Search results for "Project management"

showing 10 items of 1539 documents

Haptic information differentially interferes with visual analysis in reaching-grasping control and in perceptual processes.

1998

We used an interference paradigm in order to study integration between haptic and visual information in motor control and in perceptual analysis. Subjects either reached and grasped a visually presented sphere or matched its size with their left hand while manipulating with their right hand another sphere whose size could be smaller or greater. In four experiments haptic analysis of the manipulated sphere could be either automatically incorporated with or explicitly dissociated from visual analysis. In a fifth experiment reaching-grasping and matching were executed with the right hand, whereas manipulation was executed with the left hand. Manipulation with the right hand influenced finger s…

AdultMaleMatching (statistics)KinematicsVisionmedia_common.quotation_subjectHapticsSettore BIO/09Photic stimulation; male; psychomotor performance; fingers; female; hand strength; functional laterality; visual perception; adult; humansLateralization of brain functionFunctional LateralityTask (project management)FingersPerceptionManipulationMatchingHumansComputer visionHaptic technologymedia_commonCommunicationHand Strengthbusiness.industryGeneral NeuroscienceInformation processingMotor controlBody movementReaching- graspingVisual PerceptionFemaleArtificial intelligenceInterferencePsychologybusinessPhotic StimulationPsychomotor PerformanceNeuroreport
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Visual inference of arm movement is constrained by motor representations

2015

International audience; Several studies support the idea that motion inference is strongly motor dependent. In the present study, we address the role of biomechanical constraints in motion prediction and how this implicit knowledge can interfere in a spatial prediction task. Right-handed (RHS) and left-handed subjects (LHS) had to estimate the final position of a horizontal arm movement in which the final part of the trajectory was hidden. Our study highlighted a direction effect: end point prediction accuracy was better to infer the final position of horizontal motion directed toward the median line of human body. This finding suggests that the spatial prediction of end point is mapped ont…

AdultMaleMotion PerceptionInferenceMotor Activity050105 experimental psychologyMotion (physics)Task (project management)Young Adult03 medical and health sciencesBehavioral Neuroscience0302 clinical medicinePosition (vector)motionMotor systemHumansdewey1500501 psychology and cognitive sciencesComputer visionBiomechanical constraintsMovement (music)business.industry05 social sciencesspacepredictionMotor systembodyBiomechanical PhenomenaSpatial predictionEmbodied cognitionSpace Perception[ SDV.NEU ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC]ArmVisual PerceptionTrajectoryFemale[SDV.NEU]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC]Artificial intelligencebusinessPsychomotor Performancepsychological phenomena and processes030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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Effects of autonomy-supportive and controlling styles on situational self-determined motivation: some unexpected results of the commitment procedure.

2015

International audience; Distinct and simultaneous effects of autonomy-supportive and controlling styles, usually considered as mutually exclusive, on situational self-determined motivation are tested. In Study 1, economics students ( N = 100; 57 men, 43 women; M age = 21.5 yr.) were randomly assigned to one of the four experimental conditions (high vs. low) of autonomy supportive and / or controlling behaviors during a task. Results supported the independence of those constructs. An unexpected effect in regards to Self-determination Theory was found in the Low autonomy – High control condition in which self-determined motivation was observed. The interpretation for this specific condition, …

AdultMaleMotivationAdolescentmedia_common.quotation_subjectControl (management)[SHS.PSY]Humanities and Social Sciences/PsychologyMutually exclusive eventsTask (project management)Developmental psychologyYoung AdultPersonal AutonomyCognitive dissonanceHumansFemaleSituational ethicsPsychologySocial BehaviorSocial psychologyGeneral PsychologyAutonomymedia_commonPsychological reports
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Developing motor planning over ages

2009

International audience; Few studies have explored the development of response selection processes in children in the case of object manipulation. In the current research, we studied the end-state comfort effect, the tendency to ensure a comfortable position at the end rather than at the beginning of simple object manipulation tasks. We used two versions of the unimanual bar transport task. In Experiment 1, only 10-year-olds reached the same level of sensitivity to end-state comfort as adults, and 8-year-olds were less efficient than 6-year-olds. In each age group, children’s sensitivity did not increase during a session: i.e., either clearly showed the sensitivity or showed no sensitivity a…

AdultMaleMotor developmenteducationExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyObjects and tools050105 experimental psychologySession (web analytics)Developmental psychologyTask (project management)03 medical and health sciencesChild Guidance0302 clinical medicinePrimary school childrenHand strengthTask Performance and AnalysisDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyCognitive developmentHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesSensitivity (control systems)ChildMotor skillHand Strength05 social sciencesCognitionEnd-state comfort effectKindergartenersMotor SkillsChild Preschool[SCCO.PSYC]Cognitive science/PsychologyTask analysisFemalePsychologyPsychomotor Performance030217 neurology & neurosurgeryCognitive psychologyMotor planning
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Daily modulation of the speed–accuracy trade-off

2017

International audience; Goal-oriented arm movements are characterized by a balance between speed and accuracy. The relation between speed and accuracy has been formalized by Fitts’ law and predicts a linear increase in movement duration with task constraints. Up to now this relation has been investigated on a short-time scale only, that is during a single experimental session, although chronobiological studies report that the motor system is shaped by circadian rhythms. Here, we examine whether the speed–accuracy trade-off could vary during the day. Healthy adults carried out arm-pointing movements as accurately and fast as possible toward targets of different sizes at various hours of the …

AdultMaleMovement050105 experimental psychologySession (web analytics)Task (project management)Executive FunctionYoung Adult03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineMotor imageryTask Performance and AnalysisMotor systemModulation (music)speed–accuracy trade-off time-of-day modulation arm pointing motor imageryReaction TimeHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesBalance (ability)Communicationbusiness.industryMovement (music)General Neuroscience05 social sciencesDimensional Measurement AccuracyDuration (music)[ SDV.NEU ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC]SleepPsychologybusinessPsychomotor Performance030217 neurology & neurosurgeryCognitive psychologyNeuroscience
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Context-dependent neuroelectric responses during motor control

2015

Abstract Research on brain responses during motor control is usually performed under typical laboratory settings. However, everyday life and the laboratory differ in many aspects, such as purposeful and motivated behavior; and there's no awareness of “being measured” in everyday life. In the laboratory, movements are usually explicitly instructed, overtly measured and follow no intrinsic motivated purpose. Therefore, here we present a new method to measure and reliably analyze neuroelectric brain responses by EEG, as well as kinematics during the performance of grasping movements in two different behavioral contexts. One context (L) simulates a typical laboratory task and another context (E…

AdultMaleMovementContext (language use)KinematicsElectroencephalographyTask (project management)Developmental psychologyYoung AdultBehavioral NeuroscienceTask Performance and AnalysismedicineHumansAttentionEveryday lifeHand Strengthmedicine.diagnostic_testMovement (music)BrainMotor controlElectroencephalographyCognitionBiomechanical PhenomenaFemalePsychologyPsychomotor PerformanceCognitive psychologyBehavioural Brain Research
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Intensified job demands and job performance: does SOC strategy use make a difference?

2019

We examined intensified job demands (IJDs) and selecting-optimizing-compensating (SOC) strategies as predictors of job performance (task performance, organizational citizenship behavior). We also investigated SOC strategy use as a moderator in the linkages between IJDs and performance. We sampled three disparate occupational groups (N=4,582). We found that certain dimensions of IJDs showed significant associations with the indicators of job performance but there were also scale-based variations in these linkages, depending on the type of performance and on the sub-scale of IJDs. Specifically, some dimensions of IJDs (e.g., work intensification) related to poorer task performance whereas som…

AdultMaleOccupational groupHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisWorkloadOrganizational citizenship behaviourTask (project management)03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineSurveys and QuestionnairesTask Performance and AnalysisHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesOccupationsFinlandWork Performance050107 human factorsOrganizational citizenship behaviorSelecting-optimizing-compensating strategiesJob performance05 social sciencesPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthIntensified job demands (IJDs)Middle AgedModerationOrganizational Culture030210 environmental & occupational healthModerator effectsJob performanceScale (social sciences)FemaleOriginal ArticlePsychologySocial psychologyIndustrial Health
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Measuring Task-Switching Ability in the Implicit Association Test

2005

Abstract. Recently, the role of method-specific variance in the Implicit Association Test (IAT) was examined ( McFarland & Crouch, 2002 ; Mierke & Klauer, 2003 ). This article presents a new content-unspecific control task for the assessment of task-switching ability within the IAT methodology. Study 1 showed that this task exhibited good internal consistency and stability. Studies 2-4 examined method-specific variance in the IAT and showed that the control task is significantly associated with conventionally scored IAT effects of the IAT-Anxiety. Using the D measures proposed by Greenwald, Nosek, and Banaji (2003 ), the amount of method-specific variance in the IAT-Anxiety could b…

AdultMalePersonality TestsTask switchingAdolescentPsychometricsPsychometricsConcept FormationExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyTask (project management)Discrimination LearningArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Internal consistencyReaction TimeHumansAttentionDiscrimination learningSet (psychology)General PsychologyAssociation LearningReproducibility of ResultsImplicit-association testGeneral MedicineVariance (accounting)Pattern Recognition VisualSet PsychologyFemalePsychologySocial psychologyAlgorithmsExperimental Psychology
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The emergence and adaptive use of prestige in an online social learning task

2020

AbstractPrestige-biased social learning occurs when individuals preferentially learn from others who are highly respected, admired, copied, or attended to in their group. This form of social learning is argued to reflect novel forms of social hierarchy in human societies, and, by providing an efficient short-cut to acquiring adaptive information, underpin the cumulative cultural evolution that has contributed to our species’ ecological success. Despite these potentially important consequences, little empirical work to date has tested the basic predictions of prestige-biased social learning. Here we provide evidence supporting the key predictions that prestige-biased social learning is used …

AdultMaleProperty (philosophy)Sciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectarvostusCultural evolution050109 social psychologyHierarchy Socialevoluutiopsykologia050105 experimental psychologyArticleTask (project management)Education DistanceYoung AdultBiasprestigeHuman behaviourHumans0501 psychology and cognitive scienceskulttuurievoluutiocultural evolutionSociocultural evolutionmedia_commonAgedEmpirical workMultidisciplinaryPrestigeQ05 social sciencesRReproducibility of ResultsDeceptionMiddle AgedSocial learningbehavioral ecologySocial Learningsosiaalinen oppiminensocial learningSocial hierarchyMedicineFemalePsychologyCognitive psychology
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Assessing Anxiety with Extrinsic Simon Tasks

2006

This article introduces two new indirect measures of anxiety that are based on the Extrinsic Affective Simon Task (EAST; De Houwer, 2003 ). The EAST differs from the more established Implicit Association Test (IAT; Greenwald, McGhee, & Schwartz, 1998 ) in that participants' responses to different trials within one block of trials are compared rather than performance between two different blocks of trials. Two studies led to the following results: (a) Both extrinsic Simon tasks for assessing anxiety showed only moderate internal consistencies, (b) one of the two tasks showed at least some convergent validity with an IAT for assessing anxiety, and (c) both tasks were dissociated from sel…

AdultMalePsychological TestsDirect assessmentmedia_common.quotation_subjectImplicit-association testExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyGeneral MedicineAnxietyTask (project management)AssociationArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Convergent validitymedicineHumansPersonalityAnxietyFemalePsychological testingmedicine.symptomPsychologyAssociation (psychology)General Psychologymedia_commonCognitive psychologyExperimental Psychology
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