Search results for "automaticity"

showing 10 items of 23 documents

Comparing the Effect of Interference on an Emotional Stroop Task in Older Adults with and without Alzheimer’s Disease

2020

Background Impairments in the ability to recognize facial affective expressions may lead to social dysfunction and difficulties with interpersonal communication. Objective The objective was to compare the attentional responses on a Stroop emotional task using words and faces by testing whether the two stimuli differ in the degree of interference they produce in patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD). Methods There were 75 participants: 25 healthy older adults, 25 with mild AD, and 25 with moderate AD. A variation of the classic emotional Stroop test was administered. This task combined emotional words (happy or sad) superimposed on facial expressions (happy or sad), where the words were eit…

Male0301 basic medicinemedicine.medical_specialtyEmotionsAutomaticityDiseaseInterpersonal communicationNeuropsychological TestsAudiology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineAlzheimer DiseaseEmotional Stroop testReaction TimemedicineHumansCognitive DysfunctionValence (psychology)AgedAged 80 and overFacial expressionGeneral NeuroscienceGeneral MedicineMental Status and Dementia TestsFacial ExpressionPsychiatry and Mental healthClinical Psychology030104 developmental biologySocial PerceptionStroop TestFacilitationFemaleGeriatrics and GerontologyPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryStroop effectJournal of Alzheimer's Disease
researchProduct

Athletes’ regulation of emotions experienced during competition: A naturalistic video-assisted study.

2015

This study aimed to identify the type and effectiveness of emotional regulation strategies used by table tennis players to manage their emotions experienced during competition. Using a naturalistic video-assisted approach, 30 interviews were conducted with 11 national table tennis players. Ten emotions were identified in the participants’ transcriptions: anger, anxiety, discouragement, disappointment, disgust, joy, serenity, relief, hope, and pride. Qualitative analyses of participants’ transcriptions revealed the emergence of 4 categories pertaining to emotion regulation: (a) regulation efforts comprising: (i) antecedent-focused regulation (e.g., attention deployment, cognitive change); (i…

PrideDisappointmentSocial PsychologybiologyAthletesmedia_common.quotation_subjectAutomaticityPhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationAngerbiology.organism_classificationDisgustDevelopmental psychologySocial supportmedicineAnxietymedicine.symptomPsychologySocial psychologyApplied Psychologymedia_commonSport, Exercise, and Performance Psychology
researchProduct

Modelling the influence of automaticity of behaviour on physical activity motivation, intention and actual behaviour

2014

In research and in practise social-cognitive models, such as the theory of planned behaviour (TPB), are used to predict physical activity behaviour. These models mainly focus on reflective cognitive processes. As a reflective process, intention is thought to be the most proximal predictor to behaviour. Nevertheless, research suggests that the relation between intention and actual behaviour, the so called intention-behaviour gap, is moderate. Many health-related actions in daily life are performed repetitively and with minimal forethought. In contrast to social-cognitive theories, dual-process theories suggest that behaviour is based on both reflective and automatic processes. Recent researc…

youth athletesmotivaatioautomaticity of behaviourmotivationnuorethabit formationbehaviour regulationphysical activityintegrated model TPB and SDTliikuntakäyttäytyminenfyysinen aktiivisuusurheilijat
researchProduct

The mediating role of constructs representing reasoned-action and automatic processes on the past behavior-future behavior relationship.

2020

Abstract Objective Past behavior has been consistently shown to predict and explain future behavior. It has been proposed that past behavior effects reflect both reasoned action and automatic processes. The current study sought to explore the mediation of past behavior-future behavior relationship via constructs reflecting these processes across three populations and behaviors: binge drinking in university students, flossing in adults, and parental sun safety behavior of children 2 – 5 years of age. Furthermore, this study used a measure of past behavior that combined long-term, recent, and routine patterns of behavioral engagement. Method A prospective design with two waves of data collect…

AdultMediation (statistics)Health (social science)media_common.quotation_subjectHealth BehaviorAutomaticityBinge drinkingIntentionStructural equation modelingDevelopmental psychology03 medical and health sciencesHabits0302 clinical medicineHistory and Philosophy of ScienceSocial cognitionHumans030212 general & internal medicineProspective StudiesChildmedia_commonData collection030503 health policy & servicesAction (philosophy)AttitudeHabit0305 other medical sciencePsychologySocial sciencemedicine (1982)
researchProduct

Habitual initiation of media use and a response-frequency measure for its examination

2014

When measuring media habits, most scholars rely on retrospective self-reports about behavioral frequency, context stability, or automaticity of the performance. This article develops a new implicit measurement for media research to complement existing approaches, which focuses on measuring the initiation of general, goal-related habits. In the response-frequency measure of media habit (RFMMH), participants are presented with several media use goals and are asked to choose quickly and without deliberation which media device (television set, radio set, newspaper, computer, mobile device) they would use. The more often a media device is chosen, the stronger the mental script to choose this dev…

Social PsychologyCommunicationmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesAutomaticity050801 communication & media studies050109 social psychologyContext (language use)DeliberationTelevision setlaw.invention0508 media and communicationsddc:150law0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesHabitSet (psychology)PsychologySocial psychologyMobile deviceApplied PsychologyComplement (set theory)media_commonCognitive psychology
researchProduct

Visual mismatch negativity (vMMN): a prediction error signal in the visual modality

2015

Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 8

Visual perceptionvisual mismatch negativitySpeech recognitionAutomaticityMismatch negativity610 Medicine & healthStimulus (physiology)Electroencephalographyperceptual learninglcsh:RC321-571170 Ethics3206 Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology2738 Psychiatry and Mental HealthBehavioral NeuroscienceMMN (Mismatch negativity)Perceptual learning2802 Behavioral Neurosciencemedicine10237 Institute of Biomedical Engineeringstimulus specific adaptationEEGstimulus specific adaptationpredictive codingOddball paradigmlcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryBiological Psychiatryta515prediction errormedicine.diagnostic_testQuantitative Biology::Neurons and CognitionEditorial ArticlePsychiatry and Mental healthNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyNeurology2808 NeurologyEEG; ERP; Perceptual Learning; Predictive coding; Prediction error; Repetition suppression; Stimulus specific adaptation; Visual mismatch negativityOblique effectrepetition suppressionPsychology2803 Biological PsychiatryERPCognitive psychologyNeuroscienceFrontiers in Human Neuroscience
researchProduct

The exploitation of distributional information in syllable processing

2004

There is now growing evidence that people are sensitive to the statistical regularities embedded into linguistic utterances, but the exact nature of the distributional information to which human performance is sensitive is an issue that has been surprisingly neglected as yet. In order to address this issue, we first propose an overview of some basic measures of association, going from the simple co-occurrence frequency to the normative measure of contingency, rw: We then report an experiment collecting judgments of word-likeness as a function of the relationship between the phonemes composing the rimes (VC). The contingency between Vs and Cs, as assessed by rw; was the best predictor of chi…

Linguistics and LanguageGeneralityComputational modelParsingbusiness.industryComputer scienceCognitive NeuroscienceAutomaticityExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyPhonologycomputer.software_genreArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)ConnectionismArtificial intelligenceSyllableContingencybusinesscomputerNatural language processingJournal of Neurolinguistics
researchProduct

The Contribution of RAN Pause Time and Articulation Time to Reading Across Languages: Evidence From a More Representative Sample of Children

2014

We examined the relationship between rapid automatized naming (RAN) components – articulation time and pause time – and reading fluency across languages varying in orthographic consistency. Three hundred forty-seven Grade 4 children (82 Chinesespeaking Taiwanese children, 90 English-speaking Canadian children, 90 Greek-speaking Cypriot children, and 85 Finnish-speaking children) were assessed on RAN (Colors and Digits) and reading fluency (word reading efficiency and text reading speed). The results showed that articulation time accounted for more unique variance in reading in the alphabetic orthographies than in Chinese, and pause time for more unique variance in reading in Chinese than in…

Word readingmedia_common.quotation_subjectComputingMilieux_PERSONALCOMPUTINGAutomaticityText readinglukeminenLinguisticsEducationFluencyreadingReading (process)Ranta516rapid automatized naming (RAN)Psychology (miscellaneous)PsychologyArticulation (phonetics)Rapid automatized namingta515media_commonScientific Studies of Reading
researchProduct

Automatic Influences of Priming on Prosocial Behavior

2013

Literature on the automaticity of social behavior indicates that in some circumstances, priming a concept automatically activates related behavioral schemas. Previous research studies have used priming techniques to increase willingness to help, but most of these have simply measured intention to engage in prosocial behavior rather than real helping behavior. Two different studies investigated the effect of priming the concept of prosocial behavior on real helping behavior. After priming prosociality through a scrambled sentences test, participants were shown to increase their donation rate after a direct request coming from an experimenter's confederate (study 1) and to spontaneously help …

prosocial behavior automaticity priming helping situational featuresSettore M-PSI/05 - Psicologia Sociale
researchProduct

Potere disciplinare e norme incorporate

2020

The problem I discuss is whether the behaviors which are the product of the exercise of disciplinary power may be characterized as “normative”, and if so in what sense of the word “normative”. Disciplinary power is, I will say, the “inscription of norms” in the body of those who are subject to it. I distinguish two ways (“indirect” and “direct” inscription) in which norms may be inscribed, through the exercise of disciplinary power, in the body of the subjects, which I dub, respectively, “automatic execution (of norms)” and “normative automatisms”. Automatic execution of norms is a well-known phenomenon. Normative automatisms are odd entities: in the case of normative automatisms, the norm …

powerSettore IUS/20 - Filosofia Del DirittoBackgroundJ. R. SearleNormativityautomaticityMichel Foucaulthabitu
researchProduct