FRACC) were used as independent measures for traumatic events and orientation toward the host culture as well as orientation toward the culture of origin, respectively. A moderation analysis was conducted to examine whether the relationship between the number of traumatic events and depression was influenced by the women’s orientation toward the culture of origin and the host culture. We identified a significant model explaining 26.85% of the variance in depressive symptoms (Cohen’s f2 = 0.37). The number of traumatic events and the orientation toward the host culture exerted significant effects on depressive symptoms. The moderating effect was not significant, indicating that the effect of the number of traumatic events was not influenced by cultural orientation. Based on our results, orientation toward the host culture as well as traumatic experiences exert independent effects on depressive symptoms in refugees.
Orientation: Local football contributes significantly to the social- and economic welfare of South Africa through its spectators. Understanding the motives and experiences of football spectators could provide opportunities for capitalising on football as revenue stream feeding the South African economy.
Research purpose: To investigate how motives for sport consumption predict intrinsic psychological reward of South African premier league football spectators.
Motivation for the study: Sport - particularly football - is an untapped resource for stimulating economic development and growth through its consumers. Spectators, who often experience their investment in the sport as deeply rewarding and meaningful, should participate more frequently in purchasing products or services associated with the sport. Through understanding the motives for sport consumption of South African premier league football spectators and the impact of these motives on intrinsic psychological reward experiences, football clubs are able to provide a targeted experience or service to spectators in order to further stimulate economic growth.
Research design, approach and method: A census sample of 806 football spectators attending various matches at a football stadium in Soweto was drawn. A cross-sectional research design was implemented. This research was exploratory and descriptive. Structural equation modelling was implemented to assess the factor structures of the constructs, to confirm composite reliability of the measures and to assess the structural paths between the variables.
Main findings: A predictive model for intrinsic psychological rewards (life satisfaction and meaning) through the motivation for sport consumption (individual – and game related factors) was confirmed. It was further established that motivation for sport consumption is significantly positively a) related to and b) associated with the experience of intrinsic psychological reward by South African football spectators. Practical/managerial implications: Football clubs should tailor spectator experiences around both individual and game related spectator motives in order to develop experiences associated with intrinsic psychological reward.
Contribution/value-add: The study contributes to consumer psychology research relating to the motives associated with the consumption of football within South Africa.
Virtual reality (VR) headsets offer a large and immersive workspace for displaying visualizations with stereoscopic vision, as compared to traditional environments with monitors or printouts. The controllers for these devices further allow direct three-dimensional interaction with the virtual environment. In this paper, we make use of these advantages to implement a novel multiple and coordinated view (MCV) system in the form of a vertical stack, showing tilted layers of geospatial data. In a formal study based on a use-case from urbanism that requires cross-referencing four layers of geospatial urban data, we compared it against more conventional systems similarly implemented in VR: a simpler grid of layers, and one map that allows for switching between layers. Performance and oculometric analyses showed a slight advantage of the two spatial-multiplexing methods (the grid or the stack) over the temporal multiplexing in blitting. Subgrouping the participants based on their preferences, characteristics, and behavior allowed a more nuanced analysis, allowing us to establish links between e.g., saccadic information, experience with video games, and preferred system. In conclusion, we found that none of the three systems are optimal and a choice of different MCV systems should be provided in order to optimally engage users.
BACKGROUND: Time-limited, early-life exposures to institutional deprivation are associated with disorders in childhood, but it is unknown whether effects persist into adulthood. We used data from the English and Romanian Adoptees study to assess whether deprivation-associated adverse neurodevelopmental and mental health outcomes persist into young adulthood.
METHODS: The English and Romanian Adoptees study is a longitudinal, natural experiment investigation into the long-term outcomes of individuals who spent from soon after birth to up to 43 months in severe deprivation in Romanian institutions before being adopted into the UK. We used developmentally appropriate standard questionnaires, interviews completed by parents and adoptees, and direct measures of IQ to measure symptoms of autism spectrum disorder, inattention and overactivity, disinhibited social engagement, conduct or emotional problems, and cognitive impairment (IQ score <80) during childhood (ages 6, 11, and 15 years) and in young adulthood (22-25 years). For analysis, Romanian adoptees were split into those who spent less than 6 months in an institution and those who spent more than 6 months in an institution. We used a comparison group of UK adoptees who did not experience deprivation. We used mixed-effects regression models for ordered-categorical outcome variables to compare symptom levels and trends between groups.
FINDINGS: Romanian adoptees who experienced less than 6 months in an institution (n=67 at ages 6 years; n=50 at young adulthood) and UK controls (n=52 at age 6 years; n=39 at young adulthood) had similarly low levels of symptoms across most ages and outcomes. By contrast, Romanian adoptees exposed to more than 6 months in an institution (n=98 at ages 6 years; n=72 at young adulthood) had persistently higher rates than UK controls of symptoms of autism spectrum disorder, disinhibited social engagement, and inattention and overactivity through to young adulthood (pooled p<0·0001 for all). Cognitive impairment in the group who spent more than 6 months in an institution remitted from markedly higher rates at ages 6 years (p=0·0001) and 11 years (p=0·0016) compared with UK controls, to normal rates at young adulthood (p=0·76). By contrast, self-rated emotional symptoms showed a late-onset pattern with minimal differences versus UK controls at ages 11 years (p=0·0449) and 15 years (p=0·17), and then marked increases by young adulthood (p=0·0005), with similar effects seen for parent ratings. The high deprivation group also had a higher proportion of people with low educational achievement (p=0·0195), unemployment (p=0·0124), and mental health service use (p=0·0120, p=0·0032, and p=0·0003 for use when aged <11 years, 11-14 years, and 15-23 years, respectively) than the UK control group. A fifth (n=15) of individuals who spent more than 6 months in an institution were problem-free at all assessments.
INTERPRETATION: Notwithstanding the resilience shown by some adoptees and the adult remission of cognitive impairment, extended early deprivation was associated with long-term deleterious effects on wellbeing that seem insusceptible to years of nurturance and support in adoptive families.
FUNDING: Economic and Social Research Council, Medical Research Council, Department of Health, Jacobs Foundation, Nuffield Foundation.
Age-related memory decline is associated with changes in neural functioning but little is known about how aging affects the quality of information representation in the brain. Whereas a long-standing hypothesis of the aging literature links cognitive impairments to less distinct neural representations in old age, memory studies have shown that high similarity between activity patterns benefits memory performance for the respective stimuli. Here, we addressed this apparent conflict by investigating between-item representational similarity in 50 younger (19–27 years old) and 63 older (63–75 years old) human adults (male and female) who studied scene-word associations using a mnemonic imagery strategy while electroencephalography was recorded. We compared the similarity of spatiotemporal frequency patterns elicited during encoding of items with different subsequent memory fate. Compared to younger adults, older adults’ memory representations were more similar to each other but items that elicited the most similar activity patterns early in the encoding trial were those that were best remembered by older adults. In contrast, young adults’ memory performance benefited from decreased similarity between earlier and later periods in the encoding trials, which might reflect their better success in forming unique memorable mental images of the joint picture–word pair. Our results advance the understanding of the representational properties that give rise to memory quality as well as how these properties change in the course of aging.
Neural pattern similarity differentially relates to memory performance in younger and older adults
(2019)
Age-related memory decline is associated with changes in neural functioning, but little is known about how aging affects the quality of information representation in the brain. Whereas a long-standing hypothesis of the aging literature links cognitive impairments to less distinct neural representations in old age (“neural dedifferentiation”), memory studies have shown that overlapping neural representations of different studied items are beneficial for memory performance. In an electroencephalography (EEG) study, we addressed the question whether distinctiveness or similarity between patterns of neural activity supports memory differentially in younger and older adults. We analyzed between-item neural pattern similarity in 50 younger (19–27 years old) and 63 older (63–75 years old) male and female human adults who repeatedly studied and recalled scene–word associations using a mnemonic imagery strategy. We compared the similarity of spatiotemporal EEG frequency patterns during initial encoding in relation to subsequent recall performance. The within-person association between memory success and pattern similarity differed between age groups: For older adults, better memory performance was linked to higher similarity early in the encoding trials, whereas young adults benefited from lower similarity between earlier and later periods during encoding, which might reflect their better success in forming unique memorable mental images of the joint picture–word pairs. Our results advance the understanding of the representational properties that give rise to subsequent memory, as well as how these properties may change in the course of aging.
Sex differences in the relationship between conduct disorder and cortical structure in adolescents
(2017)
Objective: Previous studies have reported reduced cortical thickness and surface area and altered gyrification in frontal and temporal regions in adolescents with conduct disorder (CD). Although there is evidence that the clinical phenotype of CD differs between males and females, no studies have examined whether such sex differences extend to cortical and subcortical structure.
Method: As part of a European multisite study (FemNAT-CD), structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data were collected from 48 female and 48 male participants with CD and from 104 sex-, age-, and pubertal-status−matched controls (14–18 years of age). Data were analyzed using surface-based morphometry, testing for effects of sex, diagnosis, and sex-by-diagnosis interactions, while controlling for age, IQ, scan site, and total gray matter volume.
Results: CD was associated with cortical thinning and higher gyrification in ventromedial prefrontal cortex in both sexes. Males with CD showed lower, and females with CD showed higher, supramarginal gyrus cortical thickness compared with controls. Relative to controls, males with CD showed higher gyrification and surface area in superior frontal gyrus, whereas the opposite pattern was seen in females. There were no effects of diagnosis or sex-by-diagnosis interactions on subcortical volumes. Results are discussed with regard to attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, depression, and substance abuse comorbidity, medication use, handedness, and CD age of onset.
Conclusion: We found both similarities and differences between males and females in CD–cortical structure associations. This initial evidence that the pathophysiological basis of CD may be partly sex-specific highlights the need to consider sex in future neuroimaging studies and suggests that males and females may require different treatments.
Following a brief review of current efforts to identify the neuronal correlates of conscious processing (NCCP) an attempt is made to bridge the gap between the material neuronal processes and the immaterial dimensions of subjective experience. It is argued that this "hard problem" of consciousness research cannot be solved by only considering the neuronal underpinnings of cognition. The proposal is that the hard problem can be treated within a naturalistic framework if one considers not only the biological but also the socio-cultural dimensions of evolution. The argument is based on the following premises: perceptions are the result of a constructivist process that depends on priors. This applies both for perceptions of the outer world and the perception of oneself. Social interactions between agents endowed with the cognitive abilities of humans generated immaterial realities, addressed as social or cultural realities. This novel class of realities assumed the role of priors for the perception of oneself and the embedding world. A natural consequence of these extended perceptions is a dualist classification of observables into material and immaterial phenomena nurturing the concept of ontological substance dualism. It is argued that perceptions shaped by socio-cultural priors lead to the construction of a self-model that has both a material and an immaterial dimension. As priors are implicit and not amenable to conscious recollection the perceived immaterial dimension is experienced as veridical and not derivable from material processes—which is the hallmark of the hard problem. These considerations let the hard problem appear as the result of cognitive constructs that are amenable to naturalistic explanations in an evolutionary framework.
In den vorgelegten drei Studien wurden Lebenserzählungen zum einen über die Adoleszenzentwicklung und zum anderen im Adult Attachment Interview textanalytisch, über semantisch-syntaktische Kodes, untersucht. Die ersten beiden Studien untersuchen die Variablen globale Kohärenz, bzw. narrative Verantwortungsübernahme in Lebenserzählungen von 102 Kindern, Jugendlichen und jungen Erwachsenen (8, 12, 16 und 20 Jahre). Hypothesen sind, dass beide Variablen in der Adoleszenz aufgrund der Identitätsentwicklung ansteigen. Die Haupthypothesen zeigen sich als bestätigt. In der dritten Studie wird die narrative Verantwortungsübernahme anhand einer Sekundäranalyse von Adult Attachment Interviews von 28 Frauen untersucht. Die Hypothese lautet, dass sichere Bindungsrepräsentationen mehr narrative Verantwortungsübernahme zeigen als unsichere Bindungsrepräsentationen und dass unsichere Bindungsrepräsentationen mehr narrative Abstufungen von Verantwortung zeigen als sichere Bindungsrepräsentationen. Während die erste Hypothese keine signifikanten Ergebnisse zeigt, stellt sich die zweite Hypothese als bestätigt dar. Die Ergebnisse werden in den ersten beiden Studien in Bezug auf die Identitätsentwicklung und in der dritten Studie im Zusammenhang mit einer Grammatik von unsicherer Bindung diskutiert. Enth. 3 Sonderabdr. aus verschiedenen Zeitschr: Developmental Psychology 2008, Vol. 44, No. 3, 707–721 The Development of Global Coherence in Life Narratives Across Adolescence: Temporal, Causal, and Thematic Aspects de Silveira, Cybèle and Habermas, Tilmann(2011) 'Narrative Means to Manage Responsibility in Life Narratives Across Adolescence', The Journal of Genetic Psychology, 172: 1, 1 — 20 de Silveira, Cybèle and Habermas, Tilmann(2010) 'Narrative Grading of Responsibility of Secure and Insecure Attachment Representations in the Adult Attachment Interview'
Pathophysiological models are urgently needed for personalized treatments of mental disorders. However, most potential neural markers for psychopathology are limited by low interpretability, prohibiting reverse inference from brain measures to clinical symptoms and traits. Neural signatures—i.e. multivariate brain-patterns trained to be both sensitive and specific to a construct of interest—might alleviate this problem, but are rarely applied to mental disorders. We tested whether previously developed neural signatures for negative affect and discrete emotions distinguish between healthy individuals and those with mental disorders characterized by emotion dysregulation, i.e. Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) and complex Post-traumatic Stress Disorder (cPTSD). In three different fMRI studies, a total sample of 192 women (49 BPD, 62 cPTSD, 81 healthy controls) were shown pictures of scenes with negative or neutral content. Based on pathophysiological models, we hypothesized higher negative and lower positive reactivity of neural emotion signatures in participants with emotion dysregulation. The expression of neural signatures differed strongly between neutral and negative pictures (average Cohen's d = 1.17). Nevertheless, a mega-analysis on individual participant data showed no differences in the reactivity of neural signatures between participants with and without emotion dysregulation. Confidence intervals ruled out even small effect sizes in the hypothesized direction and were further supported by Bayes factors. Overall, these results support the validity of neural signatures for emotional states during fMRI tasks, but raise important questions concerning their link to individual differences in emotion dysregulation.
Pathophysiological models are urgently needed for personalized treatments of mental disorders. However, most potential neural markers for psychopathology are limited by low interpretability, prohibiting reverse inference from brain measures to clinical symptoms and traits. Neural signatures—i.e. multivariate brain-patterns trained to be both sensitive and specific to a construct of interest—might alleviate this problem, but are rarely applied to mental disorders. We tested whether previously developed neural signatures for negative affect and discrete emotions distinguish between healthy individuals and those with mental disorders characterized by emotion dysregulation, i.e. Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) and complex Post-traumatic Stress Disorder (cPTSD). In three different fMRI studies, a total sample of 192 women (49 BPD, 62 cPTSD, 81 healthy controls) were shown pictures of scenes with negative or neutral content. Based on pathophysiological models, we hypothesized higher negative and lower positive reactivity of neural emotion signatures in participants with emotion dysregulation. The expression of neural signatures differed strongly between neutral and negative pictures (average Cohen’s d = 1.17). Nevertheless, a mega-analysis on individual participant data showed no differences in the reactivity of neural signatures between participants with and without emotion dysregulation. Confidence intervals ruled out even small effect sizes in the hypothesized direction and were further supported by Bayes factors. Overall, these results support the validity of neural signatures for emotional states during fMRI tasks, but raise important questions concerning their link to individual differences in emotion dysregulation.
Memory enables us to use information from our past experiences to guide new behaviours, calling for the need to integrate or form inference across multiple distinct episodic experiences. Here, we compared children (aged 9–10 years), adolescents (aged 12–13 years), and young adults (aged 19–25 years) on their ability to form integration across overlapping associations in memory. Participants first encoded a set of overlapping, direct AB- and BC-associations (object-face and face-object pairs) as well as non-overlapping, unique DE-associations. They were then tested on these associations and inferential AC-associations. The experiment consisted of four such encoding/retrieval cycles, each consisting of different stimuli set. For accuracy on both unique and inferential associations, young adults were found to outperform teenagers, who in turn outperformed children. However, children were particularly slower than teenagers and young adults in making judgements during inferential than during unique associations. This suggests that children may rely more on making inferences during retrieval, by first retrieving the direct associations, followed by making the inferential judgement. Furthermore, young adults showed a higher correlation between accuracy in direct (AB, BC) and inferential AC-associations than children. This suggests that, young adults relied closely on AB- and BC-associations for making AC decisions, potentially by forming integrated ABC-triplets during encoding or retrieval. Taken together, our findings suggest that there may be an age-related shift in how information is integrated across experienced episodes, namely from relying on making inferences at retrieval during middle childhood to forming integrated representations at different memory processing stages in adulthood.
Auf das richtige Maß kommt es an : wie beeinflussen digitale Medien unser Denken und Handeln?
(2020)
Welchen Einfluss haben digitale Technologien auf das menschliche Wahrnehmen, Denken und Handeln? Schaden Computerspiele der Entwicklung junger Gehirne? Und gibt es tatsächlich so etwas wie eine »digitale Demenz«, eine durch die Nutzung moderner Technologien bedingte wachsende Vergesslichkeit? Auf einige dieser Fragen gibt es bereits Antworten, die empirisch belegt sind.
A question of striking the right balance : how do digital media influence how we think and act?
(2020)
What influence do digital technologies have on human perception, thinking and action? Do computer games harm the development of young brains? And is there really such a thing as »digital dementia«, an increasing forgetfulness caused by the use of modern technologies? For some of these questions, answers are available that are empirically corroborated.
In psychotherapy, movement synchrony seems to be associated with higher patient satisfaction and treatment outcome. However, it remains unclear whether movement synchrony rated by humans and movement synchrony identified by automated methods reflect the same construct. To address this issue, video sequences showing movement synchrony of patients and therapists (N = 10) or not (N = 10), were analyzed using motion energy analysis. Three different synchrony conditions with varying levels of complexity (naturally embedded, naturally isolated, and artificial) were generated for time series analysis with windowed cross-lagged correlation/ -regression (WCLC, WCLR). The concordance of ratings (human rating vs. automatic assessment) was computed for 600 different parameter configurations of the WCLC/WCLR to identify the parameter settings that measure movement synchrony best. A parameter configuration was rated as having a good identification rate if it yields high concordance with human-rated intervals (Cohen’s kappa) and a low amount of over-identified data points. Results indicate that 76 configurations had a good identification rate (IR) in the least complex condition (artificial). Two had an acceptable IR with regard to the naturally isolated condition. Concordance was low with regard to the most complex (naturally embedded) condition. A valid identification of movement synchrony strongly depends on parameter configuration and goes beyond the identification of synchrony by human raters. Differences between human-rated synchrony and nonverbal synchrony measured by algorithms are discussed.
Which factors determine whether a stimulus is consciously perceived or unconsciously processed? Here, I investigate how previous experience on two different time scales – long term experience over the course of several days, and short term experience based on the previous trial – impact conscious perception. Regarding long term experience, I investigate how perceptual learning does not only change the capacity to process stimuli, but also the capacity to consciously perceive them. To this end, subjects are trained extensively to discriminate between masked stimuli, and concurrently rate their subjective experience. Both the ability to discriminate the stimuli as well as subjective awareness of the stimuli increase as a function of training. However, these two effects are not simple byproducts of each other. On the contrary, they display different time courses, with above chance discrimination performance emerging before subjective experience; importantly, the two learning effects also rely on different circuits in the brain: Moving the stimuli outside the trained receptive field size abolishes the learning effects on discrimination ability, but preserves the learning effects on subjective awareness.
This indicates that the receptive fields serving subjective experience are larger than the ones serving objective performance, and that the channels through which they receive their information are arranged in parallel. Regarding short term experience, I investigate how memory based predictions arising from information acquired on the trial before affect visibility and the neural correlates of consciousness. To this end, I vary stimulus evidence as well as predictability and acquire electroencephalographic data.
A comparison of the neural processes distinguishing consciously perceived from unperceived trials with and without predictions reveals that predictions speed up processing, thus shifting the neural correlates forward in time. Thus, the neural correlates of consciousness display a previously unappreciated flexibility in time and do not arise invariably late as had been predicted by some theorists.
Admittedly, however, previous experience does not always stabilize perception. Instead, previous experience can have the reverse effect: Seeing the opposite of what was there, as in so-called repulsive aftereffects. Here, I investigate what determines the direction of previous experience using multistable stimuli. In a functional magnetic resonance imaging experiment, I find that a widespread network of frontal, parietal, and ventral occipital brain areas is involved in perceptual stabilization, whereas the reverse effect is only evident in extrastriate cortex. This areal separation possibly endows the brain with the flexibility to switch between exploiting already available information and emphasizing the new.
Taken together, my data show that conscious perception and its neuronal correlates display a remarkable degree of flexibility and plasticity, which should be taken into account in future theories of consciousness.
This paper investigates how the major outcome of a confirmatory factor investigation is preserved when scaling the variance of a latent variable by the various scaling methods. A constancy framework, based upon the underlying factor analysis formula that enables scaling by modifying components through scalar multiplication, is described; a proof is included to demonstrate the constancy property of the framework. It provides the basis for a scaling method that enables the comparison of the contribution of different latent variables of the same confirmatory factor model to observed scores, as for example, the contributions of trait and method latent variables. Furthermore, it is shown that available scaling methods are in line with this constancy framework and that the criterion number included in some scaling methods enables modifications. The impact of the number of manifest variables on the scaled variance parameter can be modified and the range of possible values. It enables the adaptation of scaling methods to the requirements of the field of application.
The article reports three simulation studies conducted to find out whether the effect of a time limit for testing impairs model fit in investigations of structural validity, whether the representation of the assumed source of the effect prevents impairment of model fit and whether it is possible to identify and discriminate this method effect from another method effect. Omissions due to the time limit for testing were not considered as missing data but as information on the participants’ processing speed. In simulated data the presence of a time-limit effect impaired comparative fit index and nonnormed fit index whereas normed chi-square, root mean square error of approximation, and standardized root mean square residual indicated good model fit. The explicit consideration of the effect due to the time limit by an additional component of the model improved model fit. Effect-specific assumptions included in the model of measurement enabled the discrimination of the effect due to the time limit from another possible method effect.
The paper outlines a method for investigating the speed effect due to a time limit in testing. It is assumed that the time limit enables latent processing speed to influence responses by causing omissions in the case of insufficient speed. Because of processing speed as additional latent source, the customary confirmatory factor model is enlarged by a second latent variable representing latent processing speed. For distinguishing this effect from other method effects, the factor loadings are fixed according to the cumulative normal distribution. With the second latent variable added, confirmatory factor analysis of reasoning data (N=518) including omissions because of a time limit yielded good model fit and discriminated the speed effect from other possible effects due to the item difficulty, the homogeneity of an item subset and the item positions. Because of the crucial role of the cumulative normal distribution for fixing the factor loadings a check of the normality assumption is also reported.
The paper reports an investigation on whether valid results can be achieved in analyzing the structure of datasets although a large percentage of data is missing without replacement. Two types of confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) models were employed for this purpose: the missing data CFA model with an additional latent variable for representing the missing data and the semi-hierarchical CFA model that also includes the additional latent variable and reflects the hierarchical structure assumed to underlie the data. Whereas, the missing data CFA model assumes that the model is equally valid for all participants, the semi-hierarchical CFA model is implicitly specified differently for subgroups of participants with and without omissions. The comparison of these models with the regular one-factor model in investigating simulated binary data revealed that the modeling of missing data prevented negative effects of missing data on model fit. The investigation of the accuracy in estimating the factor loadings yielded the best results for the semi-hierarchical CFA model. The average estimated factor loadings for items with and without omissions showed the expected equal sizes. But even this model tended to underestimate the expected values.
Several psychotherapy treatments exist for posttraumatic stress disorder. This study examines the treatment preferences of treatment-seeking traumatized adults in Germany and investigates the reasons for their treatment choices. Preferences for prolonged exposure, cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR), psychodynamic psychotherapy and stabilization were assessed via an online survey. Reasons for preferences were analyzed by means of thematic coding by two independent rates. 104 traumatized adults completed the survey. Prolonged exposure and CBT were each preferred by nearly 30%, and EMDR and psychodynamic psychotherapy were preferred by nearly 20%. Stabilization was significantly less preferred than all other options, by only 4%. Significantly higher proportions of patients were disinclined to choose EMDR and stabilization. Patients who preferred psychodynamic psychotherapy were significantly older than those who preferred CBT. Reasons underlying preferences included the perceived treatment mechanisms and treatment efficacy. Traumatized patients vary in their treatment preferences. Preference assessments may help clinicians comprehensively address patients' individual needs and thus improve therapy outcomes.
Vorausgehende Forschungsarbeiten haben gezeigt, dass die Identifikation von Mitarbeitern mit Ihrer Organisation ein zentraler Prädiktor für wünschenswerte Einstellungen und Verhaltensweisen wie Arbeitszufriedenheit, Leistung und Extrarollenverhalten ist (Riketta, 2005). Folglich entwickelte sich in den vergangenen Jahren ein zunehmendes Forschungsinteresse an den Faktoren, die die organisationale Identifikation von Mitarbeitern beeinflussen (Ashforth et al., 2008). Ein vielversprechender Ansatzpunkt scheint die Rolle des Führungsverhaltens zu sein. Die selbstkonzeptbasierten Theorien der Führung postulieren, dass die Effektivität von Führungskräften im Wesentlichen darauf beruht, dass sie die Identifikation ihrer Mitarbeiter mit der Arbeitsgruppe oder dem Unternehmen stärken (Shamir et al., 1993; van Knippenberg et al., 2004). Basierend auf dieser Erkenntnis haben van Dick et al. (2007) ein Transfermodell der organisationalen Identifikation entwickelt. Dieses geht davon aus, dass sich die organisationale Identifikation von Vorgesetzten auf ihr Führungsverhalten auswirkt und die organisationale Identifikation ihrer Mitarbeiter beeinflusst. Nach diesem Modell sollten die Mitarbeiter hochidentifizierter Führungskräfte eine stärkere organisationale Identifikation aufweisen als Mitarbeiter von weniger stark identifizierten Vorgesetzten. Die erhöhte Identifikation der Mitarbeiter sollte wiederum positiv auf ihre Arbeitszufriedenheit, Leistung und Extrarollenverhalten wirken. Eine Serie von querschnittlichen Feldstudien brachte erste empirische Belege für diese Annahmen (van Dick et al., 2007; Wieseke et al., 2009). Vor diesem Hintergrund war es das Ziel der vorliegenden Arbeit, das Transfermodell von van Dick und Kollegen (2007) weiteren empirischen Tests zu unterziehen und theoretisch zu erweitern. Hierzu wurden drei Fragestellungen näher untersucht: Zunächst wurden zwei experimentelle Studien durchgeführt, um den angenommenen kausalen Einfluss der Vorgesetzten-Identifikation auf die organisationale Identifikation der Mitarbeiter zu testen (Manuskript 1). Die Ergebnisse der Studien stützen die Hypothese, dass sich die organisationale Identifikation der Führungskräfte auf die Identifikation der Mitarbeiter auswirkt. Darüber hinaus zeigte sich ein Effekt auf die Leistung der Mitarbeiter. Probanden, die für einen hochidentifizierten Vorgesetzten arbeiteten, zeigten eine bessere Leistung als Mitarbeiter einer weniger stark identifizierten Führungskraft. Im zweiten Schritt der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde das Führungsverhalten untersucht, das dem Identitätstransfer zugrunde liegt (Manuskript 2). Basierend auf den selbstkonzeptbasierten Theorien der Führung wurde angenommen, dass es vor allem transformationale Führungsverhaltensweisen sind, die für den Identitätstransfer verantwortlich sind. Zur Überprüfung dieser Hypothese wurden Befragungen von Führungskräften und Mitarbeitern durchgeführt. Eine Befragung fand in Deutschland, die zweite in China statt. Wie erwartet zeigte sich, dass transformationale Führung die Beziehung zwischen Führungskraft-Identifikation und organisationaler Identifikation der Mitarbeiter mediierte. Zudem fand sich in der chinesischen Stichprobe eine dreigliedrige Mediation: Transformationales Führungsverhalten und organisationale Identifikation der Mitarbeiter mediierten in Serie den Zusammenhang zwischen der Führungskräfte- und Mitarbeiter-Identifikation. Das Ziel des dritten Papers war die Erweiterung des Transfermodells um die Kundenperspektive. Es wurde angenommen, dass sich organisationale Identifikation nicht nur von Vorgesetzten auf Mitarbeiter, sondern auch von Mitarbeitern auf ihre Kunden überträgt. Eine Befragung von Führungskräften, Mitarbeitern und Kunden stützte diese Annahme. Neben einem positiven Zusammenhang von Vorgesetzten- und Mitarbeiter-Identifikation, fand sich auch die erwartete positive Korrelation zwischen der organisationalen Identifikation der Mitarbeiter und der ihrer Kunden. Zudem zeigte sich, dass die Kundenorientierung der Mitarbeiter und die organisationale Identifikation der Kunden den Zusammenhang zwischen Mitarbeiter- Identifikation auf der einen Seite und Kundenzufriedenheit und Empfehlungsverhalten der Kunden auf der anderen Seite mediierte. Insgesamt leisten die vorgelegten Arbeiten einen Beitrag zur empirischen Validierung und Weiterentwicklung des Transfermodells der organisationalen Identifikation. Sie überprüfen die Kausalitätsannahme des Transferprozesses, untersuchen den zugrunde liegenden Mechanismus und erweitern das Modell um die Perspektive der Kunden. Die Ergebnisse unterstreichen die Wichtigkeit der organisationalen Identifikation der Vorgesetzten für die Einstellungen und Verhaltensweisen ihrer Mitarbeiter. Zudem legen sie nahe, dass sich die Identifikation der Führungskräfte, vermittelt durch die Mitarbeiter, auch auf die Zufriedenheit und das Verhalten der Kunden auswirkt. Diese Befunde sprechen dafür, dass Führungskräfte als Multiplikatoren der organisationalen Identifikation dienen können. Eine Führungskraft beeinflusst eine Vielzahl an Mitarbeitern, die dann wiederum mit einer größeren Anzahl an Kunden interagieren. Initiativen und Maßnahmen, die die organisationale Identifikation von Führungskräften fördern, können daher ein effizienter Weg sein, um die Leistungsfähigkeit und Kundenzufriedenheit einer Organisation zu fördern.
Anhand der Faktorenanalyse konnten vier voneinander inhaltlich abgrenzbare Konstrukte identifiziert und die Multidimensionalität des SBK-Self-Reports etabliert werden. Die Faktorladungen gaben zudem Aufschluss über die inhaltliche Gestaltung der Skalen und liessen eine Konkretisierung der Skalendefinitionen zu. Aus testtheoretischer Sicht kann den vier SBK-Skalen ausreichend bis zufriedenstellende Reliabilitäten bestätigt werden (r = ,70 bis r = , 79). Die Skalen sind inhaltlich voneinander abgrenzbar, zeigen allerdings, wie erwartet Beziehungen zueinander auf. Die Annahme der Kriteriumsvalidität des SBK-Self-Reports kann, mit Ausnahme der Nonverbalen Sensitivität, für die Skalen Verbale Sensitivität, Verbale Regulation und Nonverbale Regulation durch die Ergebnisse unterstützt werden. Mit Blick auf die Konstruktvalidierung, kann den SBK-Skalen hinreichend konvergente und diskriminante Validität zugesprochen werden. Die sozialen Basis-Kompetenzen können als von der akademischen Intelligenz unabhängige Konstrukte betrachtet werden und lassen sich unter Gesichtspunkten der Abgrenzungsproblematik sozialer Intelligenz von der sprachgebundenen Intelligenz deutlich trennen. Mit dem Ziel elementare Bestandteile sozial kompetenten Verhaltens in Arbeitssituationen zu erfassen, lassen sich bei dieser Stichprobe insbesondere Indizien für die Zentralität der sozialen Basis-Kompetenz „Verbale Regulation“ finden. Die Verbale Regulation weist direkte Bezüge zu fast allen sozialen Kompetenzen in den hier erfassten Arbeitssituationen auf und eignet sich zur Prädiktor sozial kompetenten Verhaltens im Arbeitskontext. Gründe für die nicht gefundenen Effekte der anderen sozialen Basis-Kompetenz-Skalen können unterschiedlicher Natur sein: Möglich wäre, dass nonlineare Zusammenhänge zwischen den abhängigen und unabhängigen Variablen bestehen. Ursachen können ebenso in der Stichprobe liegen. Eine Untersuchung, die auf soziale Berufsfelder zugeschnitten wäre (z.B. Krankenschwestern, Pflegepersonal), würde vermutlich deutlichere Indizien für eine Beziehung zwischen den Sensitivitätsebenen der Basis-Kompetenzen und sozial kompetenten Verhalten zulassen. Eine inhaltliche Auseinandersetzung mit den potentiellen Ursachen wäre folglich für weiterführende Untersuchungen anzuregen. Gemeinsam leisten die Verbale Regulation, Persönlichkeitsfaktoren und kognitive Variablen einen substantiellen Beitrag zur Varianzaufklärung des sozial kompetenten Verhaltens in sozialen Arbeitssituationen. Hinsichtlich den Persönlichkeitsvariablen, hat sich insbesondere die „Offenheit für Erfahrung“ als bedeutender Prädiktor erwiesen. Im Rahmen der kognitiven Variablen scheint insbesondere das sprachgebundene Intelligenzmerkmal „Sprachgefühl“ zur Vorhersage vieler sozialer Kompetenzen geeignet zu sein. Allerdings ist ebenso festzuhalten, dass je nach sozialer Kompetenz und Arbeitssituation teilweise zusätzliche und unterschiedliche kognitive Variablen Relevanz besitzen. In bezug auf den relativen Einfluss der Variablenblöcke, können die kognitiven Variablen über die Persönlichkeitsvariablen hinaus Varianz in den sozialen Kompetenzen aufklären. Allerdings beweist sich die soziale Basis-Kompetenz Verbale Regulation, als effizientester Prädiktor, der über die Persönlichkeitsvariablen und kognitiven Variablen hinaus zusätzliche Varianz in den arbeitsbezogenen sozialen Kompetenzen aufklären kann und die Vorhersage massgeblich verbessert. Die Verbale Regulation zeigte sich insgesamt als konsistentester Prädiktor über die Situationen und Kompetenzen hinweg. Auch wenn durch die Hinzunahme der Persönlichkeits- und/oder kognitiven Variablen sich der Varianzbeitrag der sozialen Basis-Kompetenzen prozentual verringerte und die Prädiktoren daher nicht durchgängig additiv zu betrachten sind, konnte den sozialen Basis-Kompetenzen ein bedeutsamer Einzelbeitrag zugeschrieben werden. Die Stärke der positiven Beziehung zwischen Verbaler Regulation und den sozialen Kompetenzen war im Rahmen dieser Stichprobe, abhängig von der Interaktions-Angst, Zustandsangst und Neurotizismus. Ergebnisse der moderierten Regressionen zeigen, dass hohe Interaktions-Ängste und hohe Zustandsangst den positiven Zusammenhang zwischen Verbaler Regulation und sozial kompetenten Verhalten in den meisten Fällen mindern kann. Personen erzielen die besten Resultate in den sozialen Kompetenzen, wenn sie über eine hohe sprachliche Regulation verfügen und kaum Angst empfinden. Ein ähnlicher Interaktionseffekt ist bei Neurotizismus und Verbaler Regulation zu beobachten. Dabei fördert die emotionale Stabilität den positiven Zusammenhang zwischen Verbaler Regulation und den sozialen Kompetenzen. Personen, die eine hohe Verbale Regulationsfertigkeit besitzen, schneiden bei einer hohen emotionalen Stabilität, am besten in den sozialen Kompetenzen ab. Eine Ausnahme dieser Form der Wechselwirkung ist lediglich bei einigen Interaktionseffekten in den Gruppensituationen zu finden. Hier kann eine ausgeprägte Teamfähigkeit erzielt werden, wenn eine hohe Verbale Regulation mit hoher Angst oder Neurotizismus einhergeht. Im Zusammenhang mit Nonverbaler Regulation, Verbaler Sensitivität und Nonverbaler Sensitivität konnten lediglich bei einzelnen aufgabenbezogenen Sozialen Kompetenzen und Situationen, Interaktionseffekte von Neurotizismus, Interaktions-Angst und Angst als Zustand festgestellt werden. Der Interaktionseffekt war bei Verbaler Regulation und den postulierten Moderatoren über die sozialen Kompetenzen und Situationen hinweg am konsistentesten. Post hoc wurde angenommen, dass eine hohe Nonverbaler Sensitivität nur in Abhängigkeit mit einer guten Urteilsfähigkeit sich positiv auf sozial kompetentes Verhalten auswirkt. Diese Erwartung bestätigte sich in vielen Fällen. Personen wurden in den Kompetenzen am begabtesten bewertet, wenn sowohl die Urteilsbildung als auch Nonverbale Sensitivität hoch ausgeprägt war. Allerdings stellten wir darüber hinaus fest, dass Personen die sowohl eine geringe Urteilsbildung besassen, als auch nonverbal unaufmerksam waren, dennoch besser in den sozialen Kompetenzen abschnitten, als wenn sie lediglich eine hohe Nonverbale Sensitivität aufwiesen. Eine geringe Urteilsbildung kann daher im Zusammenhang mit einer hohen Nonverbalen Sensitivität am stärksten soziales Fehlverhalten hervorrufen.
The present study addresses the problem whether negative priming (NP) is due to information processing in perception, recognition or selection. We argue that most NP studies confound priming and perceptual similarity of prime-probe episodes and implement a color-switch paradigm in order to resolve the issue. In a series of three identity negative priming experiments with verbal naming response, we determined when NP and positive priming (PP) occur during a trial. The first experiment assessed the impact of target color on priming effects. It consisted of two blocks, each with a different fixed target color. With respect to target color no differential priming effects were found. In Experiment 2 the target color was indicated by a cue for each trial. Here we resolved the confounding of perceptual similarity and priming condition. In trials with coinciding colors for prime and probe, we found priming effects similar to Experiment 1. However, trials with a target color switch showed such effects only in trials with role-reversal (distractor-to-target or target-to-distractor), whereas the positive priming (PP) effect in the target-repetition trials disappeared. Finally, Experiment 3 split trial processing into two phases by presenting the trial-wise color cue only after the stimulus objects had been recognized. We found recognition in every priming condition to be faster than in control trials. We were hence led to the conclusion that PP is strongly affected by perception, in contrast to NP which emerges during selection, i.e., the two effects cannot be explained by a single mechanism.
From early to middle childhood, brain regions that underlie memory consolidation undergo profound maturational changes. However, there is little empirical investigation that directly relates age-related differences in brain structural measures to the memory consolidation processes. The present study examined system-level memory consolidations of intentionally studied object-location associations after one night of sleep (short delay) and after two weeks (long delay) in normally developing 5-to-7-year-old children (n = 50) and young adults (n = 39). Behavioural differences in memory consolidation were related to structural brain measures. Our results showed that children, in comparison to young adults, consolidate correctly learnt object-location associations less robustly over short and long delay. Moreover, using partial least squares correlation method, a unique multivariate profile comprised of specific neocortical (prefrontal, parietal, and occipital), cerebellar, and hippocampal subfield structures was found to be associated with variation in short-delay memory consolidation. A different multivariate profile comprised of a reduced set of brain structures, mainly consisting of neocortical (prefrontal, parietal, and occipital), and selective hippocampal subfield structures (CA1-2 and subiculum) was associated with variation in long-delay memory consolidation. Taken together, the results suggest that multivariate structural pattern of unique sets of brain regions are related to variations in short- and long-delay memory consolidation across children and young adults.
RESEARCH HIGHLIGHTS
Short- and long-delay memory consolidation is less robust in children than in young adults
* Short-delay brain profile comprised of hippocampal, cerebellar, and neocortical brain regions
* Long-delay brain profile comprised of neocortical and selected hippocampal brain regions.
* Brain profiles differ between children and young adults.
Highlights
• Short- and long-delay memory consolidation is less robust in children than in young adults.
• Short-delay brain profile comprised of hippocampal, cerebellar, and neocortical brain regions.
• Long-delay brain profile comprised of neocortical and selected hippocampal brain regions.
• Brain profiles differ between children and young adults.
Abstract
From early to middle childhood, brain regions that underlie memory consolidation undergo profound maturational changes. However, there is little empirical investigation that directly relates age-related differences in brain structural measures to memory consolidation processes. The present study examined memory consolidation of intentionally studied object-location associations after one night of sleep (short delay) and after two weeks (long delay) in normally developing 5-to-7-year-old children (n = 50) and young adults (n = 39). Behavioural differences in memory retention rate were related to structural brain measures. Our results showed that children, in comparison to young adults, retained correctly learnt object-location associations less robustly over short and long delay. Moreover, using partial least squares correlation method, a unique multivariate profile comprised of specific neocortical (prefrontal, parietal, and occipital), cerebellar, and hippocampal head and subfield structures in the body was found to be associated with variation in short-delay memory retention. A different multivariate profile comprised of a reduced set of brain structures, mainly consisting of neocortical (prefrontal, parietal, and occipital), hippocampal head, and selective hippocampal subfield structures (CA1–2 and subiculum) was associated with variation in long-delay memory retention. Taken together, the results suggest that multivariate structural pattern of unique sets of brain regions are related to variations in short- and long-delay memory consolidation across children and young adults.
From early to middle childhood, brain regions that underlie memory consolidation undergo profound maturational changes. However, there is little empirical investigation that directly relates age-related differences in brain structural measures to the memory consolidation processes. The present study examined system-level memory consolidations of intentionally studied object-location associations after one night of sleep (short delay) and after two weeks (long delay) in normally developing 5-to-7-year-old children (n = 50) and young adults (n = 39). Behavioural differences in memory consolidation were related to structural brain measures. Our results showed that children, in comparison to young adults, consolidate correctly learnt object-location associations less robustly over short and long delay. Moreover, using partial least squares correlation method, a unique multivariate profile comprised of specific neocortical (prefrontal, parietal, and occipital), cerebellar, and hippocampal subfield structures was found to be associated with variation in short-delay memory consolidation. A different multivariate profile comprised of a reduced set of brain structures, mainly consisting of neocortical (prefrontal, parietal, and occipital), and selective hippocampal subfield structures (CA1-2 and subiculum) was associated with variation in long-delay memory consolidation. Taken together, the results suggest that multivariate structural pattern of unique sets of brain regions are related to variations in short- and long-delay memory consolidation across children and young adults.
RESEARCH HIGHLIGHTS
* Short- and long-delay memory consolidation is less robust in children than in young adults
* Short-delay brain profile comprised of hippocampal, cerebellar, and neocortical brain regions
* Long-delay brain profile comprised of neocortical and selected hippocampal brain regions.
* Brain profiles differ between children and young adults.
Memory consolidation tends to be less robust in childhood than adulthood. However, little is known about the corresponding functional differences in the developing brain that may underlie age-related differences in retention of memories over time. This study examined system-level memory consolidation of object-scene associations after learning (immediate delay), one night of sleep (short delay), as well as two weeks (long delay) in 5-to-7-year-old children (n = 49) and in young adults (n = 39), as a reference group with mature consolidation systems. Particularly, we characterized how functional neural activation and reinstatement of neural patterns change over time, assessed by functional magnetic resonance imaging combined with representational (dis)similarity analysis (RSA). Our results showed that memory consolidation in children was less robust (i.e., more forgetting) compared to young adults. For correctly retained remote memories, young adults showed increased neural activation from short to long delay in neocortical (parietal, prefrontal and occipital) and cerebellar brain regions, while children showed increased neural activation in prefrontal and decrease in neural activity in parietal brain regions over time. In addition, there was an overall attenuated scene-specific memory reinstatement of neural patterns in children compared to young adults. At the same time, we observed category-based reinstatement in medial-temporal, neocortical (prefrontal and parietal), and cerebellar brain regions only in children. Taken together, 5-to-7-year-old children, compared to young adults, show less robust memory consolidation, possibly due to difficulties in engaging in differentiated neural reinstatement in neocortical mnemonic regions during retrieval of remote memories, coupled with relying more on gist-like, category-based neural reinstatement.
Memory consolidation tends to be less robust in childhood than adulthood. However, little is known about the corresponding functional differences in the developing brain that may underlie age-related differences in retention of memories over time. This study examined system-level memory consolidation of object-scene associations after learning (immediate delay), one night of sleep (short delay), as well as two weeks (long delay) in 5-to-7-year-old children (n = 49) and in young adults (n = 39), as a reference group with mature consolidation systems. Particularly, we characterized how functional neural activation and reinstatement of neural patterns change over time, assessed by functional magnetic resonance imaging combined with representational similarity analysis (RSA). Our results showed that memory consolidation in children was less robust and strong (i.e., more forgetting) compared to young adults. Contrasting correctly retained remote versus recent memories across time delay, children showed less upregulation in posterior parahippocampal gyrus, lateral occipital cortex, and cerebellum than adults. In addition, both children and adults showed decrease in scene-specific neural reinstatement over time, indicating time-related decay of detailed differentiated memories. At the same time, we observed more generic gist-like neural reinstatement in medial-temporal and prefrontal brain regions uniquely in children, indicating qualitative difference in memory trace in children. Taken together, 5-to-7-year-old children, compared to young adults, show less robust memory consolidation, possibly due to difficulties in engaging in differentiated neural reinstatement in neocortical mnemonic regions during retrieval of remote memories, coupled with relying more on gist-like generic neural reinstatement.
Childhood is a period when memory consolidation and knowledge base undergo rapid changes. The present study examined short-delay (overnight) and long-delay (after a 2-week period) consolidation of new information either congruent or incongruent with prior knowledge in typically developing 6- to 8-year-old children (n = 32), 9- to 11-year-old children (n = 33), and 18- to 30-year-old young adults (YA; n = 39). Both memory accessibility (cued recall of objects) and precision (precision of object placement) of initially well-learned object–scene pairs were measured. Our results showed that overnight, memory accessibility declined similarly in all age groups; memory precision improved more in younger children (YC) compared to older children (OC) and even declined in YA. After a 2-week period, both memory accessibility and precision became worse. Specifically, while age groups showed similar decline in memory accessibility, precision decline was less in YC than in OC and YA. The accessibility and precision of congruent and incongruent information changed similarly with consolidation in all age groups. Taken together, our results showed that, for initially well-learned information, YC have robust memory consolidation, despite their overall lower mnemonic performance compared to OC and YA, which is potentially crucial for stable and precise knowledge accumulation early on in development.
The ability to learn sequential contingencies of actions for predicting future outcomes is indispensable for flexible behavior in many daily decision-making contexts. It remains open whether such ability may be enhanced by transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS). The present study combined tDCS with functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) to investigate potential tDCS-induced effects on sequential decision-making and the neural mechanisms underlying such modulations. Offline tDCS and sham stimulation were applied over the left and right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) in young male adults (N = 29, mean age = 23.4 years, SD = 3.2) in a double-blind between-subject design using a three-state Markov decision task. The results showed (i) an enhanced dlPFC hemodynamic response during the acquisition of sequential state transitions that is consistent with the findings from a previous functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study; (ii) a tDCS-induced increase of the hemodynamic response in the dlPFC, but without accompanying performance-enhancing effects at the behavioral level; and (iii) a greater tDCS-induced upregulation of hemodynamic responses in the delayed reward condition that seems to be associated with faster decision speed. Taken together, these findings provide empirical evidence for fNIRS as a suitable method for investigating hemodynamic correlates of sequential decision-making as well as functional brain correlates underlying tDCS-induced modulation. Future research with larger sample sizes for carrying out subgroup analysis is necessary in order to decipher interindividual differences in tDCS-induced effects on sequential decision-making process at the behavioral and brain levels.