journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38438713/cognitive-modelling-of-concepts-in-the-mental-lexicon-with-multilayer-networks-insights-advancements-and-future-challenges
#21
REVIEW
Massimo Stella, Salvatore Citraro, Giulio Rossetti, Daniele Marinazzo, Yoed N Kenett, Michael S Vitevitch
The mental lexicon is a complex cognitive system representing information about the words/concepts that one knows. Over decades psychological experiments have shown that conceptual associations across multiple, interactive cognitive levels can greatly influence word acquisition, storage, and processing. How can semantic, phonological, syntactic, and other types of conceptual associations be mapped within a coherent mathematical framework to study how the mental lexicon works? Here we review cognitive multilayer networks as a promising quantitative and interpretative framework for investigating the mental lexicon...
March 4, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38438712/post-loss-speeding-or-post-win-slowing-an-empirical-note-on-the-interpretation-of-decision-making-time-as-a-function-of-previous-outcome
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Benjamin James Dyson
Differences in response time following previous losses relative to previous wins are robust observations in behavioural science, often attributed to an increased (or decreased) degree of cognitive control exerted after negative feedback, hence, post-loss slowing (or post-loss speeding). This presumes that the locus of this effect resides in the specific modulation of decision time following negative outcomes. Across two experiments, I demonstrate how the use of absolute rather than relative processing speeds, and the sensitivity of processing speeds in response to specific experimental manipulations (Experiment 1: win rate, Experiment 2: feedback), provide clarity as to the relative weighting of post-win and post-loss states in determining these behavioural effects...
March 4, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38438711/brief-category-learning-distorts-perceptual-space-for-complex-scenes
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gaeun Son, Dirk B Walther, Michael L Mack
The formation of categories is known to distort perceptual space: representations are pushed away from category boundaries and pulled toward categorical prototypes. This phenomenon has been studied with artificially constructed objects, whose feature dimensions are easily defined and manipulated. How such category-induced perceptual distortions arise for complex, real-world scenes, however, remains largely unknown due to the technical challenge of measuring and controlling scene features. We address this question by generating realistic scene images from a high-dimensional continuous space using generative adversarial networks and using the images as stimuli in a novel learning task...
March 4, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38438710/facilitation-and-interference-are-asymmetric-in-holistic-face-processing
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Haiyang Jin, Luyan Ji, Olivia S Cheung, William G Hayward
A hallmark of face specificity is holistic processing. It is typically measured by paradigms such as the part-whole and composite tasks. However, these tasks show little evidence for common variance, so a comprehensive account of holistic processing remains elusive. One aspect that varies between tasks is whether they measure facilitation or interference from holistic processing. In this study, we examined facilitation and interference in a single paradigm to determine the way in which they manifest during a face perception task...
March 4, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38436870/separated-hands-further-response-response-binding-effects
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Silvia Selimi, Christian Frings, Birte Moeller
Action control is hierarchically organized. Multiple consecutive responses can be integrated into an event representation of higher order and can retrieve each other upon repetition, resulting in so-called response-response binding effects. Previous research indicates that the spatial separation of responses can affect how easily they can be cognitively separated. In this study, we introduced a barrier between the responding hands to investigate whether the spatial separation of two responses also influences response-response binding effects...
March 4, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38429591/visual-perspective-and-body-ownership-modulate-vicarious-pain-and-touch-a-systematic-review
#26
REVIEW
Matteo P Lisi, Martina Fusaro, Salvatore Maria Aglioti
We conducted a systematic review investigating the influence of visual perspective and body ownership (BO) on vicarious brain resonance and vicarious sensations during the observation of pain and touch. Indeed, the way in which brain reactivity and the phenomenological experience can be modulated by blurring the bodily boundaries of self-other distinction is still unclear. We screened Scopus and WebOfScience, and identified 31 articles, published from 2000 to 2022. Results show that assuming an egocentric perspective enhances vicarious resonance and vicarious sensations...
March 1, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38429590/context-reinstatement-requires-a-schema-relevant-virtual-environment-to-benefit-object-recall
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Griffin E Koch, Marc N Coutanche
How does our environment impact what we will later remember? Early work in real-world environments suggested that having matching encoding/retrieval contexts improves memory. However, some laboratory-based studies have not replicated this advantageous context-dependent memory effect. Using virtual reality methods, we find support for context-dependent memory effects and examine an influence of memory schema and dynamic environments. Participants (N = 240) remembered more objects when in the same virtual environment (context) as during encoding...
March 1, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38409500/do-moments-of-inattention-during-study-cause-the-error-speed-effect-for-targets-in-recognition-memory-tasks
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anne Voormann, Constantin G Meyer-Grant, Annelie Rothe-Wulf, Karl Christoph Klauer
The error-speed effect - characterized by a decreased performance in a second recognition task for stimuli that elicited fast error responses in a first recognition task - has so far been predominantly interpreted as evidence for the existence of misleading memory information. However, this neglects a possible alternative explanation, namely that the effect may instead be caused by moments of inattention during study. Here, we introduce a manipulation that allowed us to distinguish between words from the study phase that participants most certainly paid attention to and those they did not...
February 26, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38409499/practice-effects-on-dual-task-order-coordination-and-its-sequential-adjustment
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tilo Strobach
When the performance of two tasks overlaps in time, performance impairments in one or both tasks are common. Various theoretical explanations for how component tasks are controlled in dual-task situations have been advanced. However, less attention has been paid to the issue of how two temporally overlapping tasks are appropriately coordinated in terms of their order. The current study focuses on two specific aspects of this task-order coordination: (1) the potential effects of practice on task-order coordination performance and (2) its relationships with cognitive meta-control mechanisms that adjust this coordination...
February 26, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38388825/audiovisual-simultaneity-windows-reflect-temporal-sensory-uncertainty
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emma Cary, Ilona Lahdesmaki, Stephanie Badde
The ability to judge the temporal alignment of visual and auditory information is a prerequisite for multisensory integration and segregation. However, each temporal measurement is subject to error. Thus, when judging whether a visual and auditory stimulus were presented simultaneously, observers must rely on a subjective decision boundary to distinguish between measurement error and truly misaligned audiovisual signals. Here, we tested whether these decision boundaries are relaxed with increasing temporal sensory uncertainty, i...
February 22, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38383840/the-role-of-word-form-in-gender-processing-during-lexical-access-a-theoretical-review-and-novel-proposal-in-language-comprehension
#31
REVIEW
A R Sá-Leite, S Lago
In contrast to language production, there are few comprehension models of the representation and use of grammatical gender in long-term memory. To bridge this gap, we conducted a systematic review of empirical studies on the role of gender-form regularities in the recognition of nouns in isolation and within sentences. The results of a final sample of 40 studies suggest that there are two routes for the retrieval of gender during real-time comprehension: a form-based route and a lexical-based route. Our review indicates that the use of these routes depends on the degree of gender transparency of the language and the degree of overtness of the experimental paradigm...
February 21, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38381302/distinct-but-related-abilities-for-visual-and-haptic-object-recognition
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jason K Chow, Thomas J Palmeri, Isabel Gauthier
People vary in their ability to recognize objects visually. Individual differences for matching and recognizing objects visually is supported by a domain-general ability capturing common variance across different tasks (e.g., Richler et al., Psychological Review, 126, 226-251, 2019). Behavioral (e.g., Cooke et al., Neuropsychologia, 45, 484-495, 2007) and neural evidence (e.g., Amedi, Cerebral Cortex, 12, 1202-1212, 2002) suggest overlapping mechanisms in the processing of visual and haptic information in the service of object recognition, but it is unclear whether such group-average results generalize to individual differences...
February 21, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38381301/what-if-anything-can-be-considered-an-amodal-sensory-dimension
#33
REVIEW
Charles Spence, Nicola Di Stefano
The term 'amodal' is a key topic in several different research fields across experimental psychology and cognitive neuroscience, including in the areas of developmental and perception science. However, despite being regularly used in the literature, the term means something different to the researchers working in the different contexts. Many developmental scientists conceive of the term as referring to those perceptual qualities, such as, for example, the size and shape of an object, that can be picked up by multiple senses (e...
February 21, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38381300/face-shape-and-motion-are-perceptually-separable-support-for-a-revised-model-of-face-processing
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emily Renae Martin, Jason S Hays, Fabian A Soto
A recent model of face processing proposes that face shape and motion are processed in parallel brain pathways. Although tested in neuroimaging, the assumptions of this theory remain relatively untested through controlled psychophysical studies until now. Recruiting undergraduate students over the age of 18, we test this hypothesis using a tight control of stimulus factors, through computerized three-dimensional face models and calibration of dimensional discriminability, and of decisional factors, through a model-based analysis using general recognition theory (GRT)...
February 21, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38379075/the-distinct-development-of-stimulus-and-response-serial-dependence
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Liqin Zhou, Yujie Liu, Yuhan Jiang, Wenbo Wang, Pengfei Xu, Ke Zhou
Serial dependence (SD) is a phenomenon wherein current perceptions are biased by the previous stimulus and response. This helps to attenuate perceptual noise and variability in sensory input and facilitates stable ongoing perceptions of the environment. However, little is known about the developmental trajectory of SD. This study investigates how the stimulus and response biases of the SD effect develop across three age groups. Conventional analyses, in which previous stimulus and response biases were assessed separately, revealed significant changes in the biases over time...
February 20, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38366265/can-we-enhance-working-memory-bias-and-effectiveness-in-cognitive-training-studies
#36
REVIEW
Jose A Rodas, Afroditi A Asimakopoulou, Ciara M Greene
Meta-analyses have found that working memory (WM) can be improved with cognitive training; however, some authors have suggested that these improvements are mostly driven by biases in the measurement of WM, especially the use of similar tasks for assessment and training. In the present meta-analysis, we investigated whether WM, fluid intelligence, executive functions, and short-term memory can be improved by cognitive training and evaluated the impact of possible sources of bias. We performed a risk of bias assessment of the included studies and took special care in controlling for practice effects...
February 16, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38366264/reconciling-categorization-and-memory-via-environmental-statistics
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Arjun Devraj, Thomas L Griffiths, Qiong Zhang
How people represent categories and how those representations change over time is a basic question about human cognition. Previous research has demonstrated that people categorize objects by comparing them to category prototypes in early stages of learning but consider the individual exemplars within each category in later stages. However, these results do not seem consistent with findings in the memory literature showing that it becomes increasingly easier to access representations of general knowledge than representations of specific items over time...
February 16, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38361106/information-entropy-facilitates-not-impedes-lexical-processing-during-language-comprehension
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hossein Karimi, Pete Weber, Jaden Zinn
It is well known that contextual predictability facilitates word identification, but it is less clear whether the uncertainty associated with the current context (i.e., its lexical entropy) influences sentence processing. On the one hand, high entropy contexts may lead to interference due to greater number of lexical competitors. On the other hand, predicting multiple lexical competitors may facilitate processing through the preactivation of shared semantic features. In this study, we examined whether entropy measured at the trial level (i...
February 15, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38361105/construction-or-updating-event-model-processes-during-visual-narrative-comprehension
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Irina R Brich, Frank Papenmeier, Markus Huff, Martin Merkt
The plot of a narrative is represented in the form of event models in working memory. Because only parts of the plot are actually presented and information is continually changing, comprehenders have to infer a good portion of a narrative and keep their mental representation updated. Research has identified two related processes (e.g., Gernsbacher, 1997): During model construction (shifting, laying a foundation) at large coherence breaks an event model is completely built anew. During model updating (mapping) at smaller omissions, however, the current event model is preserved, and only changed parts are updated through inference processes...
February 15, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38351255/object-based-attention-requires-monocular-visual-pathways
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
N Strommer, S Al-Janabi, A S Greenberg, S Gabay
Mechanisms of object-based attention (OBA) are commonly associated with the cerebral cortex. However, less is known about the involvement of subcortical visual pathways in these processes. Knowledge of the neural mechanisms subserving OBA can provide insight into the evolutionary trajectory of attentional selection. In the current study, the classic double-rectangle cueing task was implemented using a stereoscope in order to differentiate between the involvement of lower (monocular) and higher (binocular) visual pathways in OBA processes...
February 13, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
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