386 research outputs found
Spatial Anticipatory Attentional Bias for Alcohol: A Preliminary Report on Reliability and Associations with Risky Drinking
Introduction
Although risky drinking and alcohol dependence have been associated with spatial attentional biases, concerns have been raised about the reliability of the frequently-used dot-probe task. A form of anticipatory bias related to predictive cues has been found to be related to alcohol-related processes, and to have high reliability in the context of threat stimuli. It remains to be determined whether this anticipatory attentional bias also has good reliability for alcohol stimuli. Further, correlations with drinking-related individual differences need to be replicated.
Material and Methods
83 healthy adult participants were included, who completed the task and questionnaires on risky drinking (AUDIT-C), drinking motives (DMQ-R), reasons to abstain from drinking (RALD), and alcohol craving (ACQ). The task used a 400 ms Cue-Stimulus Interval, based on previous work. The Spearman-Brown split-half reliability of reaction time-based bias scores was calculated. The within-subject effect of probe location (predicted-alcohol versus predicted-non-alcohol) was tested using a paired-sample t-test. Correlations were calculated between bias scores and questionnaire scales; tests were one-sided for predicted effects and two-sided for exploratory effects.
Results
The reliability was .81 (.74 after outlier removal). There was no overall bias. A predicted correlation between risky drinking and anticipatory bias towards alcohol was found, but no other predicted or exploratory effects.
Discussion
The anticipatory attentional bias for alcohol is a reliably measurable individual difference, with some evidence that it is associated with risky drinking.
Conclusions
Implicit behavioural measures of spatial attentional bias can in principle achieve high reliability. Further study of attentional biases using predictive cues would appear to be promising
Freeze or Forget? Virtual Attack Effects in an Emotional Sternberg Task
Emotionally salient stimuli have the ability to disrupt cognitive processing. This kind of disruption involves effects on working memory and may be related to mental health problems. To explore the nature of such emotional interference on working memory, a Virtual Attack Emotional Sternberg Task (VAEST) was used. Neutral faces were presented as distractors and warning signals, which were sometimes followed by a virtual attack, created by having the neutral face turn angry while the image was enlarged. The attack was hypothesized to have one of two effects: to disrupt cognitive processing and thereby increase interference effects, or to terminate a state of freezing and thereby reduce interference effects. The task was successfully completed online by a sample of 59 students. Results clearly show that the virtual attack caused a reduction of interference relative to no-attack trials. The apparent cognitive disruption caused by emotional distractors may thus reflect freezing, which can be reversed by a freeze-terminating stimulus
Trial-to-trial Carryover Effects on Spatial Attentional Bias
Visual Probe Tasks (VPTs) have been extensively used to measure spatial attentional biases, but as usually analysed, VPTs do not consider trial-to-trial carryover effects of probe location: Does responding to a probe on, e.g., the location of a threat cue affect the bias on the subsequent trial? The aim of the current study was to confirm whether this kind of carryover exists, using a novel task version, the diagonalized VPT, designed to focus on such trial-to-trial interactions. Two versions of the task were performed by a sample of college students. In one version cues were coloured squares; in the other, cues were threat-related and neutral images. Both versions included partially random positive or negative response feedback and varying Cue-Probe Intervals (200 or 600 ms). Carryover effects were found in both versions. Responding to a probe at the location of a cue of a given colour induced an attentional bias on the subsequent trial in the direction of that colour. Responding to a threat-related cue induced an attentional bias towards threat on the subsequent trial. The results provide evidence that trial-to-trial carryover effects on spatial attentional bias indeed exist. A methodological implication is that previous probe location could be considered in analyses or re-analyses of spatial visual attention tasks
An Environmentally-oriented Mode of Industrial Project Planning
Recent research has shown that many industrial projects are not being designed with the environment in mind. The intellectual exercise of thinking ‘what impact does this project have on the environment?' has not yet been made an integral part of industrial project-planning. More thoughtful and informed planning is needed, for reasons of both sound environmental management and, increasingly, sound project economics. An environmentally-oriented mode of planning, in which inputs and means related to environmental concerns are carefully taken into account during the planning, is discussed. This mode represents a tentative summary statement of an emerging consensus. Its objective is to facilitate informed and socially desirable choice among alternative actions in such a manner that adverse environmental consequences will be avoided or at least minimized. Environmentally-oriented planning requires that a new methodology, that of impact assessment, be fully integrated into the very fabric of planning. Impact assessment consists of three analytical functions: description, prediction, and evaluation. These functions can be translated into a series of tasks, which in their entirety constitute the full process of impact assessment. The process can be achieved operationally by incorporating environmental considerations into planning via five dimensions: multidisciplinary professional involvement, broad public participation, holistic thinking, systematic analysis, and continuous integration. Adoption and application of the process can be encouraged and/or facilitated by a number of internal organizational adjustments, or by external public-policy adjustment
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An implementation of N-way repeated measures ANOVA: effect coding, automated unpacking of interactions, and randomization testing
The paper presents the details of an implementation of repeated measures ANOVA, consisting of a set of functions to organize data and represent contrasts to be tested and run statistical tests. The implementation is focused on uses common in experimental psychology. An arbitrary number of within-subject factors, each with an arbitrary number of levels, can be used. A non-parametric, randomization- and permutation-based formulation of repeated measures ANOVA was defined and implemented. Methods for testing interactions with categorical and continuous between-subject variables are implemented. Post-hoc tests for exploring interactions are automated. Simulations indicate correct control of false positive rate for all types of test. The software provides output with statistics including p-values and partial eta squared
Effects of Threat and Sleep Deprivation on Action Tendencies and Response Inhibition
The ability to control action is crucial for adaptive responding, but may be compromised in
situations involving strong emotions (e.g., threat) or when people are deprived of resources
(e.g., sleep). As compromised action control can have large consequences in threatening
situations, for example when police officers face a potentially armed suspect, we
experimentally investigated how acute threat and partial sleep deprivation affect the ability to
control impulsive responses, in 52 healthy young adults performing a simulated shooting task.
The results showed that acute threat increased the tendency to act quickly (i.e., reduced
response times; Coef = 9.46, 95% CI [3.49, 15.29], p = .001) and impaired response inhibition
(i.e., increased stop signal reaction times; Coef = -4.91, 95% CI [-9.47, -0.44], p = .035). In
addition, three nights of partial sleep deprivation (five hours [n = 28] vs. eight hours [n = 24]
of sleep), led to a significant decrease in overall response accuracy (Coef = -0.22, 95% CI [-
0.40, -0.05], p = .025). Contrary to expectations, our results did not show increased threat
sensitivity in sleep-deprived individuals (all p > .13). Nevertheless, they may have important
implications for professionals who are required to maintain behavioral control under high
levels of threat and who experience disturbed sleep due to e.g. shift work, as both factors
negatively affected performanc
The use of wavelet analysis and the mixture model to study phase-locking related to task-set reconfiguration
Abstract Wavelet analysis provides information on the time course of the phase and amplitude of oscillations in non-stationary signals. The results of wavelet analysis are equivalent to those of the faster method of complex demodulation. We combined this method with the mixture model to identify differences in the time course of synchrony between brain areas during task-set reconfiguration. The mixture model provides a trial-by-trial likelihood of intention activation , that is, of subjectdriven reconfiguration prior to stimulus presentation. This allows prepared and nonprepared conditions to be distinguished within the switch condition, identical in every way except for the odds of preparation. Preliminary results could not, due to equipment failures, be reliably interpreted, but did indicate that this combined approach may provide interesting results in the future
The potential role of temporal dynamics in approach biases: delay-dependence of a general approach bias in an alcohol approach-avoidance task
Attractive cues have been shown to evoke automatic approach biases in tasks such as the Automatic Approach Task or Stimulus Response Compatibility task. An important but as yet not studied question is the role of temporal dynamics in such tasks: the impact of automatic processes may depend on the interval between cue and response. The current proof of principle study tested this hypothesized time-dependence of the approach bias. Secondary goals included the exploration of effects of alcohol cues and virtual hand stimuli. 22 participants performed an SRC task in which the delay between the presentation of the cue and the possibility to select the response was manipulated. Results revealed an approach bias that decayed over longer delays. Thus, the approach bias was indeed dependent on processes that are transiently evoked by cues. The results did not show significant effects of alcohol cues or a virtual hand. Temporal dynamics may be an essential feature of approach biases
Alcohol-related attentional bias variability and conflicting automatic associations
Attentional bias variability is related to alcohol abuse. Of potential use for studying variability is the anticipatory attentional bias: Bias due to the locations of predictively-cued rather than already-presented stimuli. The hypothesis was tested that conflicting automatic associations are related to attentional bias variability. Further, relationships were explored between anticipatory biases and individual differences related to alcohol use. 74 social drinkers performed a cued Visual Probe Task and univalent Single-Target Implicit Associations Tasks. Questionnaires were completed on risky drinking, craving, and motivations to drink or refrain from drinking. Ambiguity was related to attentional bias variability at the 800 ms Cue-Stimulus Interval. Further, a bias related to craving and risky drinking was found at the 400 ms Cue-Stimulus Interval. Thus, the selection of attentional responses was biased by predicted locations of expected salient stimuli. The results support a role of conflicting associations in attentional bias variability
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