keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37429216/serial-attention-to-serial-memory-the-psychological-refractory-period-in-forward-and-backward-cued-recall
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gordon D Logan, Simon D Lilburn, Jana E Ulrich
Guided by the conjecture that memory retrieval is attention turned inward, we examined serial attention in serial memory, combining the psychological refractory period (PRP) procedure from attention research with cued recall of two items from brief six-item lists. We report six experiments showing robust PRP effects in cued recall from memory (1-4) and cued report from perceptual displays (5-6), which suggest that memory retrieval requires the same attentional bottleneck as "retrieval" from perception. There were strong direction effects in each memory experiment...
July 8, 2023: Cognitive Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37425177/living-by-the-sea-place-attachment-coastal-risk-perception-and-eco-anxiety-when-coping-with-climate-change
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Natacha Parreira, Carla Mouro
Climate change poses major threats to coastal regions. In Portugal, the Aveiro district is one of the most vulnerable areas due to urbanized areas' exposure to the dangers of rising water. The prospect of flood threats can trigger a range of cognitions and emotions that affect adaptation and mitigation measures' success. This study sought to examine whether active and traditional place attachment is associated with residents' active and passive coping strategies to deal with the risk of rising water levels...
2023: Frontiers in Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37416076/active-iterative-social-inference-in-multi-trial-signaling-games
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Asya Achimova, Gregory Scontras, Ella Eisemann, Martin V Butz
Human behavioral choices can reveal intrinsic and extrinsic decision-influencing factors. We investigate the inference of choice priors in situations of referential ambiguity. In particular, we use the scenario of signaling games and investigate to which extent study participants profit from actively engaging in the task. Previous work has revealed that speakers are able to infer listeners' choice priors upon observing ambiguity resolution. However, it was also shown that only a small group of participants was able to strategically construct ambiguous situations to create learning opportunities...
2023: Open Mind: Discoveries in Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37335435/learning-and-organization-of-within-session-sequences-by-pigeons-columba-livia
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Muhammad A J Qadri, Robert G Cook
Most animals engage in complex activities that are the combination of simpler actions expressed over a period of time. The mechanisms organizing such sequential behavior have been of long-standing biological and psychological interest. Previously, we observed pigeons' anticipatory behavior with a within-session sequence involving four choice alternatives suggestive of a potential understanding of the overall order and sequence of the items within a session. In that task, each colored alternative was correct for 24 consecutive trials as presented in a predictable sequence (i...
June 19, 2023: Animal Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37303918/learning-adaptability-facilitates-self-regulated-learning-at-school-the-chain-mediating-roles-of-academic-motivation-and-self-management
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Chunmei She, Qiao Liang, Wenjun Jiang, Qiang Xing
Studies have demonstrated that learning adaptability has emerged as an important factor for students' utilization of self-regulated learning for successful learning, but how this association occurred is not clear yet. This study aimed to clarify the mechanism of the relationship between learning adaptability and self-regulated learning by investigating the chain mediating roles of academic motivation and self-management of 787 junior high school students under the "double reduction" background. The results showed that (1) learning adaptability had significant positive effects on junior high school students' self-regulated learning and (2) academic motivation and self-management played independent and accumulative mediating roles in the relationship between learning adaptability and self-regulated learning...
2023: Frontiers in Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37275689/future-horizons-in-the-analysis-of-technical-tactical-performance-in-women-s-football-a-mixed-methods-approach-to-the-analysis-of-in-depth-interviews-with-professional-coaches-and-players
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Iyán Iván-Baragaño, Antonio Ardá, M Teresa Anguera, José Luis Losada, Rubén Maneiro
INTRODUCTION: Scientific knowledge about the criteria that determine success in women's football is beginning to develop. METHODS: This study was carried out with the aim of detecting regularities in the offensive success in elite women's football, as well as carrying out an interrelational analysis of linked behaviors, based on in-depth interviews with professional coaches and players. Eight in-depth interviews were conducted with professional Spanish coaches and players...
2023: Frontiers in Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37202866/nursing-practice-and-teleconsultations-in-a-pandemic-context-a-mixed-methods-study
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Safa Regragui, Sabina Abou Malham, Isabelle Gaboury, Caroline Bois, Nadia Deville-Stoetzel, Lara Maillet, Annie Savoie, Mylaine Breton
AIM: To explore the use and implementation of teleconsultations by primary care nurses in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic. BACKGROUND: Teleconsultation use increased rapidly during the COVID-19 pandemic. Its implementation has been documented for physicians and specialists, but knowledge is still limited in nursing practice. DESIGN: A sequential mixed-methods study. METHODS: Phase 1: A cross-sectional e-survey with 98 nurses (64 nurse clinicians [NCs] and 34 nurse practitioners [NPs]) was conducted in 2020 in 48 teaching primary care clinics in Quebec (Canada)...
May 18, 2023: Journal of Clinical Nursing
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37153107/determination-of-the-effective-dose-of-dexmedetomidine-to-achieve-loss-of-consciousness-during-anesthesia-induction
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Bing Mu, Wenjie Xu, Hongyi Li, Zizheng Suo, Xiaoxiao Wang, Yuxiang Zheng, Yi Tian, Bowen Zhang, Jie Yu, Naiyuan Tian, Nan Lin, Dan Zhao, Zhaoxu Zheng, Hui Zheng, Cheng Ni
BACKGROUND: Dexmedetomidine (DEX) is a sedative with greater preservation of cognitive function, reduced respiratory depression, and improved patient arousability. This study was designed to investigate the performance of DEX during anesthesia induction and to establish an effective DEX induction strategy, which could be valuable for multiple clinical conditions. METHODS: Patients undergoing abdominal surgery were involved in this dose-finding trial. Dixon's up-and-down sequential method was employed to determine the effective dose of DEX to achieve the state of "loss of consciousness", and an effective induction strategy was established with continuous infusion of DEX and remifentanil...
2023: Frontiers in Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37129857/pathways-from-education-and-childhood-parental-death-to-successful-aging-the-role-of-social-conditions-and-perceived-income-level
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Cem Soylu, Banu Cengelci Ozekes
OBJECTIVES: Although the association between adverse childhood conditions and health in later life has been relatively well established, little is known about how and through which mechanism this association develops. Building on the developmental adaptation model (Martin & Martin, 2002), the present study investigates the effects of distal and proximal influences on successful aging (SA). METHODS: A cross-sectional survey was conducted of 475 adults aged 50 and above (Mean age = 72...
May 2, 2023: Aging & Mental Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37012660/a-call-to-action-in-review-of-the-australian-dietary-guidelines-impacts-of-conflicting-nutrition-information-a-mixed-methods-study
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lindsey Ngo, Jessica Lee, Shannon Rutherford, Hai Phung
ISSUES ADDRESSED: The overabundance of conflicting nutrition information (CNI) and accompanying confusion and backlash are a public health concern; however, the complexity of responses to CNI has yet to be explored. The following mixed methods study brings depth to the perceptions and behavioural responses to CNI among the Australian millennials to better inform successful nutrition guidelines. METHODS: An explanatory sequential mixed methods design explored the cognitive and behavioural responses to CNI in Australian millennials...
April 3, 2023: Health Promotion Journal of Australia
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36971514/disturbed-medication-management-in-older-adults-with-good-cognitive-health-and-mild-cognitive-impairment-associated-with-semantic-memory-impairment-the-wakuya-project
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mika Kumai, Keiichi Kumai, Goro Kuroki, Miwako Shoji, Kei Nakamura, Kenichi Meguro
AIM: For older adults with mild cognitive impairment or mild dementia, maintaining daily lives at home is also ideal for quality of life. However, they have serious problems with medication management. Although the Dementia Assessment Sheet in community-based integrated care system-21 items and the regimen comprehension scale are assessment scales for medication, there have been no reports evaluating both semantic memory and actual performance. METHODS: A total of 180 older adults aged ≥75 years were entered in the Wakuya Project...
March 27, 2023: Geriatrics & Gerontology International
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36949919/investigating-problem-posing-during-math-walks-in-informal-learning-spaces
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Min Wang, Candace Walkington
Informal mathematics learning has been far less studied than informal science learning - but youth can experience and learn about mathematics in their homes and communities. "Math walks" where students learn about how mathematics appears in the world around them, and have the opportunity to create their own math walk stops in their communities, can be a particularly powerful approach to informal mathematics learning. This study implemented an explanatory sequential mixed-method research design to investigate the impact of problem-posing activities in the math walks program on high school students' mathematical outcomes...
2023: Frontiers in Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36829376/a-network-analysis-driven-sequential-mediation-analysis-of-students-perceived-classroom-comfort-and-perceived-faculty-support-on-the-relationship-between-teachers-cognitive-presence-and-students-grit-a-holistic-learning-approach
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tiberiu Dughi, Dana Rad, Remus Runcan, Roxana Chiș, Gabriela Vancu, Roxana Maier, Alina Costin, Gavril Rad, Sabin Chiș, Chinaza Uleanya, Macovei Crenguța Mihaela
The interaction between teachers and students is critical to the learning process. Student success and learner satisfaction have consistently improved in educational situations where instructors and students connect frequently and meaningfully. The Community of Inquiry (CoI) framework, as well as the sense of belonging concept, have received a significant amount of attention from researchers investigating online learning since its debut. The current study focuses on the CoI framework in general, and in particular on studies on teaching, social, and cognitive presences in connection to students' feeling of belonging and grit enhancement...
February 9, 2023: Behavioral Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36720804/-reliable-organisms-from-unreliable-components-revisited-the-linear-drift-linear-infinitesimal-variance-model-of-decision-making
#34
REVIEW
Philip L Smith
Diffusion models of decision making, in which successive samples of noisy evidence are accumulated to decision criteria, provide a theoretical solution to von Neumann's (1956) problem of how to increase the reliability of neural computation in the presence of noise. I introduce and evaluate a new neurally-inspired dual diffusion model, the linear drift, linear infinitesimal variance (LDLIV) model, which embodies three features often thought to characterize neural mechanisms of decision making. The accumulating evidence is intrinsically positively-valued, saturates at high intensities, and is accumulated for each alternative separately...
January 31, 2023: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36598649/rodent-model-preclinical-assessment-of-pegylated-block-copolymer-targeting-cognition-and-oxidative-stress-insults-of-alzheimer-s-disease
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sutapa Som Chaudhury, Mridula Nandi, Krishna Kumar, Bhuban Ruidas, Tapas Kumar Sur, Parash Prasad, Saikat Chakrabarti, Priyadarsi De, Jaya Sil, Chitrangada Das Mukhopadhyay
Misfolded peptide amyloid beta (Aβ42 ), neurofibrillary tangles of hyper-phosphorylated tau, oxidative damage to the brain, and neuroinflammation are distinguished determinants of Alzheimer's disease (AD) responsible for disease progression. This multifaceted neurodegenerative disease is challenging to cure under a single treatment regime until the key disease determinants are traced for their sequential occurrence in disease progression. In an early report, a novel side-chain tripeptide containing PEGylated block copolymer has been tested thoroughly in vitro and in silico for the early inhibition of Aβ42 aggregation as well as degradation of preformed Aβ42 fibril deposits...
January 4, 2023: Molecular Neurobiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36578690/making-things-happen-how-employees-paradox-mindset-influences-innovative-performance
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yanjun Liu, Hui Zhang
Individual innovation involves many contradicted behavioral options such as creative vs. habitual actions and explorative vs. exploitative activities. However, the agentic nature of innovative behaviors has been widely ignored, and we know less about what factors lead individuals to approach and balance the contradictions caused by competing demands and intentionally engage in innovative behaviors. Integrating social cognitive theory and innovation paradox, we propose a chain-mediating model to explain how employees with a paradox mindset realize the creative benefits through their innovative endeavors, considering role breadth self-efficacy (RBSE) and individual ambidexterity as two mediators...
2022: Frontiers in Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36534042/credit-assignment-in-hierarchical-option-transfer
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jing-Jing Li, Liyu Xia, Flora Dong, Anne G E Collins
Humans have the exceptional ability to efficiently structure past knowledge during learning to enable fast generalization. Xia and Collins (2021) evaluated this ability in a hierarchically structured, sequential decision-making task, where participants could build "options" (strategy "chunks") at multiple levels of temporal and state abstraction. A quantitative model, the Option Model, captured the transfer effects observed in human participants, suggesting that humans create and compose hierarchical options and use them to explore novel contexts...
July 2022: CogSci: Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36414413/tree-shrews-as-an-animal-model-for-studying-perceptual-decision-making-reveal-a-critical-role-of-stimulus-independent-processes-in-guiding-behavior
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Chuiwen Li, Kara M McHaney, Per B Sederberg, Jianhua Cang
Decision-making is an essential cognitive process by which we interact with the external world. However, attempts to understand the neural mechanisms of decision-making are limited by the current available animal models and the technologies that can be applied to them. Here, we build on the renewed interest in using tree shrews ( Tupaia Belangeri ) in vision research and provide strong support for them as a model for studying visual perceptual decision-making. Tree shrews learned very quickly to perform a two-alternative forced choice contrast discrimination task, and they exhibited differences in response time distributions depending on the reward and punishment structure of the task...
November 14, 2022: ENeuro
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36374538/the-codevelopment-of-my-kidneys-me-a-digital-self-management-program-for-people-with-chronic-kidney-disease
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Courtney J Lightfoot, Thomas J Wilkinson, Michelle Hadjiconstantinou, Matthew Graham-Brown, Jonathan Barratt, Christopher Brough, James O Burton, Jenny Hainsworth, Vicki Johnson, Maria Martinez, Andrew C Nixon, Victoria Pursey, Sally Schreder, Noemi Vadaszy, Lucina Wilde, Fiona Willingham, Hannah M L Young, Thomas Yates, Melanie J Davies, Alice C Smith
BACKGROUND: Health care self-management is important for people living with nondialysis chronic kidney disease (CKD). However, the few available resources are of variable quality. OBJECTIVE: This work describes the systematic codevelopment of "My Kidneys & Me" (MK&M), a theory-driven and evidence-based digital self-management resource for people with nondialysis CKD, guided by an established process used for the successful development of the diabetes education program MyDESMOND (Diabetes Education and Self-Management for Ongoing and Newly Diagnosed, DESMOND)...
November 14, 2022: Journal of Medical Internet Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36335319/sequential-mixed-method-evaluation-of-the-acceptability-feasibility-and-appropriateness-of-cognitive-behavioral-therapy-for-psychosis-stepped-care
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sarah L Kopelovich, Jessica Maura, Jennifer Blank, Gloria Lockwood
BACKGROUND: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for psychosis (CBTp) is recommended by national treatment guidelines yet remains widely inaccessible in the U.S. A stepped care model, favored and feasible for other scarce interventions, may improve access to CBTp. METHODS: We employed an exploratory sequential mixed method design inclusive of two distinct phases to quantitatively evaluate the acceptability, feasibility, and appropriateness of CBTp Stepped Care (CBTp-SC) among practitioners who were trained in low-intensity CBTp (Step 1), Group-Administered CBTp (Step 2), and Formulation-based CBTp (Step 3)...
November 5, 2022: BMC Health Services Research
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