12 results on '"Krieger, Florian"'
Search Results
2. The fight against infectious diseases. The essential role of higher-order thinking and problem solving
- Author
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Gottschling, Juliana, Krieger, Florian, and Greiff, Samuel
- Subjects
Theoretical & cognitive psychology [H12] [Social & behavioral sciences, psychology] ,Psychologie cognitive & théorique [H12] [Sciences sociales & comportementales, psychologie] - Published
- 2022
3. Collaborative problem solving in Luxembourg: Results and implications from PISA 2015
- Author
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Krieger, Florian, Fischbach, Antoine, and Greiff, Samuel
- Subjects
Education & instruction [H04] [Social & behavioral sciences, psychology] ,Education & enseignement [H04] [Sciences sociales & comportementales, psychologie] - Published
- 2021
4. Collaborative problem solving in Luxembourg: Results and implications from PISA 2015
- Author
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Krieger, Florian, Fischbach, Antoine, and Greiff, Samuel
- Subjects
Education & instruction [H04] [Social & behavioral sciences, psychology] ,Education & enseignement [H04] [Sciences sociales & comportementales, psychologie] - Published
- 2021
5. Die Entwicklung eines Trainingsprogrammes f��r die komplexe Probleml��sekompetenz bei Jugendlichen
- Author
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Nicolay, Bj��rn, Krieger, Florian, Salzig, Mandy, and Greiff, Samuel
- Abstract
Nationaler Bildungsbericht Luxemburg 2021
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Kollaboratives Probleml��sen in Luxemburg: Ergebnisse und Implikationen aus PISA 2015
- Author
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Krieger, Florian, Fischbach, Antoine, and Greiff, Samuel
- Abstract
Nationaler Bildungsbericht Luxemburg 2021
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Die Entwicklung eines Trainingsprogrammes für die komplexe Problemlösekompetenz in Jugendlichen
- Author
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Nicolay, Björn Fabrice, Krieger, Florian, Salzig, Mandy, and Greiff, Samuel
- Subjects
Education & instruction [H04] [Social & behavioral sciences, psychology] ,Education & enseignement [H04] [Sciences sociales & comportementales, psychologie] - Published
- 2021
8. La r��solution collaborative de probl��mes au Luxembourg: r��sultats et implications de l���enqu��te PISA 2015
- Author
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Krieger, Florian, Fischbach, Antoine, and Greiff, Samuel
- Abstract
Rapport national sur l�����ducation Luxembourg 2021
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Quantifying Sources of Variability in Infancy Research Using the Infant-Directed-Speech Preference
- Author
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Frank, Michael C, Alcock, Katherine Jane, Arias-Trejo, Natalia, Aschersleben, Gisa, Baldwin, Dare, Barbu, Stéphanie, Bergelson, Elika, Bergmann, Christina, Black, Alexis K, Blything, Ryan, Böhland, Maximilian P, Bolitho, Petra, Borovsky, Arielle, Brady, Shannon M, Braun, Bettina, Brown, Anna, Byers-Heinlein, Krista, Campbell, Linda E, Cashon, Cara, Choi, Mihye, Christodoulou, Joan, Cirelli, Laura K, Conte, Stefania, Cordes, Sara, Cox, Christopher, Cristia, Alejandrina, Cusack, Rhodri, Davies, Catherine, de Klerk, Maartje, Delle Luche, Claire, Ruiter, Laura de, Dinakar, Dhanya, Dixon, Kate C, Durier, Virginie, Durrant, Samantha, Fennell, Christopher, Ferguson, Brock, Ferry, Alissa, Fikkert, Paula, Flanagan, Teresa, Floccia, Caroline, Foley, Megan, Fritzsche, Tom, Frost, Rebecca LA, Gampe, Anja, Gervain, Judit, Gonzalez-Gomez, Nayeli, Gupta, Anna, Hahn, Laura E, Kiley Hamlin, J, Hannon, Erin E, Havron, Naomi, Hay, Jessica, Hernik, Mikołaj, Höhle, Barbara, Houston, Derek M, Howard, Lauren H, Ishikawa, Mitsuhiko, Itakura, Shoji, Jackson, Iain, Jakobsen, Krisztina V, Jarto, Marianna, Johnson, Scott P, Junge, Caroline, Karadag, Didar, Kartushina, Natalia, Kellier, Danielle J, Keren-Portnoy, Tamar, Klassen, Kelsey, Kline, Melissa, Ko, Eon-Suk, Kominsky, Jonathan F, Kosie, Jessica E, Kragness, Haley E, Krieger, Andrea AR, Krieger, Florian, Lany, Jill, Lazo, Roberto J, Lee, Michelle, Leservoisier, Chloé, Levelt, Claartje, Lew-Williams, Casey, Lippold, Matthias, Liszkowski, Ulf, Liu, Liquan, Luke, Steven G, Lundwall, Rebecca A, Macchi Cassia, Viola, Mani, Nivedita, Marino, Caterina, Martin, Alia, Mastroberardino, Meghan, Mateu, Victoria, Mayor, Julien, Menn, Katharina, Michel, Christine, Moriguchi, Yusuke, Morris, Benjamin, Nave, Karli M, and Nazzi, Thierry
- Subjects
Pediatric ,language acquisition ,experimental methods ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,open data ,infant-directed speech ,speech perception ,reproducibility ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,open materials ,preregistered - Abstract
Psychological scientists have become increasingly concerned with issues related to methodology and replicability, and infancy researchers in particular face specific challenges related to replicability: For example, high-powered studies are difficult to conduct, testing conditions vary across labs, and different labs have access to different infant populations. Addressing these concerns, we report on a large-scale, multisite study aimed at (a) assessing the overall replicability of a single theoretically important phenomenon and (b) examining methodological, cultural, and developmental moderators. We focus on infants’ preference for infant-directed speech (IDS) over adult-directed speech (ADS). Stimuli of mothers speaking to their infants and to an adult in North American English were created using seminaturalistic laboratory-based audio recordings. Infants’ relative preference for IDS and ADS was assessed across 67 laboratories in North America, Europe, Australia, and Asia using the three common methods for measuring infants’ discrimination (head-turn preference, central fixation, and eye tracking). The overall meta-analytic effect size (Cohen’s d) was 0.35, 95% confidence interval = [0.29, 0.42], which was reliably above zero but smaller than the meta-analytic mean computed from previous literature (0.67). The IDS preference was significantly stronger in older children, in those children for whom the stimuli matched their native language and dialect, and in data from labs using the head-turn preference procedure. Together, these findings replicate the IDS preference but suggest that its magnitude is modulated by development, native-language experience, and testing procedure.
- Published
- 2020
10. Royal caribbean cruises - hotels, resorts & cruise lines
- Author
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Kerliev, Krasimir, Krieger, Florian, and André, Rosário
- Subjects
Cruise lines ,Company report ,Equity research ,Ciências Sociais::Economia e Gestão [Domínio/Área Científica] - Published
- 2019
11. From labels to functions : how working memory capacity facilitates processing of matrix reasoning items with multiple rules
- Author
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Krieger, Florian and Zimmer, Hubert D.
- Subjects
ddc:150 ,ddc:310 ,ddc:500 ,ddc:620 - Abstract
The question why some individuals are more intelligent than others is one of the most important questions of the last 100 years in psychology. This study set out to investigate why individuals are better in matrix reasoning as one of the most prominent proxies of intelligence. One well-replicated finding is that matrix-reasoning items with multiple rules are harder to solve than items with a single rule. Notably, it is assumed that the individual working memory capacity (WMC) plays a crucial role in the processing of items with multiple rules. However, it is still an ongoing question why WMC is facilitating the processing of these items. In this work, we investigated possible roles of WMC in matrix-reasoning items with multiple rules. In doing so, we experimentally manipulated certain processes in matrix reasoning which are suggested in the literature to be more demanded in items with multiple rules. In addition, we observed the impact of WMC on these processes from a functional perspective. That is to say, we defined WMC not as an overall resource, but based on the WMC-literature, we examined which aspect of WMC could be required for the respective processes in matrix reasoning. The first study investigated whether storing partial solutions is required in matrix-reasoning and whether individual storage capacity as one aspect of WMC facilitates the storing of partial solutions. The second study can be regarded as a preliminary study for the third study, which quantified the influence of filtering as a further aspect of WMC on matrix-reasoning. The third study investigated whether selective encoding demands are present in multiple-rule items by means of both behavioral and eye movement analyses. We also observed whether individual filtering ability facilitates selective encoding in matrix reasoning. In addition, we observed whether goal management demands are present in multiple-rule items and whether individual storage and processing as another aspect of WMC is related to goal management. Results of all studies revealed that neither storing partial solutions nor goal management were required in multiple rule items, nor that these demands were associated with the aspects of WMC assessed in the respective studies. In contrast, results indicate that higher difficulties in multiple-rule items were mainly due to higher demands on selective encoding and more importantly, filtering facilitated processing of items with these demands. The results of the present study entail important implications for both matrix-reasoning processing and intelligence but also for our understanding of the involvement of WMC in intelligence. Die Frage, warum manche Menschen intelligenter sind als andere, ist eine der wichtigsten Fragen der letzten 100 Jahre in der Psychologie. In dieser Studie wurde untersucht, warum einige Personen in figuralen Matrizentests – als einer der prominentesten Verfahren zu Erfassung von Intelligenz – besser sind als andere. Ein gut replizierter Befund ist, dass figuralen Matrizentest-Aufgaben mit mehreren Regeln schwieriger zu lösen sind als Aufgaben mit einer einzigen Regel. Insbesondere wird davon ausgegangen, dass die individuelle Arbeitsspeicherkapazität (WMC) eine entscheidende Rolle bei der Verarbeitung von Aufgaben mit mehreren Regeln spielt. Es ist jedoch immer noch ungeklärt, warum WMC die Bearbeitung dieser Aufgaben erleichtert. Deshalb untersuchten wir in dieser Arbeit mögliche Einflüsse von WMC in figuralen Matrizentest mit mehreren Regeln. Hierbei manipulierten wir experimentell bestimmte Prozesse in figuralen Matrizentests, die in der Literatur als wichtige Prozess diskutiert werden, die bei Aufgaben mit mehreren Regeln stärker beansprucht zu sein scheinen. Darüber hinaus beobachteten wir den funktionalen Einfluss von WMC auf diese Prozesse. Das heißt, wir haben WMC nicht als Gesamtressource definiert, sondern auf der Grundlage der Literatur untersucht, welcher Aspekt von WMC für die jeweiligen Prozesse in figuralen Matrizentests benötigt werden könnte. Die erste Studie untersuchte, ob die Speicherung von Teillösungen in figuralen Matrizentest erforderlich ist und ob die individuelle Speicherkapazität, als Teilaspekt von WMC, die Speicherung von Teillösungen erleichtert. Die zweite Studie kann als Vorstudie für die dritte Studie betrachtet werden, die den Einfluss der Filterfähigkeit als weiteren Aspekt von WMC auf figural Matrizentests quantifizierte. Die dritte Studie untersuchte anhand von Verhaltens- und Augenbewegungsanalysen, ob selektive Enkodierungsanforderungen in Aufgaben mit mehreren Regeln vorhanden sind. Wir beobachteten zudem, ob individuelle Filterfähigkeiten das selektive Enkodieren in figuralen Matrizentests erleichtert. Darüber hinaus beobachteten wir, ob Anforderungen an das Zielmanagement in Aufgaben mit mehreren Regeln vorhanden sind und ob die Fähigkeit Inhalte im Arbeitsgedächtnis während der Bearbeitung einer kompetitiven Zeitaufgabe zu speichern mit dem Zielmanagement zusammenhängt. Die Ergebnisse der Studien zeigen, dass weder die Speicherung von Teillösungen noch das Zielmanagement in Aufgaben mit mehreren Regeln erforderlich war, noch, dass diese Anforderungen mit den jeweiligen Aspekten des WMC, die in den jeweiligen Studien erhoben wurde, zusammenhing. Im Gegensatz deuten die Ergebnisse darauf hin, dass höhere Schwierigkeiten bei Aufgaben mit mehreren Regeln hauptsächlich auf höhere Anforderungen an die selektive Enkodierung zurückzuführen waren, und was noch wichtiger ist, die Filterfähigkeit das Lösen dieser Aufgaben erleichterte. Die Ergebnisse der vorliegenden Studie beinhalten wichtige Implikationen sowohl für die Verarbeitung von figuralen Matrizentests als auch für Intelligenz im Allgemeinen, aber auch für unser Verständnis über die Beteiligung von WMC an Intelligenz. This research was conducted within the International Research Training Group "Adaptive Minds" supported by German Research Foundation (DFG) under Grant 1457.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Dynamics in unfolded polypeptide chains as model for elementary steps in protein folding
- Author
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Krieger, Florian, Kiefhaber, Thomas, and Seelig, Joachim
- Abstract
This thesis deals with the dynamics of unfolded polypeptide chains as model for the earliest steps in protein folding. Starting from an ensemble of unfolded conformations a folding polypeptide chain has to form specific backbone and side-chain interactions to reach the native state. The rate at which two defined contacts are formed on a polypeptide chain is limited by intrachain diffusion. The characterization of rate constants of intrachain contact formation in polypeptides and their dependence on length, sequence and solvent effects give new insights for an understanding of the dynamics of the earliest steps in protein folding. Until recently, little was known about absolute time scales of intramolecular contact formation in polypeptide chains. Direct measurements of fast intramolecular diffusion processes became possible with the development of fast diffusion-controlled electron transfer processes. In the presented work triplet-triplet energy transfer was used to characterize intrachain contact formation in homo-polypeptides and peptide fragments derived from natural protein sequences. The transfer of triplet electrons between the triplet donor xanthone to the triplet acceptor naphthalene is diffusion-controlled as tested by measuring its temperature and viscosity dependencies. The results suggest that triplet-triplet energy transfer from xanthone to naphthalene provides the requirement to determine absolute intramolecular contact formation rate constants in polypeptide chains. Intrachain contact formation in unstructured polypeptides is well described as a single exponential process. The loop-size dependence of the rate constants of intrachain contact formation revealed that intrachain motions over short and long distances are limited by different rate-limiting steps. In short peptide chains end-to-end contact formation is with a minimum time constant of 5-10 ns virtually independent of chain length and limited by an activation barrier of 12-16 kJ/mol. In long flexible poly(glycine-serine) peptide chains with more than twenty peptide bonds N the rate constants decrease with N-1.7±0.1 and end-to-end contact formation becomes nearly completely entropy-driven. Glycine and proline residues significantly change local intrachain dynamics compared to all other amino acids. Glycine accelerates contact formation whereas short proline containing peptides reveal complex kinetics of contact formation. Local chain dynamics are accelerated by a cis and slowed down by a trans peptidyl-prolyl bond. The effects vanish in peptide chains if the sequence contains more than five amino acids on each side of a single glycyine or a single proline residue. The dynamics of loop formation are sensitive to the nature of the solvent. Good solvents, such as denaturants slow down intrachain dynamics compared to water. The effect of solvent composition on chain dynamics indicates that the chain properties of polypeptides strongly depend on the surrounding conditions. Natural protein sequences are more complex than homo-polypeptide chains because they consist of 20 different amino acids. We determined the dynamics of loop formation in sequences derived from two proteins, carp muscle β-parvalbumin and protein G B1 domain. Compared to homo-polypeptides the intrachain dynamics in natural loop sequences are slowed down and higher activation barriers are determined. The results suggest that the dynamics of the earliest steps in protein folding are limited by significant activation barriers. The results allow us to estimate an upper time scale for rates of contact formation in unstructured peptide chains. In glycine-rich sequences, which are often found in β- hairpins and turns a first contact over 3-4 peptide bonds will be formed within 10-15 ns. For glycine-free sequences local contact formation is slowed down to 15-50 ns depending on the sequence. Due to the strong distance dependence of the rate constant of the end-to-end contact formation long-range interactions on an unfolded polypeptide chain over 50-60 peptide bonds will not be formed faster than in 500 ns.
- Published
- 2004
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