TY - JOUR A1 - Herbort, Oliver A1 - Butz, Martin V. T1 - Too good to be true? Ideomotor theory from a computational perspective N2 - In recent years, Ideomotor Theory has regained widespread attention and sparked the development of a number of theories on goal-directed behavior and learning. However, there are two issues with previous studies’ use of Ideomotor Theory. Although Ideomotor Theory is seen as very general, it is often studied in settings that are considerably more simplistic than most natural situations. Moreover, Ideomotor Theory’s claim that effect anticipations directly trigger actions and that action-effect learning is based on the formation of direct action-effect associations is hard to address empirically. We address these points from a computational perspective. A simple computational model of Ideomotor Theory was tested in tasks with different degrees of complexity.The model evaluation showed that Ideomotor Theory is a computationally feasible approach for understanding efficient action-effect learning for goal-directed behavior if the following preconditions are met: (1) The range of potential actions and effects has to be restricted. (2) Effects have to follow actions within a short time window. (3) Actions have to be simple and may not require sequencing. The first two preconditions also limit human performance and thus support Ideomotor Theory. The last precondition can be circumvented by extending the model with more complex, indirect action generation processes. In conclusion, we suggest that IdeomotorTheory offers a comprehensive framework to understand action-effect learning. However, we also suggest that additional processes may mediate the conversion of effect anticipations into actions in many situations. KW - Psychologie KW - ideomotor theory KW - associative learning KW - computational model KW - planning KW - consolidation Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-76383 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Meule, Adrian A1 - Kübler, Andrea T1 - The translation of substance dependence criteria to food-related behaviors: different views and interpretations. JF - Frontiers in psychiatry N2 - No abstract available. Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-123092 ER - TY - THES A1 - Schubert, Lisa T1 - The Respective Impact of Stimulus Valence and Processing Fluency on Evaluative Judgments in Stereotype Disconfirmation T1 - Der relative Einfluss von Stimulusvalenz und Verarbeitungsflüssigkeit auf evaluative Urteile im Stereotypkontext N2 - Both specific stimulus valence and unspecific processing dynamics can influence evaluative responses. Eight experiments investigated their respective influence on evaluative judgments in the domain of stereotyping. Valence of stereotypic information and consistency-driven fluency were manipulated in an impression formation paradigm. When information about the to-be-evaluated target person was strongly valenced, no effects of consistency-driven fluency were observed. Higher cognitive processes, valence of inconsistent attributes, processing priority of category information, and impression formation instructions were ruled out as possible factors responsible for the non-occurrence of fluency effects. However, consistency-driven fluency did influence the evaluative judgment, if the information about a target person was not strongly valenced. It is therefore concluded that both stimulus valence and consistency-driven processing fluency play a role in evaluative judgments in the domain of stereotyping. The respective impact of stimulus valence is much stronger than the impact of unspecific processing dynamics, however. Implications for fluency research and the applied field of stereotype change are discussed. N2 - Sowohl Stimulusvalenz als auch unspezifische Verarbeitungsflüssigkeit können evaluative Urteile beeinflussen. In acht Experimenten wurde ihr relativer Einfluss im Stereotypkontext untersucht. Hierzu wurden in einem Eindrucksbildungsparadigma die Valenz von stereotypisierender Information und die konsistenzbasierte Verarbeitungsflüssigkeit manipuliert. Im Falle starker Stimulusvalenz der Information über die zu bewertende Person hatte konsistenzbasierte Verarbeitungsflüssigkeit keinen Einfluss auf das evaluative Urteil. Höhere kognitive Prozesse, Valenz der inkonsistenten Eigenschaften, Dominanz von kategorialer Information und Eindrucksbildungsinstruktionen konnten als mögliche Erklärungen für das Ausbleiben von Effekten der Verarbeitungsflüssigkeit ausgeschlossen werden. Konsistenzbasierte Verarbeitungsflüssigkeit hatte allerdings einen Einfluss auf evaluative Urteile, wenn Stimuli keine starke Wertigkeit aufwiesen. Daraus wird geschlossen, dass sowohl Stimulusvalenz als auch unspezifische Verarbeitungsflüssigkeit bei evaluativen Urteilen im Stereotypkontext eine Rolle spielen. Der relative Einfluss von Stimulusvalenz ist jedoch deutlich stärker als der Einfluss von Verarbeitungsflüssigkeit. Implikationen für Theorien der Verarbeitungsflüssigkeit und für die Anwendung im Bereich der Stereotypveränderung werden diskutiert. KW - Vorurteil KW - Eindrucksbildung KW - Verarbeitungsflüssigkeit KW - Stereotype KW - Psychology KW - Person Perception KW - Fluency KW - Stereotypes KW - Informationsverarbeitung KW - Psychologie Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-77426 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Jin, Jing A1 - Allison, Brendan Z. A1 - Kaufmann, Tobias A1 - Kübler, Andrea A1 - Zhang, Yu A1 - Wang, Xingyu A1 - Cichocki, Andrzej T1 - The Changing Face of P300 BCIs: A Comparison of Stimulus Changes in a P300 BCI Involving Faces, Emotion, and Movement JF - PLoS One N2 - Background: One of the most common types of brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) is called a P300 BCI, since it relies on the P300 and other event-related potentials (ERPs). In the canonical P300 BCI approach, items on a monitor flash briefly to elicit the necessary ERPs. Very recent work has shown that this approach may yield lower performance than alternate paradigms in which the items do not flash but instead change in other ways, such as moving, changing colour or changing to characters overlaid with faces. Methodology/Principal Findings: The present study sought to extend this research direction by parametrically comparing different ways to change items in a P300 BCI. Healthy subjects used a P300 BCI across six different conditions. Three conditions were similar to our prior work, providing the first direct comparison of characters flashing, moving, and changing to faces. Three new conditions also explored facial motion and emotional expression. The six conditions were compared across objective measures such as classification accuracy and bit rate as well as subjective measures such as perceived difficulty. In line with recent studies, our results indicated that the character flash condition resulted in the lowest accuracy and bit rate. All four face conditions (mean accuracy >91%) yielded significantly better performance than the flash condition (mean accuracy = 75%). Conclusions/Significance: Objective results reaffirmed that the face paradigm is superior to the canonical flash approach that has dominated P300 BCIs for over 20 years. The subjective reports indicated that the conditions that yielded better performance were not considered especially burdensome. Therefore, although further work is needed to identify which face paradigm is best, it is clear that the canonical flash approach should be replaced with a face paradigm when aiming at increasing bit rate. However, the face paradigm has to be further explored with practical applications particularly with locked-in patients. KW - ERPS KW - communication KW - TO-target interval KW - visual-evoked potentials KW - brain-computer-interface KW - recognition KW - amplitude KW - paradigm KW - systems Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-134173 VL - 7 IS - 11 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Hommers, Wilfried A1 - Lewand, Martin A1 - Ehrmann, Dominic T1 - Testing the moral algebra of two Kohlbergian informers JF - Psícologica N2 - This paper seeks to unify two major theories of moral judgment: Kohlberg's stage theory and Anderson's moral information integration theory. Subjects were told about thoughts of actors in Kohlberg's classic altruistic Heinz dilemma and in a new egoistical dilemma. These actors's thoughts represented Kohlberg's stages I (Personal Risk) and IV (Societal Risk) and had three levels, High, Medium, and Low. They were presented singly and in a 3 x 3 integration design. Subjects judged how many months of prison the actor deserved. The data supported the averaging model of moral integration theory, whereas Kohlberg's theory has no way to handle the integration problem. Following this, subjects ranked statements related to Kohlberg's first four stages in a procedure similar to that of Rest (1975). Higher score went with larger effect of Societal Risk as predicted by Kohlberg's theory. But contrary to Kohlberg's theory, no age trends were found. Also strongly contrary to Kohlberg's theory, effects of Personal Risk (Stage I) and Societal Risk (Stage IV) correlated positively. KW - integration KW - information KW - judgements KW - intent KW - damage KW - rules Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-133917 VL - 33 IS - 3 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Tobias, Kaufmann A1 - Völker, Stefan A1 - Gunesch, Laura A1 - Kübler, Andrea T1 - Spelling is just a click away – a user-centered brain-computer interface including auto-calibration and predictive text entry N2 - Brain–computer interfaces (BCI) based on event-related potentials (ERP) allow for selection of characters from a visually presented character-matrix and thus provide a communica- tion channel for users with neurodegenerative disease. Although they have been topic of research for more than 20 years and were multiply proven to be a reliable communication method, BCIs are almost exclusively used in experimental settings, handled by qualified experts. This study investigates if ERP–BCIs can be handled independently by laymen without expert support, which is inevitable for establishing BCIs in end-user’s daily life situations. Furthermore we compared the classic character-by-character text entry against a predictive text entry (PTE) that directly incorporates predictive text into the character- matrix. N = 19 BCI novices handled a user-centered ERP–BCI application on their own without expert support. The software individually adjusted classifier weights and control parameters in the background, invisible to the user (auto-calibration). All participants were able to operate the software on their own and to twice correctly spell a sentence with the auto-calibrated classifier (once with PTE, once without). Our PTE increased spelling speed and, importantly, did not reduce accuracy. In sum, this study demonstrates feasi- bility of auto-calibrating ERP–BCI use, independently by laymen and the strong benefit of integrating predictive text directly into the character-matrix. KW - Psychologie KW - P300-Speller KW - ERP-BCI KW - brain–computerinterface KW - user-centered KW - auto-calibration KW - predictivetextentry KW - event-relatedpotentials KW - assisitvetechnology Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-75739 ER - TY - THES A1 - Kinateder, Max T1 - Social Influence in Emergency Situations – Studies in Virtual Reality T1 - Sozialer Einfluss in Notfallsituationen - Studien in virtueller Realität N2 - In 1999, a tragic catastrophe occurred in the Mont Blanc Tunnel, one of the most important transalpine road tunnels. Twenty-seven of the victims never left their vehicles as a result of which they were trapped in smoke and suffocated (Beard & Carvel, 2005). Immediate evacuation is crucial in tunnel fires, but still many tunnel users stay passive. During emergency situations people strongly influence each other’s behavior (e.g. Nilsson & Johansson, 2009a). So far, only few empirical experimental studies investigated the interaction of individuals during emergencies. Recent developments of advanced immersive virtual worlds, allow simulating emergency situations which makes analogue studies possible. In the present dissertation project, theoretical aspects of human behavior and SI in emergencies are addressed (Chapter 1). The question of Social Influence in emergency situations is investigated in five simulation studies during different relevant stages of the evacuation process from a simulated road tunnel fire (Chapter 2). In the last part, the results are discussed and criticized (Chapter 3). Using a virtual reality (VR) road tunnel scenario, study 1 (pilot study) and 2 investigated the effect of information about adequate behavior in tunnel emergencies as well as Social Influence (SI) on drivers’ behavior. Based on a classic study of Darley and Latané (1968) on bystander inhibition, the effect of passive bystanders on self-evacuation was analyzed. Sixty participants were confronted with an accident and smoke in a road tunnel. The presence of bystanders and information status was manipulated and consequently, participants were randomly assigned into four different groups. Informed participants read a brochure containing relevant information about safety behavior in emergency situations prior to the tunnel drives. In the bystander conditions, passive bystanders were situated in a car in front of the emergency situation. Participants who had received relevant information left the car more frequently than the other participants. Neither significant effect of bystanders nor interaction with information status on the participants’ behavior was observed. Study 3 (pilot study) examined a possible alternative explanation for weak SI in VR. Based on the Threshold Theory of Social Influence (Blascovich, 2002b) and the work of Guadagno et al. (2007), the perception of virtual humans as an avatar (a virtual representation of a real human being) or as an agent (a computer-controlled animated character) was manipulated. Subsequently, 32 participants experienced an accident similar to the one in study 1. However, they were co-drivers and a virtual agent (VA) was the driver. Participants reacted differently in avatar and agent condition. Consequently, the manipulation of the avatar condition was implemented in study 4. In study 4, SI within the vehicle was investigated, as drivers are mostly not alone in their car. In a tunnel scenario similar to the first study, 34 participants were confronted with an emergency situation either as drivers or co-drivers. In the driver group, participants drove themselves and a VA was sitting on the passenger seat. Correspondently, participants in the co-driver group were seated on the passenger seat and the VA drove the vehicle on a pre-recorded path. Like in study 1, the tunnel was blocked by an accident and smoke was coming from the accident in one drive. The VA initially stayed inactive after stopping the vehicle but started to evacuate after ca. 30 seconds. About one third of the sample left the vehicle during the situation. There were no significant differences between drivers and co-drivers regarding the frequency of leaving the vehicle. Co-drivers waited significantly longer than drivers before leaving the vehicle. Study 5 looked at the pre-movement and movement phase of the evacuation process. Forty participants were repeatedly confronted with an emergency situation in a virtual road tunnel filled with smoke. Four different experimental conditions systematically varied the presence and behavior of a VA. In all but one conditions a VA was present. Across all conditions at least 60% of the participants went to the emergency exit. If the VA went to the emergency exit, the ratio increased to 75%. If the VA went in the opposite direction of the exit, however, only 61% went there. If participants were confronted with a passive VA, they needed significantly longer until they started moving and reached the emergency exit. The main and most important finding across all studies is that SI is relevant for self-evacuation, but the degree of SI varies across the phases of evacuation and situation. In addition to the core findings, relevant theoretical and methodological questions regarding the general usefulness and limitations of VR as a research tool are discussed. Finally, a short summary and outlook on possible future studies is presented. N2 - In der Mont Blanc Tunnel Katastrophe im Jahr 1999 starben 39 Menschen, von denen 27 nicht versucht hatten rechtzeitig zu flüchten. In der Folge wurden diese Personen vom Rauch eingeschlossen und erstickten in ihren Fahrzeugen. Bisher gibt es nur vereinzelt empirische Studien, die sich mit Fragestellungen zu menschlichem Verhalten in Gefahrensituationen beschäftigen. Noch weniger Arbeiten beschäftigen sich mit der gegenseitigen Beeinflussung von Individuen in Gefahrensituationen. Die wohl wahrscheinlichste Erklärung ist, dass es bisher kaum möglich oder zu aufwändig war, Gefahrensituationen experimentalpsychologisch zu untersuchen. Die Entwicklung immersiver virtueller Welten erlaubt es allerdings, solche Situationen ökologisch valide zu simulieren. Erstes Ziel des Promotionsvorhabens war deshalb sozialen Einfluss in virtuell simulierten Gefahrensituationen mittels experimentalpsychologischer Studien zu untersuchen. Zweites Ziel war die Untersuchung methodischer Grundlagen zur Untersuchung von sozialem Einfluss in virtueller Realität. Die Dissertation gliedert sich in drei Teile: Kapitel 1 führt zunächst in die Themen menschliches Verhalten in Gefahrensituationen, Evakuierung und sozialer Einfluss während Notfällen ein. In Kapitel 2 werden die eigenen empirischen Arbeiten dargestellt. Dabei wurde sozialer Einfluss in verschiedenen kritischen Phasen des Evakuierungsprozesses während eines Tunnelbrandes untersucht. Insgesamt wurden fünf unabhängige Erhebungen mit insgesamt 194 Studienteilnehmern durchgeführt. Studie 1 (Vorstudie) und 2 untersuchte den sozialen Einfluss passiver virtueller Bystander sowie den Effekt von Informationen auf das Fluchtverhalten. Die Probanden wurden mit einem Unfall und sich ausbreitendem Rauch in einem Straßentunnel konfrontiert. In einer Probandengruppe befanden sich passive Bystander am Unfallort. Die Ergebnisse zeigten erstens, dass nur wenige uninformierte Probanden überhaupt das Fahrzeug verließen um aus sich zum Notausgang zu begeben. Zweitens, konnten Information das Verhalten während des Unfalls verbessern. Drittens fand sich nur ein schwacher Einfluss passiver virtueller Bystander auf das Verhalten der Probanden in der Notfallsituation. Studie 3 (Vorstudie) untersuchte eine mögliche alternative Erklärung für schwachen sozialen Einfluss in virtueller Realität. Hier wurde die Wahrnehmung virtueller Menschen als Avatar (eine von realen Menschen gesteuerte virtuelle Repräsentation) oder als Agent (vom Computer gesteuerte animierte Figuren) manipuliert. Anschließend erlebten die Probanden einen ähnlichen Unfall wie in Studie 1. Allerdings waren sie nun Beifahrer und erlebten den Unfall gemeinsam mit einem animierten virtuellen Menschen der das Fahrzeug lenkte. Probanden ließen sich eher von einer animierten Menschen beeinflussen, wenn sie überzeugt waren, dass es sich um einen Avatar handelt. Studie 4 untersuchte den Einfluss von anderen Personen im Fahrzeug auf das Verhalten in einer Notfallsituation. Dabei erlebten die Probanden die gleiche Gefahrensituation wie in Studie 1 entweder als Fahrer oder als Beifahrer. Gleichzeitig befand sich ein virtueller Agent im Fahrzeug, der sich zunächst passiv verhielt aber nach einer gewissen Zeit das Fahrzeug verließ. Es zeigte sich, dass Probanden zügiger dem Verhalten des virtuellen Agenten folgten, wenn der Agent Fahrer und die Probanden Beifahrer waren. In Studie 5 wurde das eigentliche Evakuierungsverhalten während eines simulierten Tunnelbrandes untersucht. Dabei befanden sich die Probanden wiederholt in einem stark verrauchten Tunnel und das Verhalten eines virtuellen Agenten wurde systematisch manipuliert. Die meisten Probanden suchten den Notausgang auf, jedoch zeigte sich, dass das Verhalten des virtuellen Agenten die Probanden beeinflusste: Ging der Agent in die entgegengesetzte Richtung des Notausgangs oder blieb dieser passiv, so gingen die Probanden seltener zum Notausgang und benötigten signifikant länger um diesen zu erreichen. Kapitel 3 enthält schließlich die Zusammenfassung und Diskussion der Studien. Dabei werden die Ergebnisse der Arbeit in den aktuellen Stand der Forschung eingeordnet, praktische Implikationen abgeleitet und der weitere Forschungsbedarf beschrieben. Insgesamt konnte gezeigt werden, dass sozialer Einfluss in Gefahrensituationen von Bedeutung ist, aber während verschiedener Phasen des Evakuierungsprozesses unterschiedlich stark ist. Abschließen werden die theoretischen und methodischen Kritikpunkte der Forschungsarbeiten genannt und erörtert. KW - Notfall KW - Sozialpsychologie KW - Sozialer Einfluss KW - Psychologische Sicherheitsforschung KW - Strassentunnel KW - Evakuierung KW - Virtuelle Realitaet KW - Social Influence KW - Tunnel emergencies KW - safety research KW - evacuation behavior KW - virtual reality Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-76805 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Sütterlin, Stefan A1 - Paap, Muirne C. S. A1 - Babic, Stana A1 - Kübler, Andrea A1 - Vögele, Claus T1 - Rumination and Age: Some Things Get Better JF - Journal of Aging Research N2 - Rumination has been defined as a mode of responding to distress that involves passively focusing one's attention on symptoms of distress without taking action. This dysfunctional response style intensifies depressed mood, impairs interpersonal problem solving, and leads to more pessimistic future perspectives and less social support. As most of these results were obtained from younger people, it remains unclear how age affects ruminative thinking. Three hundred members of the general public ranging in age from 15 to 87 years were asked about their ruminative styles using the Response Styles Questionnaire (RSQ), depression and satisfaction with life. A Mokken Scale analysis confirmed the two-factor structure of the RSQ with brooding and reflective pondering as subcomponents of rumination. Older participants (63 years and older) reported less ruminative thinking than other age groups. Life satisfaction was associated with brooding and highest for the earlier and latest life stages investigated in this study. Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-124356 VL - 2012 IS - 267327 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ritz, Thomas A1 - Enlow, Michelle Bosquet A1 - Schulz, Stefan M. A1 - Kitts, Robert A1 - Staudenmayer, John A1 - Wright, Rosalind J. T1 - Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia as an Index of Vagal Activity during Stress in Infants: Respiratory Influences and Their Control JF - PLoS One N2 - Respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) is related to cardiac vagal outflow and the respiratory pattern. Prior infant studies have not systematically examined respiration rate and tidal volume influences on infant RSA or the extent to which infants' breathing is too fast to extract a valid RSA. We therefore monitored cardiac activity, respiration, and physical activity in 23 six-month old infants during a standardized laboratory stressor protocol. On average, 12.6% (range 0-58.2%) of analyzed breaths were too short for RSA extraction. Higher respiration rate was associated with lower RSA amplitude in most infants, and lower tidal volume was associated with lower RSA amplitude in some infants. RSA amplitude corrected for respiration rate and tidal volume influences showed theoretically expected strong reductions during stress, whereas performance of uncorrected RSA was less consistent. We conclude that stress-induced changes of peak-valley RSA and effects of variations in breathing patterns on RSA can be determined for a representative percentage of infant breaths. As expected, breathing substantially affects infant RSA and needs to be considered in studies of infant psychophysiology. KW - responses KW - heart-rate-variability KW - pulmonary gas-exchange KW - still-face KW - baroreflex mechanism KW - period variability KW - preterm infants KW - waking states KW - reactivity KW - attention Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-135396 VL - 7 IS - 12 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Roeser, Karolin A1 - Eichholz, Ruth A1 - Schwerdtle, Barbara A1 - Schlarb, Angelika A. A1 - Kübler, Andrea T1 - Relationship of sleep quality and health-related quality of life in adolescents according to self- and proxy ratings: a questionnaire survey N2 - Introduction: Sleep disturbances are common in adolescents and adversely affect performance, social contact, and susceptibility to stress. We investigated the hypothesis of a relationship between sleep and health-related quality of life (HRQoL), and applied self- and proxy ratings. Materials and Methods: The sample comprised 92 adolescents aged 11–17 years. All participants and their parents completed a HRQoL measure and the Sleep Disturbance Scale for Children (SDSC ). Children with SDSC T -scores above the normal range (above 60) were classified as poor sleepers. Results: According to self- and proxy ratings, good sleepers reported significantly higher HRQoL than poor sleep- ers. Sleep disturbances were significantly higher and HRQoL significantly lower in self- as compared to parental ratings. Parent-child agreement was higher for subscales measuring observable aspects. Girls experienced significantly stronger sleep disturbances and lower self-rated HRQoL than boys. Discussion: Our findings support the positive relationship of sleep and HRQoL. Furthermore, parents significantly underestimate sleep disturbances and overestimate HRQoL in their children. KW - Psychiatrie KW - quality of life KW - sleep KW - adolescence KW - parent-child agreement KW - sleep disorders Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-75953 ER -