keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38659095/bayes-optimal-integration-of-social-and-endogenous-uncertainty-in-numerosity-estimation
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tutku Öztel, Fuat Balcı
One of the most prominent social influences on human decision making is conformity, which is even more prominent when the perceptual information is ambiguous. The Bayes optimal solution to this problem entails weighting the relative reliability of cognitive information and perceptual signals in constructing the percept from self-sourced/endogenous and social sources, respectively. The current study investigated whether humans integrate the statistics (i.e., mean and variance) of endogenous perceptual and social information in a Bayes optimal way while estimating numerosities...
April 2024: Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38658919/motivations-of-undergraduate-student-medical-interpreters-exposure-and-experience
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Julie R Wechsler, Susan Tamasi
BACKGROUND: When patients do not speak the same language as their doctors, they face poorer medical outcomes, decreased doctor-patient trust, and a diminished desire to seek medical care. It has been well established that interpretation is an essential part of an accessible healthcare system, but effective use of such language services relies on both the interpreters themselves and the healthcare teams working with them. This study presents an interdisciplinary examination of the motivations of undergraduate student medical interpreters, a group which serves as a bridge between these roles...
April 24, 2024: BMC Medical Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38657475/quantifying-abnormal-emotion-processing-a-novel-computational-assessment-method-and-application-in-schizophrenia
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ellen R Bradley, Jake Portanova, Josh D Woolley, Benjamin Buck, Ian S Painter, Michael Hankin, Weizhe Xu, Trevor Cohen
Abnormal emotion processing is a core feature of schizophrenia spectrum disorders (SSDs) that encompasses multiple operations. While deficits in some areas have been well-characterized, we understand less about abnormalities in the emotion processing that happens through language, which is highly relevant for social life. Here, we introduce a novel method using deep learning to estimate emotion processing rapidly from spoken language, testing this approach in male-identified patients with SSDs (n = 37) and healthy controls (n = 51)...
April 4, 2024: Psychiatry Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38657280/implicit-relational-aspects-of-the-therapeutic-relationship-in-psychoanalytic-treatments-an-examination-of-linguistic-style-entrainment-over-time
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Katie Aafjes-van Doorn, Daniel S Spina, Lena Müller-Frommeyer, Bernard S Gorman, Karl Stukenberg, Sherwood Waldron
OBJECTIVE: In an attempt to operationalize an implicit aspect of the therapeutic relationship, this study assesses reciprocal linguistic style entrainment (rLSM) between the patient and therapist. rLSM is defined as the dynamic adjustment of function word usage to synchronize or to be in rhythm with another person as they change over time. METHOD: In this exploratory study, levels of rLSM per talk turn were analyzed for 540 sessions of 27 long-term psychoanalytic treatments in relation to treatment outcomes...
April 24, 2024: Psychotherapy Research: Journal of the Society for Psychotherapy Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38655894/raising-the-roof-situating-verbs-in-symbolic-and-embodied-language-processing
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
John Hollander, Andrew Olney
Recent investigations on how people derive meaning from language have focused on task-dependent shifts between two cognitive systems. The symbolic (amodal) system represents meaning as the statistical relationships between words. The embodied (modal) system represents meaning through neurocognitive simulation of perceptual or sensorimotor systems associated with a word's referent. A primary finding of literature in this field is that the embodied system is only dominant when a task necessitates it, but in certain paradigms, this has only been demonstrated using nouns and adjectives...
April 2024: Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38655881/pupils-dilate-more-to-harder-vocabulary-words-than-easier-ones
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ishanti Gangopadhyay, Daniel Fulford, Kathleen Corriveau, Jessica Mow, Pearl Han Li, Sudha Arunachalam
Understanding cognitive effort expended during assessments is essential to improving efficiency, accuracy, and accessibility within these assessments. Pupil dilation is commonly used as a psychophysiological measure of cognitive effort, yet research on its relationship with effort expended specifically during language processing is limited. The present study adds to and expands on this literature by investigating the relationships among pupil dilation, trial difficulty, and accuracy during a vocabulary test...
April 2024: Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38652604/exploring-the-semantic-inconsistency-effect-in-scenes-using-a-continuous-measure-of-linguistic-semantic-similarity
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Claudia Damiano, Maarten Leemans, Johan Wagemans
Viewers use contextual information to visually explore complex scenes. Object recognition is facilitated by exploiting object-scene relations (which objects are expected in a given scene) and object-object relations (which objects are expected because of the occurrence of other objects). Semantically inconsistent objects deviate from these expectations, so they tend to capture viewers' attention (the semantic-inconsistency effect ). Some objects fit the identity of a scene more or less than others, yet semantic inconsistencies have hitherto been operationalized as binary (consistent vs...
April 23, 2024: Psychological Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38651125/mental-and-social-wellbeing-trajectory-during-the-pandemic-for-vulnerable-populations
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Andrew Joyce, Thach Tran, Ruby Stocker, Jane Fisher
OBJECTIVES: We investigated changes over time in mental and social wellbeing indicators for vulnerable population subgroups during the pandemic. These groups were younger people, people with disabilities, low-income groups, unemployed, culturally, and linguistically diverse communities (CaLD), and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. METHODS: A series of four repeated population representative surveys were conducted in June 2020, September 2020, January 2022, and June 2022...
2024: Frontiers in Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38647482/people-s-beliefs-about-pronouns-reflect-both-the-language-they-speak-and-their-ideologies
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
April H Bailey, Robin Dembroff, Daniel Wodak, Elif G Ikizer, Andrei Cimpian
Pronouns often convey information about a person's social identity (e.g., gender). Consequently, pronouns have become a focal point in academic and public debates about whether pronouns should be changed to be more inclusive, such as for people whose identities do not fit current pronoun conventions (e.g., gender nonbinary individuals). Here, we make an empirical contribution to these debates by investigating which social identities lay speakers think that pronouns should encode (if any) and why. Across four studies, participants were asked to evaluate different types of real and hypothetical pronouns, including binary gender pronouns, race pronouns, and identity-neutral pronouns...
May 2024: Journal of Experimental Psychology. General
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38647471/variations-in-infants-physical-and-social-environments-shape-spontaneous-locomotion
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Justine Hoch, Christina Hospodar, Gabriela Koch da Costa Aguiar Alves, Karen Adolph
Independent locomotion is associated with a range of positive developmental outcomes, but unlike cognitive, linguistic, and social skills, acquiring motor skills requires infants to generate their own input for learning. We tested factors that shape infants' spontaneous locomotion by observing forty 12- to 22-month-olds (19 girls, 21 boys) during free play. Infants were recruited from the New York City area, and caregivers reported that 25 infants were White, six were Asian, four were Black, and five had multiple races; four were Hispanic or Latino...
April 22, 2024: Developmental Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38645615/surprisal-from-language-models-can-predict-erps-in-processing-predicate-argument-structures-only-if-enriched-by-an-agent-preference-principle
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Eva Huber, Sebastian Sauppe, Arrate Isasi-Isasmendi, Ina Bornkessel-Schlesewsky, Paola Merlo, Balthasar Bickel
Language models based on artificial neural networks increasingly capture key aspects of how humans process sentences. Most notably, model-based surprisals predict event-related potentials such as N400 amplitudes during parsing. Assuming that these models represent realistic estimates of human linguistic experience, their success in modeling language processing raises the possibility that the human processing system relies on no other principles than the general architecture of language models and on sufficient linguistic input...
2024: Neurobiology of language
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38645022/rapid-auditory-and-phonemic-processing-relies-on-the-left-planum-temporale
#32
Kelly C Martin, Andrew T DeMarco, Sara M Dyslin, Peter E Turkeltaub
After initial bilateral acoustic processing of the speech signal, much of the subsequent language processing is left-lateralized. The reason for this lateralization remains an open question. Prevailing hypotheses describe a left hemisphere (LH) advantage for rapidly unfolding information-such as the segmental (e.g., phonetic and phonemic) components of speech. Here we investigated whether and where damage to the LH predicted impaired performance on judging the directionality of frequency modulated (FM) sweep stimuli that changed within short (25ms) or longer (250ms) temporal windows...
April 1, 2024: Research Square
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38641540/it-s-not-a-lie-%C3%A2-if-you-believe-it-narrative-analysis-of-autobiographical-memories-reveals-over-confidence-disposition-in-patients-who-confabulate
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Faith Balshin-Rosenberg, Vanessa Ghosh, Asaf Gilboa
Humans perceive their personal memories as fundamentally true, and although memory is prone to inaccuracies, flagrant memory errors are rare. Some patients with damage to the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) recall and act upon patently erroneous memories (spontaneous confabulations). Clinical observations suggest these memories carry a strong sense of confidence, a function ascribed to vmPFC in studies of memory and decision making. However, most studies of the underlying mechanisms of memory overconfidence do not directly probe personal recollections and resort instead to laboratory-based tasks and contrived rating scales...
March 31, 2024: Cortex; a Journal Devoted to the Study of the Nervous System and Behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38641266/morphosyntactic-prediction-in-automatic-neural-processing-of-spoken-language-eeg-evidence
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maria Alekseeva, Andriy Myachykov, Beatriz Bermudez Margaretto, Yury Shtyrov
Automatic parsing of syntactic information by the human brain is a well-established phenomenon, but its mechanisms remain poorly understood. Its best-known neurophysiological reflection is early left-anterior negativity (ELAN) ERP component with two alternative hypotheses for its origin: (1) error detection, or (2) morphosyntactic prediction/priming. To test these alternatives, we conducted two experiments using a non-attend passive design with visual distraction and recorded ERPs to spoken pronoun-verb phrases and the same critical verbs presented in isolation without pronouns...
April 17, 2024: Brain Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38639579/video-interpretation-in-a-medical-spine-clinic-a-descriptive-study-of-a-diverse-population-and-intervention
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anne Mette Schmidt, Stine Aalkjær Clausen, Karina Agerbo, Anette Jørgensen, Charlotte Weiling Appel, Vibeke Neergaard Sørensen
OBJECTIVES: Back pain is one of the most challenging health conditions to manage. Healthcare providers face additional challenges when managing back pain for patients with culturally diverse backgrounds including addressing linguistic barriers and understanding patients' cultural beliefs about pain and healthcare. Knowledge about patients with culturally diverse backgrounds experiencing back pain and the interventions available to them is limited. Therefore, this study aims to describe the characteristics of patients with culturally diverse backgrounds experiencing back pain and the video interpretation intervention offered to them and further to explore the clinician's perspective on this intervention...
January 1, 2024: Scandinavian Journal of Pain
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38638804/individual-differences-in-auditory-perception-predict-learning-of-non-adjacent-tone-sequences-in-3-year-olds
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jutta L Mueller, Ivonne Weyers, Angela D Friederici, Claudia Männel
Auditory processing of speech and non-speech stimuli oftentimes involves the analysis and acquisition of non-adjacent sound patterns. Previous studies using speech material have demonstrated (i) children's early emerging ability to extract non-adjacent dependencies (NADs) and (ii) a relation between basic auditory perception and this ability. Yet, it is currently unclear whether children show similar sensitivities and similar perceptual influences for NADs in the non-linguistic domain. We conducted an event-related potential study with 3-year-old children using a sine-tone-based oddball task, which simultaneously tested for NAD learning and auditory perception by means of varying sound intensity...
2024: Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38636780/preparing-pharmacists-for-the-digital-age-how-pharmacy-courses-are-adapting-to-challenges-and-opportunities
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Wallace Entringer Bottacin, Thais Teles de Souza, Ana Carolina Melchiors, Walleri Christini Torelli Reis
OBJECTIVE: As the digitalization of health accelerates, the fusion of pharmacy and informatics becomes crucial. Pharmacy education must adapt to equip professionals for this evolving landscape. This study aims to compare pharmacy curricula in Brazil and the USA, focusing on health informatics, to uncover challenges and opportunities in training pharmacists for the digital era. METHODS: A cross-sectional, descriptive analysis was conducted on pharmacy curricula from leading Brazilian and American universities in early 2024...
April 16, 2024: American Journal of Pharmaceutical Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38636405/integrating-attachment-and-linguistic-perspectives-on-the-coherence-of-narratives-regarding-close-relationships-a-qualitative-illustration
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Bracha Nir, Efrat Sher-Censor
In this multidisciplinary study, we offer an integrative view on the coherence of narratives regarding close relationships. We show how coherence, as conceptualized by attachment researchers, is manifested in discursive syntactic structure, as conceptualized by linguists. To illustrate this correspondence, we use narratives of six mothers about their adolescent child and their relationship. Narratives were elicited with the widely used Five Minute Speech Sample (FMSS) procedure and were coded according to the FMSS-coherence manual, tapping their clarity, consistency, and multidimensionality...
April 17, 2024: Acta Psychologica
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38633875/predicting-pragmatic-functions-of-chinese-echo-questions-using-prosody-evidence-from-acoustic-analysis-and-data-modeling
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Siyi Cao, Yizhong Xu, Tongquan Zhou, Anqi Wu
Echo questions serve two pragmatic functions (recapitulatory and explicatory) and are subdivided into two types (yes-no echo question and wh-echo question) in verbal communication. Yet to date, most relevant studies have been conducted in European languages like English and Spanish. It remains unknown whether the different functions of echo questions can be conveyed via prosody in spoken Chinese. Additionally, no comparison was made on the diversified algorithmic models in predicting functions by the prosodity of Chinese echo questions, a novel linguistic cognition in nature...
2024: Frontiers in Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38629972/conversational-speech-behaviors-are-context-dependent
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Camille J Wynn, Tyson S Barrett, Stephanie A Borrie
PURPOSE: According to the interpersonal synergy model of spoken dialogue, interlocutors modify their communicative behaviors to meet the contextual demands of a given conversation. Although a growing body of research supports this postulation for linguistic behaviors (e.g., semantics, syntax), little is understood about how this model applies to speech behaviors (e.g., speech rate, pitch). The purpose of this study is to test the hypothesis that interlocutors adjust their speech behaviors across different conversational tasks with different conversational goals...
April 17, 2024: Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research: JSLHR
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