TY - THES A1 - Schmidt, Barbara T1 - Taking your chances: risk behavior and its relation to arousal, framing and motivation T1 - Die eigenen Chancen ergreifen: Risikoverhalten und dessen Beziehung zu Arousal, Framing und Motivation N2 - Human risk behavior is the subject of growing research in the field of psychology as well as economics. One central topic is the influence of psychological variables on risk behavior. Studies contained in this work investigated the impact of arousal, framing and motivation on risk behavior. Arousal can on the one hand be a temporarily stable trait and on the other hand a situation-dependent variable. We showed that low trait arousal, measured via resting heart rate, predicted risky behavior. After physical exercise, state arousal was heightened in the experiment. Participants tended to act less risky after physical exercise. Taken together, the results suggest an inverse relation of arousal and risk behavior. Most studies investigating risk behavior employ a payment method that we call pay-one method: although the gambles that are used consist of many trials, only one trial is paid out. We investigated the effect of the payment method on risk behavior by employing both the pay-one and a pay-all method, which pays out all trials, in a within-subjects design. We found that participants acted about 10% less risky in the pay-one condition compared to the pay-all condition. This result suggests that risk-aversion is over-estimated in common risk paradigms that use the pay-one method. When we worked on a hard task before, we like to engage in a more likable task afterwards. That observation led to the general classification of tasks in want-to and have-to tasks. Our body system strives towards a balance between those two task types in the sense of a homeostasis. We assessed event-related potentials (ERPs) in a risk game that we treated as a want-to task. When participants worked on a difficult have-to task before, amplitudes of the ERP-components in the risk game were raised compared to a condition where participants worked on an easy task before. We conclude that the motivation shift towards a want-to task after a have-to task can be assessed via ERP amplitudes. In conclusion, it was shown that arousal, framing and motivation are important psychological variables that influence risk behavior. The specific mechanisms of these influences have been investigated and discussed. N2 - Menschliches Risikoverhalten ist zunehmend Gegenstand psychologischer und ökonomischer Forschung. Eine zentrale Rolle spielt dabei der Einfluss psychologischer Variablen auf Risikoverhalten. Die in dieser Arbeit vorgestellten Studien untersuchen den Einfluss von physiologischer Erregung, Framing und Motivation auf Risikoverhalten. Physiologische Erregung kann einerseits als zeitlich stabile Eigenschaft, andererseits als situationsabhängige Variable gesehen werden. Wir konnten zeigen, dass niedrige zeitlich stabile physiologische Erregung, die über die Ruhe-Herzrate gemessen wurde, riskantes Verhalten vorhersagte. Nach körperlichem Training war die physiologische Erregung der Versuchspersonen im Experiment kurzzeitig erhöht. Die Versuchspersonen tendierten dazu, nach diesem Training weniger riskant zu handeln. Zusammengenommen legen die Ergebnisse nahe, dass eine inverse Relation zwischen physiologischer Erregung und Risikoverhalten vorliegt. Die meisten Studien, die sich mit Risikoverhalten befassen, verwenden die sogenannte pay-one Auszahlungsmethode: In Risikospielen, die aus vielen Durchgängen bestehen, wird nur ein Durchgang des gesamten Risikospiels ausbezahlt. Wir untersuchten den Effekt der Auszahlungsmethode auf das Risikoverhalten, indem wir sowohl die pay-one Methode als auch die pay-all Methode, bei der die Gewinne aller Durchgänge ausbezahlt werden, in einem Zwischensubjekt-Design verwendeten. Wir fanden heraus, dass die Versuchspersonen in der pay-one Bedingung etwa 10% weniger riskant handelten, verglichen mit der pay-all Bedingung. Dieses Ergebnis legt nahe, dass die Risiko-Aversion in Paradigmen, die die pay-one Methode verwenden, überschätzt wird. Nachdem wir an einer schwierigen Aufgabe gearbeitet haben, sehnen wir uns nach einer angenehmeren Aufgabe. Diese Beobachtung führte zu einer generellen Unterscheidung von want-to und have-to Aufgaben. Unser Körper strebt nach einem Gleichgewicht zwischen diesen beiden Aufgabentypen im Sinne einer Homöostase. Wir erfassten ereigniskorrelierte Potentiale (ERPs) durch das Elektroencephalogramm in einem Risikospiel, das wir als want-to Aufgabe verwendeten. Wenn Versuchspersonen vorher eine schwere Aufgabe bearbeitet hatten, waren die Amplituden der ERP- Komponenten im Risikospiel erhöht im Vergleich zu einer Bedingung, in der die Versuchspersonen vorher eine einfache Aufgabe bearbeitet hatten. Wir schlussfolgern, dass die Motivationsänderung nach einer have-to Aufgabe in Richtung einer want-to Aufgabe mit Hilfe von ERP Amplituden erfasst werden kann. Zusammenfassend wurde gezeigt, dass physiologische Erregung, Framing und Motivation wichtige psychologische Variablen sind, die Risikoverhalten beeinflussen. Die spezifischen Wirkungsweisen dieser Einflüsse wurden untersucht und diskutiert. KW - Risikoverhalten KW - Motivation KW - arousal KW - framing KW - risk behavior Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-107149 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Meule, Adrian T1 - Are certain foods addictive? JF - Frontiers in Psychiatry N2 - A commentary on Lifestyle medicine: the importance of firmgrounding on evidence by Rippe JM. Am J Lifestyle Med (2014) doi:10.1177/ 1559827613520527 Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-120257 SN - 1664-0640 VL - 5 IS - 38 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wieser, Matthias J. A1 - Gerdes, Antje B. M. A1 - Reicherts, Philipp A1 - Pauli, Paul T1 - Mutual influences of pain and emotional face processing JF - Frontiers in Psychology N2 - The perception of unpleasant stimuli enhances whereas the perception of pleasant stimuli decreases pain perception. In contrast, the effects of pain on the processing of emotional stimuli are much less known. Especially given the recent interest in facial expressions of pain as a special category of emotional stimuli, a main topic in this research line is the mutual influence of pain and facial expression processing. Therefore, in this mini-review we selectively summarize research on the effects of emotional stimuli on pain, but more extensively turn to the opposite direction namely how pain influences concurrent processing of affective stimuli such as facial expressions. Based on the motivational priming theory one may hypothesize that the perception of pain enhances the processing of unpleasant stimuli and decreases the processing of pleasant stimuli. This review reveals that the literature is only partly consistent with this assumption: pain reduces the processing of pleasant pictures and happy facial expressions, but does not – or only partly – affect processing of unpleasant pictures. However, it was demonstrated that pain selectively enhances the processing of facial expressions if these are pain-related (i.e., facial expressions of pain). Extending a mere affective modulation theory, the latter results suggest pain-specific effects which may be explained by the perception-action model of empathy. Together, these results underscore the important mutual influence of pain and emotional face processing. KW - emotion KW - facial expression KW - ERPs KW - perception-action KW - pain Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-118446 SN - 1664-1078 VL - 5 ER - TY - THES A1 - Winkler, Markus Heinrich T1 - Motivational properties of reward associated stimuli - Conditioning studies with smoke and monetary reinforcement T1 - Motivationale Wirkung belohnungsassoziierter Reize – Konditionierungsstudien mit Rauchen und Geldgewinn als Verstärker N2 - Abstract Tobacco addiction is considered as a chronic relapsing disorder, characterized by compul-sive drug seeking and intake. Learning processes are stressed to account for the situational-specific expression of core features of the disorder, e.g., craving for drug, tolerance and ex-cessive consumption. According to incentive theories, smoke conditioned stimuli are hy-pothesized to be appetitive in nature, promoting craving, approach and consummatory be-havior. Commonly, smoking cues are treated as simple excitatory conditioned stimuli formed by a close and reliable overlap with the drug effect. However, the smoking ritual comprises a multitude of stimuli which may give rise to different forms of learning and con-ditioned responses partially opposing each other. Previous research suggests the predictive content and the temporal proximity of smoking stimuli to the drug effect as important de-terminants of cue reactivity. In contrast to stimuli related to the preparatory stage of smok-ing and the start of consumption (BEGIN stimuli), stimuli from the terminal stage of smok-ing (END stimuli) apparently lack high cue reactivity. Several lines of evidence suggest the poor cue properties of terminal stimuli to be related to their signaling of poor smoke availa-bility. Indeed, cue reactivity is commonly decreased when smoking appears to be unavaila-ble. Moreover, the learning literature suggests that stimuli predictive for the non-availability of reward may acquire the capacity to modulate or oppose the responses of ex-citatory conditioned stimuli. Therefore, the aim of the present thesis was to enhance our knowledge of stimulus control in human drug addiction and incentive motivation by running a series of conditioning studies with smoke intake and monetary reward as reinforcer. Sub-jective report and physiological measures of motivational valence and consummatory re-sponse tendencies were used as dependent variables. The first experiment of this thesis used a differential conditioning paradigm to reveal evi-dence for the conditioning of preparatory and consummatory responses to a CS+ for smok-ing. Neutral pictograms served as CSs and single puffs on a cigarette as US. In line with the predictions of incentive theories, the excitatory CS+ for smoking acquired the ability to evoke an appetitive conditioned response, as indicated by enhanced activity of the M. zy-gomaticus major. Moreover, anticipation of puffing on the cigarette increased the activity of the M. orbicularis oris (lip muscle), indicating the activation of consummatory response tendencies. Finally, the CS+ evoked stronger skin conductance responses, indicative of in-creased autonomic arousal and orienting in preparation for action. In contrast, the rating data were apparently unaffected by the experimental contingency. In sum, the physiological data provide support for the notion that excitatory smoke conditioning gives rise to appeti-tive and consummatory conditioned responses, which may at least partially contribute to the maintenance of tobacco addiction. The second experiment of this thesis adapted the conditioning protocol of the first study to probe the functional significance of terminal stimuli in the control of addictive behavior. This study manipulated the predictive relationship of BEGIN and END stimuli to smoke rein-forcement to provide further support for the differential reactivity to both stimuli and the retarded (i.e., delayed) conditioning of END stimuli. Overall, the results of the first study of this thesis were conceptually replicated as the association of a BEGIN stimulus with smoke intake resulted in the acquisition of appetitive and consummatory physiological responses. Importantly, the results revealed evidence for a retarded excitatory conditioning of END stimuli. Thus, pairing of an END stimulus with smoke intake failed to produce a conditioned discrimination in terms of motivational valence and autonomic arousal, as indicated by the activity of the M. corrugator supercilii and the skin conductance data. These results provide further support for the notion that END stimuli may be weak cues for smoking. Moreover, in light of the results of the first study of this thesis, the retarded excitatory conditioning of terminal stimuli may be suggestive of an inhibitory response component, which may be re-lated to their signaling of poor smoke availability. In sum, these results add to a growing body of data, which suggest that the expression of cue reactivity may be modulated by the temporal proximity and the availability of the drug effect. The aim of the third study of this thesis was to provide “proof of concept” for an inhibi-tory conditioning notion of terminal stimuli. In this analog study BEGIN and END stimuli were emulated as discriminative SD and S for monetary reward. During an acquisition phase conditioned inhibition was established to the S predictive of the non-availability of re-ward. Subsequently a retardation test was used to substantiate conditioned inhibition. In this test, excitatory conditioning of the previous S was compared to the excitatory condi-tioning of a novel control stimulus. Importantly, the results revealed evidence for reward conditioned inhibition as indicated by the retarded acquisition of subjective (pleasure and reward expectancy) and physiological (skin conductance and activity of the M. orbicularis oculi) responses. In sum, these results provide support for the notion that stimuli predictive for the non-availability of reward may acquire the capacity to oppose the responses of ex-citatory conditioned stimuli. Thus, future research may benefit from the consideration of inhibitory conditioning processes in drug addiction, which may be of theoretical, methodo-logical and clinical importance. In sum, the present thesis revealed evidence for 1) an appetitive nature of excitatory condi-tioned smoking cues, 2) the dependency of this learning process on the temporal position of the conditioned stimuli in the intake ritual and 3) the acquisition of conditioned inhibition by a stimulus predictive for the non-availability of reward, as evident in retarded excitatory conditioning. Overall, these studies made a novel contribution to the field of human drug addiction and incentive motivation and provided valuable suggestions for further research. N2 - Zusammenfassung Tabakabhängigkeit wird als eine chronische Störung betrachtet, die durch exzessives dro-gensuchendes und -konsumierendes Verhalten gekennzeichnet ist. Lernprozesse werden zur Erklärung der Situationsspezifität zentraler Merkmale einer Abhängigkeit (z.B. Craving, Tole-ranz und übermäßiger Konsum) herangezogen. Anreiztheorien postulieren, dass konditio-nierte Rauchreize appetitiv sind, ein Verlangen zu konsumieren hervorrufen sowie Annähe-rungs- und konsummatorische Reaktionen induzieren. Gewöhnlich werden Rauch-Cues als einfache, exzitatorisch konditionierte Reize aufgefasst, die durch eine enge und reliable Überlappung mit der Drogenwirkung entstehen. Das Rauchritual beinhaltet allerdings eine Vielzahl von Reizen, die vermutlich unterschiedliche Lernformen begünstigen und dadurch teils einander entgegengesetzte konditionierte Reaktionen hervorrufen können. Die bisheri-ge Forschung legt nahe, dass die zeitliche Nähe und der prädiktive Wert von Reizen hinsicht-lich der Drogenwirkung die Cue-Reaktivität entscheidend beeinflussen. Im Gegensatz zu Reizen aus der präparatorischen Phase des Rauchrituals und solchen vom Konsumbeginn (Anfangsreize) lösen Reize aus der Endphase des Konsums (Endreize) nur geringe Cue-Reaktivität aus. Verschiedene Befunde legen nahe, dass die schwache Cue-Wirkung von End-reizen mit der wahrgenommenen Verfügbarkeit der Droge(nwirkung) zusammenhängt. So ist die Cue-Reaktivität gewöhnlich reduziert, wenn keine Möglichkeit zum Konsum besteht. Zudem legt die Lernliteratur nahe, dass Reize, die die Nicht-Verfügbarkeit einer Belohnung vorhersagen die Fähigkeit erwerben, exzitatorisch konditionierten Reaktionen entgegenzu-wirken. Das Ziel der vorliegenden Arbeit war es somit, unser Verständnis der Reizabhängig-keit süchtigen Verhaltens und der zugrundeliegenden motivationalen Prozesse zu erweitern. Dazu wurde eine Reihe von Konditionierungsstudien mit Rauchaufnahme und Geldgewinn als Verstärker durchgeführt. Als abhängige Variablen wurde der Selbstbericht der Proban-den sowie physiologische Maße motivationaler Valenz und konsummatorischer Reaktions-tendenzen erfasst. Im ersten Experiment dieser Arbeit wurde ein differentielles Konditionierungsparadigma ver-wendet, um den Nachweis zu erbringen, dass ein CS+ für Rauchen präparatorische und kon-summatorische Reaktionen hervorruft. Dabei wurden neutrale Symbole als konditionierte Reize verwendet und einzelne Züge an einer Zigarette als US. In Übereinstimmung mit den Vorhersagen von Anreiztheorien löste der exzitatorische CS+ eine appetitive konditionierte Reaktion aus, die sich in einer erhöhten Aktivität des M. zygomaticus major zeigte. Zudem war die Aktivität des M. orbicularis oris (Lippenmuskel) erhöht, was für die Aktivierung kon-summatorischer Reaktionstendenzen spricht. Schließlich rief der CS+ eine erhöhte Haut-leitfähigkeitsreaktion hervor, die eine Orientierungsreaktion und erhöhte autonome Reak-tivität im Rahmen der Handlungsvorbereitung anzeigt. Die experimentelle Kontingenz spie-gelte sich jedoch nicht in den Reizbewertungen wieder. Insgesamt stützen die physiologi-schen Befunde die Auffassung, dass exzitatorisch konditionierte Rauchreize appetitive und konsummatorische Reaktionen auslösen, die zur Aufrechterhaltung einer Tabakabhängig-keit beitragen können. Im zweiten Experiment wurde das Konditionierungsparadigma der ersten Studie adaptiert. Ziel des Experiments war es, die funktionellen Auswirkungen von Endreizen auf verschiedene Parameter abhängigen Verhaltens zu untersuchen. In der Studie wurde der prädiktive Gehalt von Anfangs- und Endreizen experimentell manipuliert, indem die Reize entweder als CS+ oder als CS- (und umgekehrt) mit Rauchen gepaart wurden. Zum einen sollten dadurch bis-herige Befunde erweitert werden, die zeigen, dass beide Reize unterschiedliche Reaktionen auslösen. Zum anderen sollte der Nachweis einer verlangsamten exzitatorischen Konditio-nierung von Endreizen erbracht werden. Insgesamt konnten die Ergebnisse der ersten Studie der vorliegenden Arbeit konzeptuell repliziert werden. So lösten Anfangsreize appetitive und konsummatorische physiologische Reaktionen aus, wenn sie mit Rauchen gepaart wurden. Wichtiger jedoch war der Befund einer verlangsamten exzitatorischen Konditionierung von Endreizen, wie er sich in Maßen motivationaler Valenz (M. corrugator supercilii) und auto-nomer Erregung (Hautleitfähigkeitsreaktionen) zeigte. Diese Befunde stützen die Auffas-sung, dass Endreize nur eine schwache Cue-Wirkung besitzen. In der Zusammenschau mit den Befunden der ersten Studie sprechen die Ergebnisse andeutungsweise dafür, dass End-reize eine inhibitorische Reaktionskomponente besitzen. Diese könnte damit in Zusam-menhang stehen, dass die wahrgenommene Verfügbarkeit der Droge(nwirkung) im Falle von Endreizen reduziert ist. Insgesamt gliedern sich die Befunde gut in eine Reihe von Studien ein, die nahelegen, dass Cue-Reaktivität durch die zeitliche Nähe und die Verfügbarkeit der Drogenwirkung moduliert wird. Das Ziel der dritten Studie war es einen inhibitorischen Konditionierungsansatz zur Entste-hung von Endreizen konzeptuell zu überprüfen. In einer Analogstudie wurden Anfangs- und Endreize als diskriminative Hinweisreize SD bzw. S für einen Geldgewinn modelliert. In einer Akquisitionsphase wurde der S, der die Nicht-Verfügbarkeit eines Gewinns signalisierte, als konditionierter Hemmreiz etabliert. Anschließend wurde ein Retardationstest zum Nach-weis konditionierter Hemmung durchgeführt. In diesem Test wurde die exzitatorische Kon-ditionierung des ehemaligen S mit der exzitatorischen Konditionierung eines neuen Kon-trollreizes verglichen. Dabei konnte konditionierte Hemmung in Form einer verlangsamten exzitatorischen Konditionierung subjektiver (positiver Affekt und Belohnungserwartung) und physiologischer (Hautleitfähigkeitsreaktionen und Aktivität des M. orbicularis oculi) Reaktionen nachgewiesen werden. Insgesamt stützen diese Befunde die Auffassung, dass Reize, die die Nicht-Verfügbarkeit einer Belohnung vorhersagen die Fähigkeit erwerben, exzitatorisch konditionierten Reaktionen entgegenzuwirken. Die weitere Suchtforschung könnte somit von einer stärkeren Berücksichtigung konditionierte Hemmprozesse sowohl hinsichtlich der Theorienbildung als auch in methodischer und klinischer Hinsicht profitie-ren. Insgesamt hat die vorliegende Arbeit gezeigt, dass 1) exzitatorisch konditionierte Rauchrei-ze eine appetitive Wirkung entfalten, 2) dieser Lernprozess von der zeitlichen Stellung der konditionierten Reize im Konsumritual abhängig ist und 3) Reize, die prädiktiv für die Nicht-Verfügbarkeit einer Belohnung sind als konditionierte Hemmreize fungieren können, was sich in einer verlangsamten exzitatorischen Konditionierung wiederspiegelt. Die vorliegende Arbeit erbrachte einen neuen Beitrag im Bereich der Sucht- und Motivationsforschung sowie mehrere Anknüpfungspunkte für zukünftige Forschungsvorhaben. KW - BEGIN stimuli KW - END stimuli KW - Incentive motivation KW - Conditioned inhibition KW - Facial EMG KW - Smoking KW - Addiction KW - Conditioning KW - Nicotine KW - Reward KW - Cue KW - Rauchen KW - Konditionierung Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-121794 ER - TY - THES A1 - Ewald, Heike T1 - Influence of context and contingency awareness on fear conditioning – an investigation in virtual reality T1 - Der Einfluss von Kontext und Kontingenzbewusstsein auf Furchtkonditionierung – eine Untersuchung in virtueller Realität N2 - Fear conditioning is an efficient model of associative learning, which has greatly improved our knowledge of processes underlying the development and maintenance of pathological fear and anxiety. In a differential fear conditioning paradigm, one initially neutral stimulus (NS) is paired with an aversive event (unconditioned stimulus, US), whereas another stimulus does not have any consequences. After a few pairings the NS is associated with the US and consequently becomes a conditioned stimulus (CS+), which elicits a conditioned response (CR). The formation of explicit knowledge of the CS/US association during conditioning is referred to as contingency awareness. Findings about its role in fear conditioning are ambiguous. The development of a CR without contingency awareness has been shown in delay fear conditioning studies. One speaks of delay conditioning, when the US coterminates with or follows directly on the CS+. In trace conditioning, a temporal gap or “trace interval” lies between CS+ and US. According to existing evidence, trace conditioning is not possible on an implicit level and requires more cognitive resources than delay conditioning. The associations formed during fear conditioning are not exclusively associations between specific cues and aversive events. Contextual cues form the background milieu of the learning process and play an important role in both acquisition and the extinction of conditioned fear and anxiety. A common limitation in human fear conditioning studies is the lack of ecological validity, especially regarding contextual information. The use of Virtual Reality (VR) is a promising approach for creating a more complex environment which is close to a real life situation. I conducted three studies to examine cue and contextual fear conditioning with regard to the role of contingency awareness. For this purpose a VR paradigm was created, which allowed for exact manipulation of cues and contexts as well as timing of events. In all three experiments, participants were guided through one or more virtual rooms serving as contexts, in which two different lights served as CS and an electric stimulus as US. Fear potentiated startle (FPS) responses were measured as an indicator of implicit fear conditioning. To test whether participants had developed explicit awareness of the CS-US contingencies, subjective ratings were collected. The first study was designed as a pilot study to test the VR paradigm as well as the conditioning protocol. Additionally, I was interested in the effect of contingency awareness. Results provided evidence, that eye blink conditioning is possible in the virtual environment and that it does not depend on contingency awareness. Evaluative conditioning, as measured by subjective ratings, was only present in the group of participants who explicitly learned the association between CS and US. To examine acquisition and extinction of both fear associated cues and contexts, a novel cue-context generalization paradigm was applied in the second study. Besides the interplay of cues and contexts I was again interested in the effect of contingency awareness. Two different virtual offices served as fear and safety context, respectively. During acquisition, the CS+ was always followed by the US in the fear context. In the safety context, none of the lights had any consequences. During extinction, a additional (novel) context was introduced, no US was delivered in any of the contexts. Participants showed enhanced startle responses to the CS+ compared to the CS- in the fear context. Thus, discriminative learning took place regarding both cues and contexts during acquisition. This was confirmed by subjective ratings, although only for participants with explicit contingency awareness. Generalization of fear to the novel context after conditioning did not depend on awareness and was observable only on trend level. In a third experiment I looked at neuronal correlates involved in extinction of fear memory by means of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Of particular interest were differences between extinction of delay and trace fear conditioning. I applied the paradigm tested in the pilot study and additionally manipulated timing of the stimuli: In the delay conditioning group (DCG) the US was administered with offset of one light (CS+), in the trace conditioning group (TCG) the US was presented 4s after CS+ offset. Most importantly, prefrontal activation differed between the two groups. In line with existing evidence, the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) was activated in the DCG. In the TCG I found activation of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC), which might be associated with modulation of working memory processes necessary for bridging the trace interval and holding information in short term memory. Taken together, virtual reality proved to be an elegant tool for examining human fear conditioning in complex environments, and especially for manipulating contextual information. Results indicate that explicit knowledge of contingencies is necessary for attitude formation in fear conditioning, but not for a CR on an implicit level as measured by FPS responses. They provide evidence for a two level account of fear conditioning. Discriminative learning was successful regarding both cues and contexts. Imaging results speak for different extinction processes in delay and trace conditioning, hinting that higher working memory contribution is required for trace than for delay conditioning. N2 - Furchtkonditionierung ist ein effizientes Modell für assoziatives Lernen und hat unser Wissen über Prozesse, die der Entstehung und Aufrechterhaltung von pathologischer Furcht und Angst zugrunde liegen, entscheidend vergrößert. In einem differentiellen Furchtkonditionierungparadigma wird ein zunächst neutraler Reiz (NS) gemeinsam mit einem aversiven Ereignis (unbedingter Reiz, US) dargeboten, während ein zweiter Stimulus nicht mit dem Ereignis gepaart wird. Nach mehrmaliger gemeinsamer Darbietung wird der NS mit dem US assoziiert. Dadurch wird er zu einem bedingten Reiz (CS+) und löst eine konditionierte Furchtreaktion (CR) aus. Die Bildung expliziten Wissens über die CS/US-Assoziation während der Konditionierung bezeichnet man als Kontingenzbewusstsein. Befunde über die Rolle dieses Bewusstseins in der Furchtkonditionieung sind uneinheitlich. In Delay-Furchtkonditionierungsstudien konnte die Entwicklung einer CR unabhängig von Kontingenzbewusstsein gezeigt werden. Man spricht von Delay-Konditionierung, wenn der US direkt auf den CS+ folgt. Bei der Trace-Konditionierung liegt zwischen dem CS und dem US ein kurzer zeitlicher Abstand (Trace-Interval). Für Trace-Konditionierung werden mehr kognitive Ressourcen benötigt als für Delay-Konditionierung. Auf einer impliziten Ebene ist Trace-Konditionierung nicht möglich. Die Assoziationen, die während der Furchtkonditionierung gebildet werden, beschränken sich nicht auf Assoziationen zwischen spezifischen Reizen und aversiven Ereignissen. Kontextuelle Reize bilden den Hintergrund des Lernprozesses und spielen sowohl bei der Akquisition als auch bei der Extinktion von Furcht und Angst eine wichtige Rolle. Eine häufige Einschränkung in Furchtkonditionierungsstudien beim Menschen ist der Mangel an ökologischer Validität, besonders hinsichtlich der Kontextinformationen. Der Einsatz von virtuellen Realtitäten (VR) stellt einen vielversprechenden Ansatz dar um komplexe Umgebungen nachzubilden, die nahe an Alltagssituationen sind. Um Hinweisreiz- und Kontextkonditionierung unter Berücksichtigung des Kontingenzbewusstseins zu untersuchen habe ich drei Experimente durchgeführt. Dafür wurde ein Paradigma in virtueller Realität entwickelt, das es ermöglicht, Reize, Kontexte sowie zusätzlich das Timing der Ereignisse exakt zu manipulieren. In allen drei Studien wurden Versuchspersonen durch einen oder mehrere virtuelle Räume geführt, in denen zwei verschiedene Lichter als bedingte Reize und ein elektrischer Reiz als unbedingter Reiz dienten. Furchtpotenzierte Startlereaktionen wurden gemessen als Indikator für implizite Furchtkonditionierung. Um zu überprüfen, ob die Versuchspersonen auch explizites Kontingenzbewusstsein erwoben hatten, wurden subjektive Ratings erfasst. Die erste Studie wurde als Pilotstudie konstruiert, um sowohl das VR Paradigma als auch das Konditionierungsprotokoll zu testen. Zusätzlich hat mich der Effekt des Kontingenzbewusstseins interessiert. Die Ergebnisse zeigten, dass Lidschlag-konditionierung im VR Paradigma möglich ist und dass sie nicht vom Kontingenz-bewusstsein abhängt. Allerdings war evaluative Konditionierung, gemessen durch subjektive Ratings, nur erkennbar bei Personen, die die Assoziation von CS und US explizit gelernt hatten. Um Akquisition und Extinktion sowohl furchtassoziierter Reize als auch furchtassoziierter Kontexte zu untersuchen, wurde in der zweiten Studie ein neues Reiz-Kontext-Generalisierungsparadigma eingesetzt. Neben dem Zusammenspiel von Reizen und Kontexten war ich auch hier an der Rolle des Kontingenzbewusstseins interessiert. Zwei verschiedene virtuelle Büros dienten als Furcht- bzw. Sicherheitskontext. Während der Akquisition folgte auf den CS+ im Furchtkontext immer ein US. Im Sicherheitskontext hatte keines der Lichter Konsequenzen. In der Extinktionsphase wurde zusätzlich ein neuer Kontext eingeführt. In keinem der Kontexte wurde ein US appliziert. Die Versuchspersonen reagierten nur im Furchtkontext mit erhöhter Startlereaktion auf den CS+ im Vergleich zum CS-. Diskriminatives Lernen hat sowohl hinsichtlich der Reize als auch hinsichtlich der Kontexte stattgefunden. Dies wurde bestätigt durch die subjektiven Ratings, allerdings nur bei Probanden mit Kontingenzbewusstsein. Eine Generalisierung der Angst vom Furchtkontext auf den neuen Kontext war nicht abhängig vom Kontingenzbewusstsein, konnte allerdings in der Gesamtgruppe nur tendenziell beobachtet werden. In der dritten Studie betrachtete ich neuronale Korrelate der Extinktion von Furchtgedächtnis mit Hilfe von funktioneller Magnetresonanztomographie (fMRI). Von besonderem Interesse waren dabei die Unterschiede zwischen der Extinktion von Delay- und Trace-Konditionierung. Ich habe das Paradigma aus der Pilotstudie angewendet und zusätzlich das Timing der Reize manipuliert. In der Delay-Konditionierungsgruppe (DCG) wurde der US zeitgleich mit dem Ende des CS+ appliziert, in der Trace-Konditionierungsgruppe (TCG) vier Sekunden nach Ende des CS+. Interessanterweise unterschieden sich die beiden Gruppen in ihrer präfrontalen Aktivierung. In Übereinstimmung mit der Literatur war der ventromediale Präfrontalkortex (vmPFC) in der DCG aktiviert. In der TCG konnte man Aktivierung des dorsolateralen Präfrontalkortex (dlPFC) beobachten. Dies könnte mit erhöhter Beteiligung des Arbeitsgedächtnisses zusammenhängen, die notwendig ist, um das Trace-Interval zu überbrücken und die Informationen im Kurzzeitgedächtnis zu halten. Zusammengefasst hat sich virtuelle Realität als ein elegantes Instrument zur Fuchtkonditionierung beim Menschen herausgestellt, besonders zur Manipulation von Kontextinformation. Die Ergebnisse deuten darauf hin, dass explizites Kontingenzwissen notwendig ist für evaluative Furchtkonditionierung, nicht jedoch für eine implizite CR gemessen an FPS Reaktionen. Außerdem liefern sie Evidenz für den “two level account of fear conditioning”. Die Ergebnisse der Bildgebung sprechen für zwei unterschiedliche Extinktionsprozesse bei Delay- und Trace-Konditionierung und weisen darauf hin, dass für Trace-Konditionierung eine höhere Beteiligung des Arbeitsgedächtnisses notwendig ist als für Delay-Konditionierung. KW - Klassische Konditionierung KW - Angst KW - Virtuelle Realität KW - Schreckreaktion KW - Funktionelle Kernspintomographie KW - Fear conditioning KW - virtual reality KW - contingency awareness KW - contextual conditioning KW - fMRI KW - fear potentiated startle response KW - Assoziation KW - Lernen KW - Kontingenz Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-111226 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Meule, Adrian A1 - Gearhard, Ashley N. T1 - Food Addiction in the Light of DSM-5 JF - Nutrients N2 - The idea that specific kind of foods may have an addiction potential and that some forms of overeating may represent an addicted behavior has been discussed for decades. In recent years, the interest in food addiction is growing and research on this topic lead to more precise definitions and assessment methods. For example, the Yale Food Addiction Scale has been developed for the measurement of addiction-like eating behavior based on the diagnostic criteria for substance dependence of the fourth revision of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV). In 2013, diagnostic criteria for substance abuse and-dependence were merged, thereby increasing the number of symptoms for substance use disorders (SUDs) in the DSM-5. Moreover, gambling disorder is now included along SUDs as a behavioral addiction. Although a plethora of review articles exist that discuss the applicability of the DSM-IV substance dependence criteria to eating behavior, the transferability of the newly added criteria to eating is unknown. Thus, the current article discusses if and how these new criteria may be translated to overeating. Furthermore, it is examined if the new SUD criteria will impact future research on food addiction, for example, if "diagnosing" food addiction should also be adapted by considering all of the new symptoms. Given the critical response to the revisions in DSM-5, we also discuss if the recent approach of Research Domain Criteria can be helpful in evaluating the concept of food addiction. KW - food addiction KW - obesity KW - binge eating KW - RDoC KW - DSM-IV KW - DSM-5 KW - substance dependence KW - substance use disorder KW - gambling KW - craving Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-119279 SN - 2072-6643 VL - 6 IS - 9 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Höhne, Johannes A1 - Holz, Elisa A1 - Staiger-Sälzer, Pit A1 - Müller, Klaus-Robert A1 - Kübler, Andrea A1 - Tangermann, Michael T1 - Motor Imagery for Severely Motor-Impaired Patients: Evidence for Brain-Computer Interfacing as Superior Control Solution JF - PLoS ONE N2 - Brain-Computer Interfaces (BCIs) strive to decode brain signals into control commands for severely handicapped people with no means of muscular control. These potential users of noninvasive BCIs display a large range of physical and mental conditions. Prior studies have shown the general applicability of BCI with patients, with the conflict of either using many training sessions or studying only moderately restricted patients. We present a BCI system designed to establish external control for severely motor-impaired patients within a very short time. Within only six experimental sessions, three out of four patients were able to gain significant control over the BCI, which was based on motor imagery or attempted execution. For the most affected patient, we found evidence that the BCI could outperform the best assistive technology (AT) of the patient in terms of control accuracy, reaction time and information transfer rate. We credit this success to the applied user-centered design approach and to a highly flexible technical setup. State-of-the art machine learning methods allowed the exploitation and combination of multiple relevant features contained in the EEG, which rapidly enabled the patients to gain substantial BCI control. Thus, we could show the feasibility of a flexible and tailorable BCI application in severely disabled users. This can be considered a significant success for two reasons: Firstly, the results were obtained within a short period of time, matching the tight clinical requirements. Secondly, the participating patients showed, compared to most other studies, very severe communication deficits. They were dependent on everyday use of AT and two patients were in a locked-in state. For the most affected patient a reliable communication was rarely possible with existing AT. KW - eyes KW - signal filtering KW - social communication KW - hands KW - machine learning KW - man-computer interface KW - games KW - electroencephalography Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-119331 VL - 9 IS - 8 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Meule, Adrian A1 - Lutz, Annika P. C. A1 - Krawietz, Vera A1 - Stützer, Judith A1 - Vögele, Claus A1 - Kübler, Andrea T1 - Food-cue affected motor response inhibition and self-reported dieting success: a pictorial affective shifting task JF - Frontiers in Psychology N2 - Behavioral inhibition is one of the basic facets of executive functioning and is closely related to self-regulation. Impulsive reactions, that is, low inhibitory control, have been associated with higher body mass index (BMI), binge eating, and other problem behaviors (e.g., substance abuse, pathological gambling, etc.). Nevertheless, studies which investigated the direct influence of food-cues on behavioral inhibition have been fairly inconsistent. In the current studies, we investigated food-cue affected behavioral inhibition in young women. For this purpose, we used a go/no-go task with pictorial food and neutral stimuli in which stimulus-response mapping is reversed after every other block (affective shifting task). In study 1, hungry participants showed faster reaction times to and omitted fewer food than neutral targets. Low dieting success and higher BMI were associated with behavioral disinhibition in food relative to neutral blocks. In study 2, both hungry and satiated individuals were investigated. Satiation did not influence overall task performance, but modulated associations of task performance with dieting success and self-reported impulsivity. When satiated, increased food craving during the task was associated with low dieting success, possibly indicating a preload-disinhibition effect following food intake. Food-cues elicited automatic action and approach tendencies regardless of dieting success, self-reported impulsivity, or current hunger levels. Yet, associations between dieting success, impulsivity, and behavioral food-cue responses were modulated by hunger and satiation. Future research investigating clinical samples and including other salient non-food stimuli as control category is warranted. KW - impulsivity KW - inhibitory control KW - response inhibition KW - go/no-go task KW - food-cues KW - dieting success KW - body mass index Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-119840 SN - 1664-1078 VL - 5 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wölk, Julian A1 - Sütterlin, Stefan A1 - Koch, Stefan A1 - Vögele, Claus A1 - Schulz, Stefan M. T1 - Enhanced cardiac perception predicts impaired performance in the Iowa Gambling Task in patients with panic disorder JF - Brain and Behavior N2 - OBJECTIVE: Somatic marker theory predicts that somatic cues serve intuitive decision making; however, cardiovascular symptoms are threat cues for patients with panic disorder (PD). Therefore, enhanced cardiac perception may aid intuitive decision making only in healthy individuals, but impair intuitive decision making in PD patients. METHODS: PD patients and age-and sex-matched volunteers without a psychiatric diagnosis (n=17, respectively) completed the Iowa Gambling Task (IGT) as a measure of intuitive decision making. Interindividual differences in cardiac perception were assessed with a common mental-tracking task. RESULTS: In line with our hypothesis, we found a pattern of opposing associations (Fisher's Z=1.78, P=0.04) of high cardiac perception with improved IGT-performance in matched control-participants (r=0.36, n=14) but impaired IGT-performance in PD patients (r=-0.38, n=13). CONCLUSION: Interoceptive skills, typically assumed to aid intuitive decision making, can have the opposite effect in PD patients who experience interoceptive cues as threatening, and tend to avoid them. This may explain why PD patients frequently have problems with decision making in everyday life. Screening of cardiac perception may help identifying patients who benefit from specifically tailored interventions. KW - panic disorder KW - somatic marker hypothesis KW - cardiac perception KW - Iowa Gambling Task KW - decision making KW - interoception Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-119865 SN - 2162-3279 VL - 4 IS - 2 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ewald, Heike A1 - Glotzbach-Schoon, Evelyn A1 - Gerdes, Antje B. M. A1 - Andreatta, Marta A1 - Müller, Mathias A1 - Mühlberger, Andreas A1 - Pauli, Paul T1 - Delay and trace fear conditioning in a complex virtual learning environment - neural substrates of extinction JF - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience N2 - Extinction is an important mechanism to inhibit initially acquired fear responses. There is growing evidence that the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) inhibits the amygdala and therefore plays an important role in the extinction of delay fear conditioning. To our knowledge, there is no evidence on the role of the prefrontal cortex in the extinction of trace conditioning up to now. Thus, we compared brain structures involved in the extinction of human delay and trace fear conditioning in a between-subjects-design in an fMRI study. Participants were passively guided through a virtual environment during learning and extinction of conditioned fear. Two different lights served as conditioned stimuli (CS); as unconditioned stimulus (US) a mildly painful electric stimulus was delivered. In the delay conditioning group (DCG) the US was administered with offset of one light (CS+), whereas in the trace conditioning group (TCG) the US was presented 4s after CS+ offset. Both groups showed insular and striatal activation during early extinction, but differed in their prefrontal activation. The vmPFC was mainly activated in the DCG, whereas the TCG showed activation of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) during extinction. These results point to different extinction processes in delay and trace conditioning. VmPFC activation during extinction of delay conditioning might reflect the inhibition of the fear response. In contrast, dlPFC activation during extinction of trace conditioning may reflect modulation of working memory processes which are involved in bridging the trace interval and hold information in short term memory. KW - prefrontal cortex KW - delay conditioning KW - trace conditioning KW - extinction KW - virtual reality KW - fMRI KW - medial prefrontal cortex KW - event-related FMRI KW - orbifrontal cortex KW - contextual fear Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-116230 SN - 1662-5161 VL - 8 IS - 323 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Huestegge, Lynn A1 - Rohrßen, Julia A1 - van Ermingen-Marbach, Muna A1 - Pape-Neumann, Julia A1 - Heim, Stefan T1 - Devil in the details ? Developmental dyslexia and visual long-term memory for details JF - Frontiers in Psychology N2 - Cognitive theories on causes of developmental dyslexia can be divided into language-specific and general accounts. While the former assume that words are special in that associated processing problems are rooted in language-related cognition (e.g., phonology) deficits, the latter propose that dyslexia is rather rooted in a general impairment of cognitive (e.g., visual and/or auditory) processing streams. In the present study, we examined to what extent dyslexia (typically characterized by poor orthographic representations) may be associated with a general deficit in visual long-term memory (LTM) for details. We compared object- and detail-related visual LTM performance (and phonological skills) between dyslexic primary school children and IQ-, age-, and gender-matched controls. The results revealed that while the overall amount of LTM errors was comparable between groups, dyslexic children exhibited a greater portion of detail-related errors. The results suggest that not only phonological, but also general visual resolution deficits in LTM may play an important role in developmental dyslexia. KW - anguage and word processing KW - picture processing KW - memory errors KW - orthographic representations KW - visual resolution deficit KW - phonology and reading KW - word form area KW - reading disability KW - spatial attention KW - ventral stream Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-115887 SN - 1664-1078 VL - 5 IS - 686 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Erlbeck, Helena A1 - Kübler, Andrea A1 - Kotchoubey, Boris A1 - Veser, Sandra T1 - Task instructions modulate the attentional mode affecting the auditory MMN and the semantic N400 JF - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience N2 - Event-related potentials (ERPs) have been proven to be a useful tool to complement clinical assessment and to detect residual cognitive functions in patients with disorders of consciousness. These ERPs are of ten recorded using passive or unspecific instructions. Patient data obtained this way are then compared to data from healthy participants, which are usually recorded using active instructions. The present study investigates the effect of attentive modulations and particularly the effect of activevs. passive instruction on the ERP components mismatch negativity (MMN) and N400. A sample of 18 healthy participants listened to three auditory paradigms: anoddball, aword priming, and a sentence paradigm. Each paradigm was presented three times with different instructions: ignoring auditory stimuli, passive listening, and focused attention on the auditory stimuli. After each task, the participants indicated their subjective effort. The N400 decreased from the focused task to the passive task, and was extinct in the ignore task. The MMN exhibited higher amplitudes in the focused and passive task compared to the ignore task. The data indicate an effect of attention on the supratemporal component of the MMN. Subjective effort was equally high in the passive and focused tasks but reduced in the ignore task. We conclude that passive listening during EEG recording is stressful and attenuates ERPs, which renders the interpretation of the results obtained in such conditions difficult. KW - ERP KW - priming KW - selective attention KW - event-related potentials KW - vigilance decrement KW - brain potentials KW - vegetative state KW - consciousness KW - component KW - predicts recovery KW - mismatch negativity KW - attention KW - instruction KW - N400 KW - MMN Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-115553 VL - 8 IS - 654 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Blechert, Jens A1 - Meule, Adrian A1 - Busch, Niko A. A1 - Ohla, Kathrin T1 - Food-pics: an image database for experimental research on eating and appetite JF - Frontiers in Psychology N2 - Our current environment is characterized by the omnipresence of food cues. The sight and smell of real foods, but also graphically depictions of appetizing foods, can guide our eating behavior, for example, by eliciting food craving and influencing food choice. The relevance of visual food cues on human information processing has been demonstrated by a growing body of studies employing food images across the disciplines of psychology, medicine, and neuroscience. However, currently used food image sets vary considerably across laboratories and image characteristics (contrast, brightness, etc.) and food composition (calories, macronutrients, etc.) are often unspecified. These factors might have contributed to some of the inconsistencies of this research. To remedy this, we developed food-pics, a picture database comprising 568 food images and 315 non-food images along with detailed meta-data. A total of N = 1988 individuals with large variance in age and weight from German speaking countries and North America provided normative ratings of valence, arousal, palatability, desire to eat, recognizability and visual complexity. Furthermore, data on macronutrients (g), energy density (kcal), and physical image characteristics (color composition, contrast, brightness, size, complexity) are provided. The food-pics image database is freely available under the creative commons license with the hope that the set will facilitate standardization and comparability across studies and advance experimental research on the determinants of eating behavior. Read F KW - food-cues KW - standardized food images KW - ERP KW - image properties KW - anorexia nervosa KW - restrained eaters KW - high calorie KW - brain KW - weight loss KW - visual-attention KW - responses KW - cues KW - reward KW - hunger KW - fMRI KW - eating behavior KW - obesity KW - food pictures Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-115987 SN - 1664-1078 VL - 5 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Petrasek, Tomas A1 - Prokopova, Iva A1 - Sladek, Martin A1 - Weissova, Kamila A1 - Vojtechova, Iveta A1 - Bahnik, Stepan A1 - Zemanova, Anna A1 - Schönig, Kai A1 - Berger, Stefan A1 - Tews, Bjoern A1 - Bartsch, Dusan A1 - Schwab, Martin E. A1 - Sumova, Alena A1 - Stuchlik, Ales T1 - Nogo-A-deficient transgenic rats show deficits in higher cognitive functions, decreased anxiety, and altered circadian activity patterns JF - Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience N2 - Decreased levels of Nogo-A-dependent signaling have been shown to affect behavior and cognitive functions. In Nogo-A knockout and knockdown laboratory rodents, behavioral alterations were observed, possibly corresponding with human neuropsychiatric diseases of neurodevelopmental origin, particularly schizophrenia. This study offers further insight into behavioral manifestations of Nogo-A knockdown in laboratory rats, focusing on spatial and non-spatial cognition, anxiety levels, circadian rhythmicity, and activity patterns. Demonstrated is an impairment of cognitive functions and behavioral flexibility in a spatial active avoidance task, while non-spatial memory in a step-through avoidance task was spared. No signs of anhedonia, typical for schizophrenic patients, were observed in the animals. Some measures indicated lower anxiety levels in the Nogo-A-deficient group. Circadian rhythmicity in locomotor activity was preserved in the Nogo-A knockout rats and their circadian period (tau) did not differ from controls. However, daily activity patterns were slightly altered in the knockdown animals. We conclude that a reduction of Nogo-A levels induces changes in CNS development, manifested as subtle alterations in cognitive functions, emotionality, and activity patterns. KW - AAPA KW - circadian rhythmicity KW - passive avoidance KW - Nogo-A KW - anhedonia KW - neophobia KW - morris water maze KW - place avoidance task KW - neurite outgrowth inhibitor KW - axon regeneration KW - synaptic plasticity KW - down regulation KW - traumatic brain injury KW - carousel maze KW - messenger RNA KW - genetic deletion Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-117073 VL - 8 IS - 90 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Gerdes, Antje B. M. A1 - Wieser, Matthias J. A1 - Alpers, Georg W. T1 - Emotional pictures and sounds: a review of multimodal interactions of emotion cues in multiple domains JF - Frontiers in Psychology N2 - In everyday life, multiple sensory channels jointly trigger emotional experiences and one channel may alter processing in another channel. For example, seeing an emotional facial expression and hearing the voice's emotional tone will jointly create the emotional experience. This example, where auditory and visual input is related to social communication, has gained considerable attention by researchers. However, interactions of visual and auditory emotional information are not limited to social communication but can extend to much broader contexts including human, animal, and environmental cues. In this article, we review current research on audiovisual emotion processing beyond face-voice stimuli to develop a broader perspective on multimodal interactions in emotion processing. We argue that current concepts of multimodality should be extended in considering an ecologically valid variety of stimuli in audiovisual emotion processing. Therefore, we provide an overview of studies in which emotional sounds and interactions with complex pictures of scenes were investigated. In addition to behavioral studies, we focus on neuroimaging, electro- and peripher-physiological findings. Furthermore, we integrate these findings and identify similarities or differences. We conclude with suggestions for future research. KW - emotional sounds KW - auditory stimuli KW - facial expressions KW - human brain KW - multisensory integration KW - multimodal emotion processing KW - emotional pictures KW - audiovisual interactions KW - emotional scene stimuli KW - visual stimuli KW - social anxiety KW - human amygdala KW - attention capture KW - relevance detection KW - audiovisual integration Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-114548 SN - 1664-1078 VL - 5 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Martens, Suzanne A1 - Bensch, Michael A1 - Halder, Sebastian A1 - Hill, Jeremy A1 - Nijboer, Femke A1 - Ramos-Murguialday, Ander A1 - Schoelkopf, Bernhard A1 - Birbaumer, Niels A1 - Gharabaghi, Alireza T1 - Epidural electrocorticography for monitoring of arousal in locked-in state JF - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience N2 - Electroencephalography (EEG) often fails to assess both the level (i.e., arousal) and the content (i.e., awareness) of pathologically altered consciousness in patients without motor responsiveness. This might be related to a decline of awareness, to episodes of low arousal and disturbed sleep patterns, and/or to distorting and attenuating effects of the skull and intermediate tissue on the recorded brain signals. Novel approaches are required to overcome these limitations. We introduced epidural electrocorticography (ECoG) for monitoring of cortical physiology in a late-stage amytrophic lateral sclerosis patient in completely locked-in state (CLIS) Despite long-term application for a period of six months, no implant related complications occurred. Recordings from the left frontal cortex were sufficient to identify three arousal states. Spectral analysis of the intrinsic oscillatory activity enabled us to extract state-dependent dominant frequencies at <4, similar to 7 and similar to 20 Hz, representing sleep-like periods, and phases of low and elevated arousal, respectively. In the absence of other biomarkers, ECoG proved to be a reliable tool for monitoring circadian rhythmicity, i.e., avoiding interference with the patient when he was sleeping and exploiting time windows of responsiveness. Moreover, the effects of interventions addressing the patient's arousal, e.g., amantadine medication, could be evaluated objectively on the basis of physiological markers, even in the absence of behavioral parameters. Epidural ECoG constitutes a feasible trade-off between surgical risk and quality of recorded brain signals to gain information on the patient's present level of arousal. This approach enables us to optimize the timing of interactions and medical interventions, all of which should take place when the patient is in a phase of high arousal. Furthermore, avoiding low responsiveness periods will facilitate measures to implement alternative communication pathways involving brain-computer interfaces (BCI). KW - temporal-lobe epilepsy KW - neuroprosthetic devices KW - brain computer interface KW - event-related potentials KW - intraoperative electrocoicography KW - electrocorticography KW - epidural recording KW - locked-in state KW - coma KW - consciousness KW - paralyzed patients KW - EEG KW - sleep KW - communication KW - frequencies KW - amyotrophic-lateral-sclerosis Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-114863 VL - 8 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Real, Ruben G. L. A1 - Kotchoubey, Boris A1 - Kübler, Andrea T1 - Studentized continuous wavelet transform (t-CWT) in the analysis of individual ERPs: real and simulated EEG data N2 - This study aimed at evaluating the performance of the Studentized Continuous Wavelet Transform (t-CWT) as a method for the extraction and assessment of event-related brain potentials (ERP) in data from a single subject. Sensitivity, specificity, positive (PPV) and negative predictive values (NPV) of the t-CWT were assessed and compared to a variety of competing procedures using simulated EEG data at six low signal-to-noise ratios. Results show that the t-CWT combines high sensitivity and specificity with favorable PPV and NPV. Applying the t-CWT to authentic EEG data obtained from 14 healthy participants confirmed its high sensitivity. The t-CWT may thus be well suited for the assessment of weak ERPs in single-subject settings. KW - electroencephalogram KW - wavelet KW - EEG KW - t-CWT KW - significance KW - detection KW - ERP Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-113581 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kirsch, Wladimir A1 - Königstein, Elisabeth A1 - Kunde, Wilfried T1 - Action feedback affects the perception of action-related objects beyond actual action success N2 - Successful object-oriented action typically increases the perceived size of aimed target objects. This phenomenon has been assumed to reflect an impact of an actor's current action ability on visual perception. The actual action ability and the explicit knowledge of action outcome, however, were confounded in previous studies. The present experiments aimed at disentangling these two factors. Participants repeatedly tried to hit a circular target varying in size with a stylus movement under restricted feedback conditions. After each movement they were explicitly informed about the success in hitting the target and were then asked to judge target size. The explicit feedback regarding movement success was manipulated orthogonally to actual movement success. The results of three experiments indicated the participants' bias to judge relatively small targets as larger and relatively large targets as smaller after explicit feedback of failure than after explicit feedback of success. This pattern was independent of the actual motor performance, suggesting that the actors' evaluations of motor actions may bias perception of target objects in itself. KW - Action feedback KW - visual perception KW - action KW - knowledge of results KW - action access KW - action ability KW - perception-action coupling Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-112670 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Pohl, Carsten A1 - Kunde, Wilfried A1 - Ganz, Thomas A1 - Conzelmann, Annette A1 - Pauli, Paul A1 - Kiesel, Andrea T1 - Gaming to see: action video gaming is associated with enhanced processing of masked stimuli N2 - Recent research revealed that action video game players outperform non-players in a wide range of attentional, perceptual and cognitive tasks. Here we tested if expertise in action video games is related to differences regarding the potential of shortly presented stimuli to bias behavior. In a response priming paradigm, participants classified four animal pictures functioning as targets as being smaller or larger than a reference frame. Before each target, one of the same four animal pictures was presented as a masked prime to influence participants' responses in a congruent or incongruent way. Masked primes induced congruence effects, that is, faster responses for congruent compared to incongruent conditions, indicating processing of hardly visible primes. Results also suggested that action video game players showed a larger congruence effect than non-players for 20 ms primes, whereas there was no group difference for 60 ms primes. In addition, there was a tendency for action video game players to detect masked primes for some prime durations better than non-players. Thus, action video game expertise may be accompanied by faster and more efficient processing of shortly presented visual stimuli. KW - video gaming masked stimuli KW - masked priming KW - action videogaming KW - unconscious processing KW - prime visibility KW - expertise Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-112681 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Meule, Adrian A1 - Hermann, Tina A1 - Kübler, Andrea T1 - A short version of the Food Cravings Questionnaire—Trait: the FCQ-T-reduced N2 - One of the most often used instruments for the assessment of food cravings is the Food Cravings Questionnaire (FCQ), which consists of a trait (FCQ-T; 39 items) and state (FCQ-S; 15 items) version. Scores on the FCQ-T have been found to be positively associated with eating pathology, body mass index (BMI), low dieting success and increases in state food craving during cognitive tasks involving appealing food stimuli. The current studies evaluated reliability and validity of a reduced version of the FCQ-T consisting of 15 items only (FCQ-T-r). Study 1 was a questionnaire study conducted online among students (N = 323). In study 2, female students (N = 70) performed a working memory task involving food and neutral pictures. Study 1 indicated a one-factorial structure and high internal consistency (α = 0.94) of the FCQ-T-r. Scores of the FCQ-T-r were positively correlated with BMI and negatively correlated with dieting success. In study 2, participants reported higher state food craving after the task compared to before. This increase was positively correlated with the FCQ-T-r. Hours since the last meal positively predicted food craving before the task when controlling for FCQ-T-r scores and the interaction of both variables. Contrarily, FCQ-T-r scores positively predicted food craving after the task when controlling for food deprivation and the interaction term. Thus, trait food craving was specifically associated with state food craving triggered by palatable food-cues, but not with state food craving related to plain hunger. Results indicate high reliability of the FCQ-T-r. Replicating studies that used the long version, small-to-medium correlations with BMI and dieting success could be found. Finally, scores on the FCQ-T-r predicted cue-elicited food craving, providing further support of its validity. The FCQ-T-r constitutes a succinct, valid and reliable self-report measure to efficiently assess experiences of food craving as a trait. KW - food carving KW - Food Carvings Questionnaire KW - psychometric properties KW - validity KW - reliability KW - body mass index KW - dieting success KW - food-cues Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-112748 ER -