26 research outputs found
The Pervasive Problem of Post Hoc Data Selection in Studies on Unconscious Processing
Studies on unconscious mental processes typically require that participants are unaware of some information (e.g., a visual stimulus). An important methodological question in this field of research is how to deal with data from participants who become aware of the critical stimulus according to some measure of awareness. While it has previously been argued that the post hoc selection of participants dependent on an awareness measure may often result in regression-to-the-mean artifacts (Shanks, 2017), a recent article (Sklar et al., 2021) challenged this conclusion claiming that the consideration of this statistical artifact might lead to unjustified rejections of true unconscious influences. In this reply, we explain this pervasive statistical problem with a basic and concrete example, show that Sklar et al. fundamentally mischaracterize it, and then refute the argument that the influence of the artifact has previously been overestimated. We conclude that, without safeguards, the method of post hoc data selection should never be employed in studies on unconscious processing
Access to awareness of direct gaze is related to autistic traits
Background: The atypical processing of eye contact is a characteristic hallmark of autism spectrum disorder (ASD). The severity of these symptoms, however, is thought to lie on a continuum that extends into the typical population. While behavioural evidence shows that differences in social cognitive tasks in typically developed (TD) adults are related to the levels of autistic-like traits, it remains unknown whether such a relation exists for the sensitivity to direct gaze.; Methods: In two experiments, we measured reaction times to detect the faces with direct and averted gaze, suppressed from awareness, i.e. the access to awareness. In experiment 1, we tested N = 19 clinically diagnosed adults with ASD and N = 22 TD matched controls, while in experiment 2, we tested an independent sample of N = 20 TD adults.; Results: In line with the literature, experiment 1 showed preferential processing of direct gaze in the TD group but not in the ASD group. Importantly, we found a linear relationship in both experiments between the levels of autistic traits within the groups of TD participants and their sensitivity to direct gaze: with increasing autistic characteristics, there was a decrease in sensitivity to direct gaze.; Conclusion: These results provide the first evidence that differences in gaze processing and the sensitivity to direct gaze are already present in individuals with subclinical levels of autistic traits. Furthermore, they lend support to the continuum view of the disorder and could potentially help in an earlier diagnosis of individuals at high risk for autism.Peer Reviewe
Biased Recognition of Facial Affect in Patients with Major Depressive Disorder Reflects Clinical State
Cognitive theories of depression posit that perception is negatively biased in
depressive disorder. Previous studies have provided empirical evidence for
this notion, but left open the question whether the negative perceptual bias
reflects a stable trait or the current depressive state. Here we investigated
the stability of negatively biased perception over time. Emotion perception
was examined in patients with major depressive disorder (MDD) and healthy
control participants in two experiments. In the first experiment subjective
biases in the recognition of facial emotional expressions were assessed.
Participants were presented with faces that were morphed between sad and
neutral and happy expressions and had to decide whether the face was sad or
happy. The second experiment assessed automatic emotion processing by
measuring the potency of emotional faces to gain access to awareness using
interocular suppression. A follow-up investigation using the same tests was
performed three months later. In the emotion recognition task, patients with
major depression showed a shift in the criterion for the differentiation
between sad and happy faces: In comparison to healthy controls, patients with
MDD required a greater intensity of the happy expression to recognize a face
as happy. After three months, this negative perceptual bias was reduced in
comparison to the control group. The reduction in negative perceptual bias
correlated with the reduction of depressive symptoms. In contrast to previous
work, we found no evidence for preferential access to awareness of sad vs.
happy faces. Taken together, our results indicate that MDD-related perceptual
biases in emotion recognition reflect the current clinical state rather than a
stable depressive trait
Individual Differences in Goal Pursuit Despite Interfering Aversion, Temptation, and Distraction
Self-control can be defined as the ability to exert control over ones
impulses. Currently, most research in the area relies on self-report. Focusing
on attentional control processes involved in self-control, we modified a
spatial selective attentional cueing task to test three domains of self-
control experimentally in one task using aversive, tempting, and neutral
picture-distractors. The aims of the study were (1) to investigate individual
differences in the susceptibility to aversive, tempting, and neutral
distraction within one paradigm and (2) to test the association of these three
self-control domains to conventional measures of self-control including self-
report. The final sample consisted of 116 participants. The task required
participants to identify target letters “E” or “F” presented at a cued target
location while the distractors were presented. Behavioral and eyetracking data
were obtained during the performance of the task. High task performance was
encouraged via monetary incentives. In addition to the attentional self-
control task, self-reported self-control was assessed and participants
performed a color Stroop task, an unsolvable anagram task and a delay of
gratification task using chocolate sweets. We found that aversion, temptation,
and neutral distraction were associated with significantly increased error
rates, reaction times and gaze pattern deviations. Overall task performance on
our task correlated with self-reported self-control ability. Measures of
aversion, temptation, and distraction showed moderate split-half reliability,
but did not correlate with each other across participants. Additionally,
participants who made a self-controlled decision in the delay of gratification
task were less distracted by temptations in our task than participants who
made an impulsive choice. Our individual differences analyses suggest that (1)
the ability to endure aversion, resist temptations and ignore neutral
distractions are independent of each other and (2) these three domains are
related to other measures of self-control
Pavlovian-to-Instrumental Transfer across Mental Disorders: A Review
A mechanism known as Pavlovian-to-instrumental transfer (PIT) describes a phenomenon by which the values of environmental cues acquired through Pavlovian conditioning can motivate instrumental behavior. PIT may be one basic mechanism of action control that can characterize mental disorders on a dimensional level beyond current classification systems. Therefore, we review human PIT studies investigating subclinical and clinical mental syndromes. The literature prevails an inhomogeneous picture concerning PIT. While enhanced PIT effects seem to be present in non-substance-related disorders, overweight people, and most studies with AUD patients, no altered PIT effects were reported in tobacco use disorder and obesity. Regarding AUD and relapsing alcohol-dependent patients, there is mixed evidence of enhanced or no PIT effects. Additionally, there is evidence for aberrant corticostriatal activation and genetic risk, e.g., in association with high-risk alcohol consumption and relapse after alcohol detoxification. In patients with anorexia nervosa, stronger PIT effects elicited by low caloric stimuli were associated with increased disease severity. In patients with depression, enhanced aversive PIT effects and a loss of action-specificity associated with poorer treatment outcomes were reported. Schizophrenic patients showed disrupted specific but intact general PIT effects. Patients with chronic back pain showed reduced PIT effects. We provide possible reasons to understand heterogeneity in PIT effects within and across mental disorders. Further, we strengthen the importance of reliable experimental tasks and provide test-retest data of a PIT task showing moderate to good reliability. Finally, we point toward stress as a possible underlying factor that may explain stronger PIT effects in mental disorders, as there is some evidence that stress per se interacts with the impact of environmental cues on behavior by selectively increasing cue-triggered wanting. To conclude, we discuss the results of the literature review in the light of Research Domain Criteria, suggesting future studies that comprehensively assess PIT across psychopathological dimensions
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Can understanding reward help illuminate anhedonia?
Purpose of review: The goal of this paper is to examine how reward processing might help us understand the symptom of anhedonia.
Recent findings: There are extensive reviews exploring the relationship between responses to rewarding stimuli and depression. These often include a discussion on anhedonia and how this might be underpinned in particular by dysfunctional reward processing. However, there is no specific consensus on whether studies to date have adequately examined the various sub-components of reward processing or how these might relate in turn to various aspects of anhedonia symptoms.
Summary: The approach to understanding the symptom of anhedonia should be to examine all the sub-components of reward processing at the subjective and objective behavioural and neural level, with well validated tasks that can be replicated. Investigating real life experiences of anhedonia and how theses might be predicted by objective lab measures is also needed in future research
The influence of emotion and motivation on visual information processing
Die schnelle Entdeckung verhaltensrelevanter visueller Reize ist eine der
wichtigsten Herausforderungen fĂĽr das menschliche visuelle System. In den
meisten Fällen erhalten visuelle Reize eine Verhaltensrelevanz durch ihre
emotionale oder motivationale Bedeutung. Das Ziel der vorliegenden Arbeit war
es, die Mechanismen zu untersuchen, die dem Einfluss von Emotion und
Motivation auf die visuelle Wahrnehmung bei gesunden Personen zugrunde liegen.
Die ersten beiden Studien ĂĽberprĂĽften, wie die Verarbeitung visueller Reize
mit Aufmerksamkeits- und Bewusstseinsprozessen interagiert. In Studie 1 konnte
gezeigt werden, dass emotionale Reize die Auswirkungen räumlicher
Aufmerksamkeit im visuellen Kortex verstärken können. Studie 2 zeigte, dass
Augenbewegungen als Indikator fĂĽr die unbewusste Verarbeitung visueller Reize
dienen können, auch bei objektiver Abwesenheit von Bewusstsein über einen
Reiz. Der Schwerpunkt der letzten beiden Studien lag auf den Auswirkungen
impliziter motivationaler Informationen visueller Stimuli. Studie 3 zeigte,
dass zwei psychologische Dimensionen impliziter Motivation, und zwar
motivationaler Wert und motivationale Salienz, in zwei verschiedenen Regionen
des orbitofrontalen Kortex verarbeitet werden. SchlieĂźlich lieferte Studie 4
empirische Belege fĂĽr den Einfluss impliziter Motivation auf
aufmerksamkeitsgesteuerte Selektionsprozesse. Zusammen genommen zeigen diese
Studien die tief greifenden Auswirkungen von Emotion und Motivation auf die
menschliche visuelle Wahrnehmung und liefern zudem methodische Ansätze für
weitere Erforschungen neuronaler und behavioraler Effekte von emotional und
motivational salienten Reizen.Rapid detection of behaviourally relevant visual stimuli is one of the major
challenges for the human visual system. In most instances, visual stimuli gain
behavioural relevance through their emotional or motivational meaning. The aim
of the present work was to explore the mechanisms underlying the influence of
emotion and motivation on visual perception in healthy individuals. The first
two studies examined how visual processing interacts with attention and
awareness, respectively. In study 1, it could be shown that emotional stimuli
can enhance the effects of spatial attention in early visual cortex. Study 2
demonstrated that eye movements can serve as an indicator for unconscious
visual processing, even in the objective absence of awareness. The last two
studies focused on the effects of implicit motivational information of visual
stimuli. Study 3 showed that two psychological dimensions of implicit
motivation, namely motivational value and motivational salience, are processed
in two distinct areas of orbitofrontal cortex. Finally, study 4 provided
empirical evidence for the impact of implicit motivation on attentional
selection processes. Taken together, these studies demonstrate the profound
effects of emotion and motivation on human visual perception and provide
methodological approaches for further investigations into the neural and
behavioural effects of emotionally and motivationally salient stimuli
Critical review of “Regression to the mean does not explain away non-conscious processing” by Sklar, Goldstein & Hassin
In our review, we show that Sklar, Goldstein, and Hassin’s (SGH) critical discussion of Shanks (2017) is lacking strong arguments that would allow to conclude that “regression to the mean does not explain away non-conscious processing” (title). In its current form, the manuscript by SGA (https://psyarxiv.com/evcgy/) is not a useful contribution to the field
What We Talk about When We Talk about Unconscious Processing – A Plea for Best Practices
In this perspective article, we first outline the large diversity of methods, measures, statistical analyses, and concepts in the field of the experimental study of unconscious processing. We then suggest that this diversity implies that comparisons between different studies on unconscious processing are fairly limited, especially when stimulus awareness has been assessed in different ways. Furthermore, we argue that flexible choices of methods and measures will inevitably lead to an overestimation of unconscious processes. In the concluding paragraph, we briefly present solutions and strategies for future research. We make a plea for the introduction of “best practices,” similar to previous attempts to constitute practicing standards for functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and electroencephalography (EEG)
Associations with monetary values do not influence access to awareness for faces
Human faces can convey socially relevant information in various ways. Since the early detection of such information is crucial in social contexts, socially meaningful information might also have privileged access to awareness. This is indeed suggested by previous research using faces with emotional expressions. However, the social relevance of emotional faces is confounded with their physical stimulus characteristics. Here, we sought to overcome this problem by manipulating the relevance of face stimuli through classical conditioning: Participants had to learn the association between different face exemplars and high or low amounts of positive and negative monetary outcomes. Before and after the conditioning procedure, the time these faces needed to enter awareness was probed using continuous flash suppression, a variant of binocular rivalry. While participants successfully learned the association between the face stimuli and the respective monetary outcomes, faces with a high monetary value did not enter visual awareness faster than faces with a low monetary value after conditioning, neither for rewarding nor for aversive outcomes. Our results tentatively suggest that behaviorally relevant faces do not have privileged access to awareness when the assessment of the faces' relevance is dependent on the processing of face identity, as this requires complex stimulus processing that is likely limited at pre-conscious stages