192 results on '"Laeng B"'
Search Results
2. Hemispheric lateralization in top-down attention during spatial relation processing: a Granger causal model approach
- Author
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Falasca, N. W., DʼAscenzo, S., Di Domenico, A., Onofrj, M., Tommasi, L., Laeng, B., and Franciotti, R.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Brightness perception changes related to pupil size
- Author
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Sulutvedt, U, Zavagno, D, Lubell, J, Leknes, S, de Rodez Benavent, S, Laeng, B, de Rodez Benavent, SA, Sulutvedt, U, Zavagno, D, Lubell, J, Leknes, S, de Rodez Benavent, S, Laeng, B, and de Rodez Benavent, SA
- Abstract
Dilating the pupils allow more quanta of light to impact the retina. Consequently, by “forcing” dilation of one pupil with a pharmacological agent (Tropicamide), the brightness of a surface under observation should increase proportionally to the dilation of the eye pupil. In a psychophysical procedure of brightness adjustment and matching, we presented to one eye geometrical patterns with a central square (the reference pattern) that differed in physical brightness within backgrounds of constant luminance. Subsequently, with the other eye, participants adjusted to the same luminance a similar pattern (target) whose central square luminance was randomly set higher or lower in brightness than the reference. As only one eye was treated with Tropicamide, we assessed whether the subjective brightness of the target square shifted in a consistent direction when viewed with the dilated pupil compared to the untreated eye. We found that, as the eye pupil increased post drug administration, so did the sense of brightness of the pattern (i.e., higher brightness adjustments followed viewing the reference with the treated eye). A reversed effect was observed when the untreated (control) eye viewed the reference first. The results confirm that even slight dilations of the pupil can result in an enhanced perceptual experience of brightness of the attended object, corresponding to an average increase of 2.09 cd/m2 for each 1 mm increase in pupil diameter
- Published
- 2021
4. Rewards of beauty: the opioid system mediates social motivation in humans
- Author
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Chelnokova, O, Laeng, B, Eikemo, M, Riegels, J, Løseth, G, Maurud, H, Willoch, F, and Leknes, S
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Synaesthesia and neurology: FW 9-3
- Author
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Laeng, B.
- Published
- 2012
6. The Eye Pupil’s Response to Static and Dynamic Illusions of Luminosity and Darkness
- Author
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Zavagno, D, Tommasi, L, Laeng, B, ZAVAGNO, DANIELE, Laeng, B., Zavagno, D, Tommasi, L, Laeng, B, ZAVAGNO, DANIELE, and Laeng, B.
- Abstract
Pupil diameters were recorded with an eye-tracker while participants observed cruciform patterns of gray-scale gradients that evoked illusions of enhanced brightness (glare) or of enhanced darkness. The illusions were either presented as static images or as dynamic animations which initially appeared as a pattern of filled squares that—in a few seconds—gradually changed into gradients until the patterns were identical to the static ones. Gradients could either converge toward the center, resulting in a central region of enhanced, illusory, brightness or darkness, or oriented toward each side of the screen, resulting in the perception of a peripheral ring of illusory brightness or darkness. It was found that pupil responses to these illusions matched both the direction and intensity of perceived changes in light: Glare stimuli resulted in pupil constrictions, and darkness stimuli evoked dilations of the pupils. A second experiment found that gradients of brightness were most effective in constricting the pupils than isoluminant step-luminance, local, variations in luminance. This set of findings suggest that the eye strategically adjusts to reflect in a predictive manner, given that these brightness illusions only suggest a change in luminance when none has occurred, the content within brightness maps of the visual scene
- Published
- 2017
7. Memory for locations within regions: Spatial biases and visual hemifield differences
- Author
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Laeng, B., Peters, M., and McCabe, B.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Erratum: Rewards of beauty: the opioid system mediates social motivation in humans
- Author
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Chelnokova, O, Laeng, B, Eikemo, M, Riegels, J, Løseth, G, Maurud, H, Willoch, F, and Leknes, S
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. The effect of luminance gradient induced luminosity and darkness in static and dynamic patterns on pupil diameter
- Author
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Zavagno, D, Tommasi, L, Laeng, B, ZAVAGNO, DANIELE, Laeng, B., Zavagno, D, Tommasi, L, Laeng, B, ZAVAGNO, DANIELE, and Laeng, B.
- Abstract
Luminance gradients can determine strong brightness illusions, which, depending on how gradients are organized around a target area (T), may result in brightness enhancement (e.g. glare effect) or brightness depression (i.e. ‘darkness enhancement’). The effects of such illusions on the eye pupil’s response were studied in an experiment with static and dynamic patterns (similar to the standard ‘glare effect’ pattern) by employing a remote eye-tracking device. Control stimuli were patterns in which luminance gradients were rotated 180 with respect to T, determining peripheral brightness effects external to T. Factors were thus Luminosity (bright, dark), Effect (central, peripheral) and Pattern (static, dynamic). Results show a main effect of Luminosity and Pattern, and a significant interaction Luminosity x Effect for both static and dynamic patterns. Summarizing, central bright patterns determined smaller pupils whilst central dark patterns determined larger pupils; the effects for dynamic stimuli were twofold those for static stimuli. Results confirm findings from previous studies with static patterns, while showing that the effect of illusory brightness patterns on pupil diameter extends to illusory darkness patterns and is enhanced by dynamic stimuli
- Published
- 2016
10. The effect of luminance gradient induced luminosity and darkness in static and dynamic patterns on pupil diameter
- Author
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ZAVAGNO, DANIELE, Tommasi, L, Laeng, B., Zavagno, D, Tommasi, L, and Laeng, B
- Subjects
M-PSI/01 - PSICOLOGIA GENERALE ,M-PSI/02 - PSICOBIOLOGIA E PSICOLOGIA FISIOLOGICA ,glare effect, brightness, darkness, pupil response - Abstract
Luminance gradients can determine strong brightness illusions, which, depending on how gradients are organized around a target area (T), may result in brightness enhancement (e.g. glare effect) or brightness depression (i.e. ‘darkness enhancement’). The effects of such illusions on the eye pupil’s response were studied in an experiment with static and dynamic patterns (similar to the standard ‘glare effect’ pattern) by employing a remote eye-tracking device. Control stimuli were patterns in which luminance gradients were rotated 180 with respect to T, determining peripheral brightness effects external to T. Factors were thus Luminosity (bright, dark), Effect (central, peripheral) and Pattern (static, dynamic). Results show a main effect of Luminosity and Pattern, and a significant interaction Luminosity x Effect for both static and dynamic patterns. Summarizing, central bright patterns determined smaller pupils whilst central dark patterns determined larger pupils; the effects for dynamic stimuli were twofold those for static stimuli. Results confirm findings from previous studies with static patterns, while showing that the effect of illusory brightness patterns on pupil diameter extends to illusory darkness patterns and is enhanced by dynamic stimuli
- Published
- 2016
11. Distinct neural mechanisms meet challenges in dynamic visual attention due to either load or object spacing
- Author
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Mäki-Marttunen, V., primary, Hagen, T., additional, Laeng, B., additional, and Espeseth, T., additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Simulating newborn face perception
- Author
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von Hofsten, O., primary, von Hofsten, C., additional, Sulutvedt, U., additional, Laeng, B., additional, Brennen, T., additional, and Magnussen, S., additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Pupil size signals mental effort deployed during multiple object tracking and predicts brain activity in the dorsal attention network and the locus coeruleus
- Author
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Alnaes, D., primary, Sneve, M. H., additional, Espeseth, T., additional, Endestad, T., additional, van de Pavert, S. H. P., additional, and Laeng, B., additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Impaired speechreading related to arrested development of face processing
- Author
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Gelder, B., Jean Vroomen, Laeng, B., and Cognitive Neuropsychology
- Published
- 1998
15. Three-dimensional information in face recognition: An eye-tracking study
- Author
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Chelnokova, O., primary and Laeng, B., additional
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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16. Searching through synaesthetic colors
- Author
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Laeng, B., primary
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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17. Women's pupillary responses to sexually significant others during the hormonal cycle
- Author
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LAENG, B, primary and FALKENBERG, L, additional
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Pupillometry of Grapheme-Color Synaesthesia
- Author
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PAULSEN, H, primary and LAENG, B, additional
- Published
- 2006
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19. Impaired speechreading related to arrested development of face processing
- Author
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de Gelder, B., Vroomen, J., Laeng, B., de Gelder, B., Vroomen, J., and Laeng, B.
- Published
- 1998
20. CAN DEFICITS IN SPATIAL INDEXING CONTRIBUTE TO SIMULTANAGNOSIA?
- Author
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Laeng, B., primary
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
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21. Tactile rod bisection: Hemispheric activation and sex differences
- Author
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Laeng, B., primary, Buchtel, H.A., additional, and Butter, C.M., additional
- Published
- 1996
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22. A Redrawn Vandenberg and Kuse Mental Rotations Test - Different Versions and Factors That Affect Performance
- Author
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Peters, M., primary, Laeng, B., additional, Latham, K., additional, Jackson, M., additional, Zaiyouna, R., additional, and Richardson, C., additional
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
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23. Cerebral lateralization for the processing of spatial coordinates and categories in left- and right-handers
- Author
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Laeng, B, primary
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. A left cerebral hemisphere's superiority in processing spatial-categorical information in a non-verbal semantic format.
- Author
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Suegami T and Laeng B
- Abstract
It has been shown that the left and right cerebral hemispheres (LH and RH) respectively process qualitative or 'categorical' spatial relations and metric or 'coordinate' spatial relations. However, categorical spatial information could be thought as divided into two types: semantically-coded and visuospatially-coded categorical information. We examined whether a LH's advantage in processing semantic-categorical information is observed in a non-verbal format, and also whether semantic- and visuospatial-categorical processing are differentially lateralized. We manipulated the colors and positions of the standard traffic light sign as semantic- and visuospatial-categorical information respectively, and tested performance with the divided visual field method. In the semantic-categorical matching task, in which the participants judged if the semantic-categorical information of a successive cue and target was the same, a right visual field advantage was observed, suggesting a LH's preference for processing semantic-categorical information in a non-verbal format. In the visuospatial-categorical matching task, in which the participants judged if the visuospatial-categorical information of a successive cue and target was identical, a left visual field advantage was obtained. These results suggest that the processing of semantic-categorical information is lateralized in LH, and we discuss the dissociation between the two types of categorical information. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Identifying objects in conventional and contorted poses: contributions of hemisphere-specific mechanisms
- Author
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Laeng, B., Shah, J., and Kosslyn, S.
- Published
- 1999
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26. Brightness perception changes related to pupil size
- Author
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Sigrid A. de Rodez Benavent, Bruno Laeng, Daniele Zavagno, Jamie Lubell, Unni Sulutvedt, Siri Leknes, Sulutvedt, U, Zavagno, D, Lubell, J, Leknes, S, de Rodez Benavent, S, and Laeng, B
- Subjects
Brightness ,genetic structures ,media_common.quotation_subject ,M-PSI/02 - PSICOBIOLOGIA E PSICOLOGIA FISIOLOGICA ,Luminance ,050105 experimental psychology ,Pupil ,Retina ,03 medical and health sciences ,Tropicamide ,0302 clinical medicine ,Brightne ,Perception ,medicine ,Pupillary response ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Set (psychology) ,Vision, Ocular ,media_common ,Mathematics ,05 social sciences ,Pupil size ,eye diseases ,Sensory Systems ,Ophthalmology ,Pupillometry ,Visual Perception ,Optometry ,sense organs ,M-PSI/01 - PSICOLOGIA GENERALE ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Dilating the pupils allow more quanta of light to impact the retina. Consequently, if one pupil is dilated with a pharmacological agent (Tropicamide), the brightness of a surface under observation should increase proportionally to the pupil dilation. Little is known about causal effects of changes in pupil size on perception of an object’s brightness. In a psychophysical procedure of brightness adjustment and matching, we presented to one eye geometrical patterns with a central square (the reference pattern) that differed in physical brightness within backgrounds of constant luminance. Subsequently, with the other eye, participants (n = 30) adjusted to the same luminance a similar pattern (target) whose central square luminance was randomly set higher or lower in brightness than the reference. As only one eye was treated with Tropicamide, we assessed whether the subjective brightness of the target square shifted in a consistent direction when viewed with the dilated pupil compared to the untreated (control) eye. We found that, as the pupil increased post drug administration, so significantly did the sense of brightness of the pattern (i.e., higher brightness adjustments followed viewing the reference pattern with the treated (Tropicamide) eye). A reversed effect was observed when the control eye viewed the reference pattern first. The results confirm that even slight pupil dilations can result in an enhanced perceptual experience of brightness of the attended object, corresponding to an average increase of 2.09 cd/m2 for each 1 mm increase in pupil diameter.
- Published
- 2020
27. Effects of the global and local attention on the processing of categorical and coordinate spatial relations.
- Author
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Michimata C, Saneyoshi A, Okubo M, and Laeng B
- Abstract
Participants made categorical or coordinate spatial judgments on the global or local elements of shapes. Stimuli were composed of a horizontal line and two dots. In the Categorical task, participants judged whether the line was above or below the dots. In the Coordinate task, they judged whether the line would fit between the dots. Stimuli were made hierarchical so that the global patterns composed of a 'global line' made of local dots-and-line units, and 'global dot' made of a single dots-and-line unit. The results indicated that the categorical task was better performed when participants attended to the local level of the hierarchical stimuli. On the other hand, the coordinate task was better performed when they attended to the global level. These findings are consistent with computer simulation models of the attentional modulation of neuronal receptive fields' size suggesting that (1) coordinate spatial relations are more efficiently encoded when one attends to a relatively large region of space, whereas (2) categorical spatial relations are more efficiently encoded when one attends to a relatively small region of space. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
28. Hemispheric lateralization in top-down attention during spatial relation processing: a Granger causal model approach
- Author
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Marco Onofrj, Luca Tommasi, Stefania D'Ascenzo, Raffaella Franciotti, Bruno Laeng, Nicola Walter Falasca, A. Di Domenico, Falasca, N. W., D'Ascenzo, Stefania, Di Domenico, A., Onofrj, M., Tommasi, L., Laeng, B., and Franciotti, R.
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Information Theory ,large and small cue ,Functional Laterality ,Lateralization of brain function ,Young Adult ,Spatial Processing ,medicine ,Humans ,Attention ,Computer Simulation ,Brain Mapping ,Communication ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,causal information ,business.industry ,hemispheric specialization ,Medicine (all) ,General Neuroscience ,Brain ,Magnetoencephalography ,Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Frontal gyrus ,Visual field ,Spatial relation ,Visual cortex ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,attention window ,Space Perception ,Specialization (logic) ,Focusing attention ,Female ,business ,Psychology ,Photic Stimulation ,Human ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Magnetoencephalography was recorded during a matching-to-sample plus cueing paradigm, in which participants judged the occurrence of changes in either categorical (CAT) or coordinate (COO) spatial relations. Previously, parietal and frontal lobes were identified as key areas in processing spatial relations and it was shown that each hemisphere was differently involved and modulated by the scope of the attention window (e.g. a large and small cue). In this study, Granger analysis highlighted the patterns of causality among involved brain areas--the direction of information transfer ran from the frontal to the visual cortex in the right hemisphere, whereas it ran in the opposite direction in the left side. Thus, the right frontal area seems to exert top-down influence, supporting the idea that, in this task, top-down signals are selectively related to the right side. Additionally, for CAT change preceded by a small cue, the right frontal gyrus was not involved in the information transfer, indicating a selective specialization of the left hemisphere for this condition. The present findings strengthen the conclusion of the presence of a remarkable hemispheric specialization for spatial relation processing and illustrate the complex interactions between the lateralized parts of the neural network. Moreover, they illustrate how focusing attention over large or small regions of the visual field engages these lateralized networks differently, particularly in the frontal regions of each hemisphere, consistent with the theory that spatial relation judgements require a fronto-parietal network in the left hemisphere for categorical relations and on the right hemisphere for coordinate spatial processing.
- Published
- 2015
29. The Eye Pupil’s Response to Static and Dynamic Illusions of Luminosity and Darkness
- Author
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Luca Tommasi, Daniele Zavagno, Bruno Laeng, Zavagno, D, Tommasi, L, and Laeng, B
- Subjects
Brightness ,genetic structures ,media_common.quotation_subject ,lcsh:BF1-990 ,Illusion ,brightness ,Poison control ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Luminance ,050105 experimental psychology ,Pupil ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Optics ,Artificial Intelligence ,illusion, luminance, brightness, eye pupil, pupillometry ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Computer vision ,media_common ,business.industry ,luminance ,eye pupil ,05 social sciences ,pupillometry ,Glare (vision) ,Sensory Systems ,eye diseases ,Ophthalmology ,lcsh:Psychology ,illusion ,Darkness ,Artificial intelligence ,sense organs ,M-PSI/01 - PSICOLOGIA GENERALE ,Psychology ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Pupillometry - Abstract
Pupil diameters were recorded with an eye-tracker while participants observed cruciform patterns of gray-scale gradients that evoked illusions of enhanced brightness ( glare ) or of enhanced darkness. The illusions were either presented as static images or as dynamic animations which initially appeared as a pattern of filled squares that—in a few seconds—gradually changed into gradients until the patterns were identical to the static ones. Gradients could either converge toward the center, resulting in a central region of enhanced, illusory, brightness or darkness, or oriented toward each side of the screen, resulting in the perception of a peripheral ring of illusory brightness or darkness. It was found that pupil responses to these illusions matched both the direction and intensity of perceived changes in light: Glare stimuli resulted in pupil constrictions, and darkness stimuli evoked dilations of the pupils. A second experiment found that gradients of brightness were most effective in constricting the pupils than isoluminant step-luminance, local, variations in luminance. This set of findings suggest that the eye strategically adjusts to reflect in a predictive manner, given that these brightness illusions only suggest a change in luminance when none has occurred, the content within brightness maps of the visual scene.
- Published
- 2017
30. The underlying architecture of musical sensibility: One general factor, four subdimensions, and strong genetic effects.
- Author
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Hansen HMU, Røysamb E, Vassend OM, Czajkowski NO, Endestad T, Danielsen A, and Laeng B
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Adult, Norway, Middle Aged, Phenotype, Emotions physiology, Music psychology
- Abstract
Current evidence suggests moderate heritability of music phenotypes, such as music listening and achievement. However, other fundamental traits underlying people's interest in music and its relevance for their lives have been largely neglected, and little is known about the genetic and environmental etiology of what we refer to as musical sensibility-the tendency to be emotionally and aesthetically engaged by music. This study investigated the latent structure, as well as the genetic and environmental factors influencing individual variability in multiple domains of musical sensibility, and the etiological architecture of the relationship between the dimensions. To this end, we used phenotypic confirmatory factor analytic and biometric twin modeling to analyze self-reported ratings on four dimensions of musical sensibility in a sample of Norwegian twins (N = 2600). The results indicate a phenotypic higher-order structure, whereby both the resulting general musical sensibility factor and the conceptually narrower domains were strongly heritable (49-65%). Multivariate analyses of the genetic and environmental covariance further revealed substantial overlap in genetic variance across domains., (© 2024 The Author(s). Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of The New York Academy of Sciences.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. The effect of aging on the dual-route model of emotion processing applied to memory recognition.
- Author
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Prete G, Palumbo R, Ceccato I, Di Crosta A, La Malva P, Sforza V, Laeng B, Tommasi L, Di Domenico A, and Mammarella N
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Aged, Young Adult, Adult, Middle Aged, Recognition, Psychology physiology, Aged, 80 and over, Aging physiology, Aging psychology, Emotions physiology, Facial Recognition physiology, Facial Expression
- Abstract
Objective: Emotional faces are automatically processed in the human brain through a cortical route (conscious processing based on high spatial frequencies, HSF) and a subcortical route (subliminal processing based on low spatial frequencies, LSF). How each route contributes to emotional face recognition is still debated, and little is known about this process in aging., Method: Here, 147 younger adults (YA) and 137 older adults (OA) were passively presented with neutral, happy, and angry faces, shown as (a) unfiltered, (b) filtered at LSF, and (c) hybrid (emotional LSF superimposed to the neutral HSF of the same face). In a succeeding recognition phase, the same faces and new faces were shown as unfiltered, and participants were asked whether each face had been already presented in the encoding phase., Results: Despite the better performance by YA compared with OA for neutral faces presented as unfiltered (cortical route), the performance of OA was better than that of YA for angry faces presented as hybrid and for happy faces presented at LSF and as hybrid., Conclusions: We conclude that the activity of the subcortical route during the encoding phase facilitates emotional recognition in aging. Results are discussed in accordance with the dual-route model. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Tunnel motion: Pupil dilations to optic flow within illusory dark holes.
- Author
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Laeng B, Nabil S, and Kitaoka A
- Subjects
- Humans, Adult, Young Adult, Male, Female, Illusions physiology, Pupil physiology, Motion Perception physiology, Optical Illusions physiology, Optic Flow physiology
- Abstract
We showed to the same observers both dynamic and static 2D patterns that can both evoke distinctive perceptions of motion or optic flow, as if moving in a tunnel or into a dark hole. At all times pupil diameters were monitored with an infrared eye tracker. We found a converging set of results indicating stronger pupil dilations to expansive growth of shapes or optic flows evoking a forward motion into a dark tunnel. Multiple regression analyses showed that the pupil responses to the illusory expanding black holes of static patterns were predicted by the individuals' pupil response to optic flows showing spiraling motion or "free fall" into a black hole. Also, individuals' pupil responses to spiraling motion into dark tunnels predicted the individuals' sense of illusory expansion with the static, illusory expanding, dark holes. This correspondence across individuals between their pupil responses to both dynamic and static, illusory expanding, holes suggests that these percepts reflect a common perceptual mechanism, deriving motion from 2D scenes, and that the observers' pupil adjustments reflect the direction and strength of motion they perceive and the expected outcome of an increase in darkness., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting InterestsThe authors declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Zooming in and out of semantics: proximal-distal construal levels and prominence hierarchies.
- Author
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Lobben M and Laeng B
- Abstract
We argue that the "Prominence Hierarchy" within linguistics can be subsumed under the "Construal Level Theory" within psychology and that a wide spectrum of grammatical phenomena, ranging from case assignment to number, definiteness, verbal agreement, voice, direct/inverse morphology, and syntactic word-order respond to Prominence Hierarchies (PH), or semantic scales. In fact, the field of prominence hierarchies, as expressed through the languages of the world, continues to be riddled with riddles. We identify a set of conundrums: (A) vantage point and animacy, (B) individuation and narrow reference phenomena, (C) fronting mechanisms, (D) abstraction, and (E) cultural variance and flexibility. We here propose an account for the existence of these hierarchies and their pervasive effects on grammar by relying on psychological Construal Level Theory (CLT). We suggest that both PH and CLT structure the external world according to proximity or distance from the " Me , Here and Now " (MHN) perspective. In language, MHN has the effect of structuring grammars; in cognition, it structures our lives, our preferences, and choices., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Lobben and Laeng.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Illusory light drives pupil responses in primates.
- Author
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Durand JB, Marchand S, Nasres I, Laeng B, and De Castro V
- Subjects
- Animals, Humans, Male, Female, Adult, Young Adult, Macaca mulatta, Color Perception physiology, Illusions physiology, Optical Illusions physiology, Light, Reflex, Pupillary physiology, Pupil physiology, Photic Stimulation methods
- Abstract
In humans, the eye pupils respond to both physical light sensed by the retina and mental representations of light produced by the brain. Notably, our pupils constrict when a visual stimulus is illusorily perceived brighter, even if retinal illumination is constant. However, it remains unclear whether such perceptual penetrability of pupil responses is an epiphenomenon unique to humans or whether it represents an adaptive mechanism shared with other animals to anticipate variations in retinal illumination between successive eye fixations. To address this issue, we measured the pupil responses of both humans and macaque monkeys exposed to three chromatic versions (cyan, magenta, and yellow) of the Asahi brightness illusion. We found that the stimuli illusorily perceived brighter or darker trigger differential pupil responses that are very similar in macaques and human participants. Additionally, we show that this phenomenon exhibits an analogous cyan bias in both primate species. Beyond evincing the macaque monkey as a relevant model to study the perceptual penetrability of pupil responses, our results suggest that this phenomenon is tuned to ecological conditions because the exposure to a "bright cyan-bluish sky" may be associated with increased risks of dazzle and retinal damages.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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35. Suicide attempt risk predicts inconsistent self-reported suicide attempts: A machine learning approach using longitudinal data.
- Author
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Haghish EF, Czajkowski N, Walby FA, Qin P, and Laeng B
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Humans, Male, Female, Self Report, Longitudinal Studies, Risk Factors, Suicide, Attempted, Suicidal Ideation
- Abstract
Introduction: Inconsistent self-reports of lifetime suicide attempts (LSAs) are a major obstacle for accurate assessment of suicidal behavior. This study is the first to posit that adolescents at higher risk report LSAs more consistently than those at lower risk, revealing a link between suicide attempt risk and consistent reporting., Methods: A machine learning model was trained with 70 % of the baseline assessment data of a longitudinal sample of Norwegian adolescents (n = 10,739). The model was used to estimate the LSA risk score for the remaining 30 % of the testing dataset. The relationship between these baseline risk scores and the consistency of reporting LSAs was assessed using a 2-year follow-up reassessment of the testing dataset., Results: Internalizing problems, optimism about the future, conduct problems, substance use, and disordered eating were important factors associated with suicide attempt risk. Of the participants, 63.41 % had inconsistent self-reports at the two-year follow-up. Adolescents who consistently reported LSAs had significantly higher scores of suicide attempt risk at baseline. Two logistic regression analyses confirmed an association between suicide attempt risk and inconsistent self-reported LSAs and showed that sex (being male), and lower levels of depression and conduct problems significantly predicted such inconsistencies. Those who inconsistently reported LSAs were more likely than the others to be classified by the model as false negatives at the baseline risk assessment due to their lower estimated risk scores., Limitations: Suicide attempts were measured with a single item in this study., Conclusion: These risk factors support the theory of adolescent suicidality (TAS) and could improve suicide attempt risk assessment. Inconsistent self-reported LSAs signal lower suicide attempt risk., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors confirm that there are no conflicts of interest associated with this study., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Oscillatory attention in groove.
- Author
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Spiech C, Danielsen A, Laeng B, and Endestad T
- Subjects
- Humans, Acoustic Stimulation, Electroencephalography, Periodicity, Movement, Auditory Perception, Music
- Abstract
Attention is not constant but rather fluctuates over time and these attentional fluctuations may prioritize the processing of certain events over others. In music listening, the pleasurable urge to move to music (termed 'groove' by music psychologists) offers a particularly convenient case study of oscillatory attention because it engenders synchronous and oscillatory movements which also vary predictably with stimulus complexity. In this study, we simultaneously recorded pupillometry and scalp electroencephalography (EEG) from participants while they listened to drumbeats of varying complexity that they rated in terms of groove afterwards. Using the intertrial phase coherence of the beat frequency, we found that while subjects were listening, their pupil activity became entrained to the beat of the drumbeats and this entrained attention persisted in the EEG even as subjects imagined the drumbeats continuing through subsequent silent periods. This entrainment in both the pupillometry and EEG worsened with increasing rhythmic complexity, indicating poorer sensory precision as the beat became more obscured. Additionally, sustained pupil dilations revealed the expected, inverted U-shaped relationship between rhythmic complexity and groove ratings. Taken together, this work bridges oscillatory attention to rhythmic complexity in relation to musical groove., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Detecting implicit and explicit facial emotions at different ages.
- Author
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Prete G, Ceccato I, Bartolini E, Di Crosta A, La Malva P, Palumbo R, Laeng B, Tommasi L, Mammarella N, and Di Domenico A
- Abstract
Emotions are processed in the brain through a cortical route, responsible for detailed-conscious recognition and mainly based on image High Spatial Frequencies (HSF), and a subcortical route, responsible for coarse-unconscious processing and based on Low SF (LSF). However, little is known about possible changes in the functioning of the two routes in ageing. In the present go/no-go online task, 112 younger adults and 111 older adults were asked to press a button when a happy or angry face appeared (go) and to inhibit responses for neutral faces (no-go). Facial stimuli were presented unfiltered (broadband image), filtered at HSF and LSF, and hybrids (LSF of an emotional expression superimposed to the HSF of the same face with a neutral expression). All stimuli were also presented rotated on the vertical axis (upside-down) to investigate the global analysis of faces in ageing. Results showed an overall better performance of younger compared to older participants for all conditions except for hybrid stimuli. The expected face-inversion effect was confirmed in both age groups. We conclude that, besides an overall worsening of the perceptual skill with ageing, no specific impairment in the functioning of both the cortical and the subcortical route emerged., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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38. Unveiling Adolescent Suicidality: Holistic Analysis of Protective and Risk Factors Using Multiple Machine Learning Algorithms.
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Haghish EF, Nes RB, Obaidi M, Qin P, Stänicke LI, Bekkhus M, Laeng B, and Czajkowski N
- Subjects
- Humans, Adolescent, Female, Male, Risk Factors, Machine Learning, Algorithms, Suicidal Ideation, Suicide
- Abstract
Adolescent suicide attempts are on the rise, presenting a significant public health concern. Recent research aimed at improving risk assessment for adolescent suicide attempts has turned to machine learning. But no studies to date have examined the performance of stacked ensemble algorithms, which are more suitable for low-prevalence conditions. The existing machine learning-based research also lacks population-representative samples, overlooks protective factors and their interplay with risk factors, and neglects established theories on suicidal behavior in favor of purely algorithmic risk estimation. The present study overcomes these shortcomings by comparing the performance of a stacked ensemble algorithm with a diverse set of algorithms, performing a holistic item analysis to identify both risk and protective factors on a comprehensive data, and addressing the compatibility of these factors with two competing theories of suicide, namely, The Interpersonal Theory of Suicide and The Strain Theory of Suicide. A population-representative dataset of 173,664 Norwegian adolescents aged 13 to 18 years (mean = 15.14, SD = 1.58, 50.5% female) with a 4.65% rate of reported suicide attempt during the past 12 months was analyzed. Five machine learning algorithms were trained for suicide attempt risk assessment. The stacked ensemble model significantly outperformed other algorithms, achieving equal sensitivity and a specificity of 90.1%, AUC of 96.4%, and AUCPR of 67.5%. All algorithms found recent self-harm to be the most important indicator of adolescent suicide attempt. Exploratory factor analysis suggested five additional risk domains, which we labeled internalizing problems, sleep disturbance, disordered eating, lack of optimism regarding future education and career, and victimization. The identified factors provided stronger support for The Interpersonal Theory of Suicide than for The Strain Theory of Suicide. An enhancement to The Interpersonal Theory based on the risk and protective factors identified by holistic item analysis is presented., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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39. From pre-processing to advanced dynamic modeling of pupil data.
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Fink L, Simola J, Tavano A, Lange E, Wallot S, and Laeng B
- Subjects
- Humans, Arousal, Blinking, Saccades, Pupil, Attention
- Abstract
The pupil of the eye provides a rich source of information for cognitive scientists, as it can index a variety of bodily states (e.g., arousal, fatigue) and cognitive processes (e.g., attention, decision-making). As pupillometry becomes a more accessible and popular methodology, researchers have proposed a variety of techniques for analyzing pupil data. Here, we focus on time series-based, signal-to-signal approaches that enable one to relate dynamic changes in pupil size over time with dynamic changes in a stimulus time series, continuous behavioral outcome measures, or other participants' pupil traces. We first introduce pupillometry, its neural underpinnings, and the relation between pupil measurements and other oculomotor behaviors (e.g., blinks, saccades), to stress the importance of understanding what is being measured and what can be inferred from changes in pupillary activity. Next, we discuss possible pre-processing steps, and the contexts in which they may be necessary. Finally, we turn to signal-to-signal analytic techniques, including regression-based approaches, dynamic time-warping, phase clustering, detrended fluctuation analysis, and recurrence quantification analysis. Assumptions of these techniques, and examples of the scientific questions each can address, are outlined, with references to key papers and software packages. Additionally, we provide a detailed code tutorial that steps through the key examples and figures in this paper. Ultimately, we contend that the insights gained from pupillometry are constrained by the analysis techniques used, and that signal-to-signal approaches offer a means to generate novel scientific insights by taking into account understudied spectro-temporal relationships between the pupil signal and other signals of interest., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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40. Are false positives in suicide classification models a risk group? Evidence for "true alarms" in a population-representative longitudinal study of Norwegian adolescents.
- Author
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Haghish EF, Laeng B, and Czajkowski N
- Abstract
Introduction: False positives in retrospective binary suicide attempt classification models are commonly attributed to sheer classification error. However, when machine learning suicide attempt classification models are trained with a multitude of psycho-socio-environmental factors and achieve high accuracy in suicide risk assessment, false positives may turn out to be at high risk of developing suicidal behavior or attempting suicide in the future. Thus, they may be better viewed as "true alarms," relevant for a suicide prevention program. In this study, using large population-based longitudinal dataset, we examine three hypotheses: (1) false positives, compared to the true negatives, are at higher risk of suicide attempt in future, (2) the suicide attempts risk for the false positives increase as a function of increase in specificity threshold; and (3) as specificity increases, the severity of risk factors between false positives and true positives becomes more similar., Methods: Utilizing the Gradient Boosting algorithm, we used a sample of 11,369 Norwegian adolescents, assessed at two timepoints (1992 and 1994), to classify suicide attempters at the first time point. We then assessed the relative risk of suicide attempt at the second time point for false positives in comparison to true negatives, and in relation to the level of specificity., Results: We found that false positives were at significantly higher risk of attempting suicide compared to true negatives. When selecting a higher classification risk threshold by gradually increasing the specificity cutoff from 60% to 97.5%, the relative suicide attempt risk of the false positive group increased, ranging from minimum of 2.96 to 7.22 times. As the risk threshold increased, the severity of various mental health indicators became significantly more comparable between false positives and true positives., Conclusion: We argue that the performance evaluation of machine learning suicide classification models should take the clinical relevance into account, rather than focusing solely on classification error metrics. As shown here, the so-called false positives represent a truly at-risk group that should be included in suicide prevention programs. Hence, these findings should be taken into consideration when interpreting machine learning suicide classification models as well as planning future suicide prevention interventions for adolescents., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Haghish, Laeng and Czajkowski.)
- Published
- 2023
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41. Recognition of brief sounds in rapid serial auditory presentation.
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Akça M, Vuoskoski JK, Laeng B, and Bishop L
- Subjects
- Humans, Acoustic Stimulation methods, Sound, Auditory Perception, Recognition, Psychology, Music
- Abstract
Two experiments were conducted to test the role of participant factors (i.e., musical sophistication, working memory capacity) and stimulus factors (i.e., sound duration, timbre) on auditory recognition using a rapid serial auditory presentation paradigm. Participants listened to a rapid stream of very brief sounds ranging from 30 to 150 milliseconds and were tested on their ability to distinguish the presence from the absence of a target sound selected from various sound sources placed amongst the distracters. Experiment 1a established that brief exposure to stimuli (60 to 150 milliseconds) does not necessarily correspond to impaired recognition. In Experiment 1b we found evidence that 30 milliseconds of exposure to the stimuli significantly impairs recognition of single auditory targets, but the recognition for voice and sine tone targets impaired the least, suggesting that the lower limit required for successful recognition could be lower than 30 milliseconds for voice and sine tone targets. Critically, the effect of sound duration on recognition completely disappeared when differences in musical sophistication were controlled for. Participants' working memory capacities did not seem to predict their recognition performances. Our behavioral results extend the studies oriented to understand the processing of brief timbres under temporal constraint by suggesting that the musical sophistication may play a larger role than previously thought. These results can also provide a working hypothesis for future research, namely, that underlying neural mechanisms for the processing of various sound sources may have different temporal constraints., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2023 Akça et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
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- 2023
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42. Using Automated Speech Processing for Repeated Measurements in a Clinical Setting of the Behavioral Variability in the Stroop Task.
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Holmlund TB, Cohen AS, Cheng J, Foltz PW, Bernstein J, Rosenfeld E, Laeng B, and Elvevåg B
- Abstract
The Stroop interference task is indispensable to current neuropsychological practice. Despite this, it is limited in its potential for repeated administration, its sensitivity and its demands on professionals and their clients. We evaluated a digital Stroop deployed using a smart device. Spoken responses were timed using automated speech recognition. Participants included adult nonpatients (N = 113; k = 5 sessions over 5 days) and patients with psychiatric diagnoses (N = 85; k = 3-4 sessions per week over 4 weeks). Traditional interference (difference in response time between color incongruent words vs. color neutral words; M = 0.121 s) and facilitation (neutral vs. color congruent words; M = 0.085 s) effects were robust and temporally stable over testing sessions (ICCs 0.50-0.86). The performance showed little relation to clinical symptoms for a two-week window for either nonpatients or patients but was related to self-reported concentration at the time of testing for both groups. Performance was also related to treatment outcomes in patients. The duration of response word utterances was longer in patients than in nonpatients. Measures of intra-individual variability showed promise for understanding clinical state and treatment outcome but were less temporally stable than measures based solely on average response time latency. This framework of remote assessment using speech processing technology enables the fine-grained longitudinal charting of cognition and verbal behavior. However, at present, there is a problematic lower limit to the absolute size of the effects that can be examined when using voice in such a brief 'out-of-the-laboratory condition' given the temporal resolution of the speech-to-text detection system (in this case, 10 ms). This resolution will limit the parsing of meaningful effect sizes.
- Published
- 2023
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43. Caressed by music: Related preferences for velocity of touch and tempo of music?
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Sailer U, Zucknick M, and Laeng B
- Abstract
Given that both hearing and touch are 'mechanical senses' that respond to physical pressure or mechanical energy and that individuals appear to have a characteristic internal or spontaneous tempo, individual preferences in musical and touch rhythms might be related. We explored this in two experiments probing individual preferences for tempo in the tactile and auditory modalities. Study 1 collected ratings of received stroking on the forearm and measured the velocity the participants used for stroking a fur. Music tempo preferences were assessed as mean beats per minute of individually selected music pieces and via the adjustment of experimenter-selected music to a preferred tempo. Heart rate was recorded to measure levels of physiological arousal. We found that the preferred tempo of favorite (self-selected) music correlated positively with the velocity with which each individual liked to be touched. In Study 2, participants rated videos of repeated touch on someone else's arm and videos of a drummer playing with brushes on a snare drum, both at a variety of tempos. We found that participants with similar rating patterns for the different stroking speeds did not show similar rating patterns for the different music beats. The results suggest that there may be a correspondence between preferences for favorite music and felt touch, but this is either weak or it cannot be evoked effectively with vicarious touch and/or mere drum beats. Thus, if preferences for touch and music are related, this is likely to be dependent on the specific type of stimulation., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Sailer, Zucknick and Laeng.)
- Published
- 2023
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44. The lateralized flash-lag illusion: A psychophysical and pupillometry study.
- Author
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Suzuki Y, Atmaca S, and Laeng B
- Subjects
- Humans, Attention, Visual Fields, Photic Stimulation, Illusions, Motion Perception
- Abstract
The flash-lag illusion (FLI) is a visual phenomenon where a flashed object, either co-localized or in physical alignment with another continuously moving object, is perceived to lag behind the path of the moving object. In the present study, we reveal an anisotropy of the FLI between the lateral visual fields that was expressed psychophysically as different points of subjective equality, depending on the hemifield in which the stimuli appeared. Specifically, the study confirmed that, as seen in two previous studies, the FLI was significantly larger in the left visual field (LVF) than in the right (RVF). In addition, pupil dilations were larger in the RVF than in the LVF as well as returning to baseline levels more rapidly in the LVF. We interpret these findings as converging on revealing more efficient spatial and attentional processing and, in turn, extrapolation of motion in the LVF/right hemisphere than in the RVF/left hemisphere., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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45. Human voices escape the auditory attentional blink: Evidence from detections and pupil responses.
- Author
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Akça M, Bishop L, Vuoskoski JK, and Laeng B
- Subjects
- Humans, Attention physiology, Blinking, Pupil, Attentional Blink, Voice
- Abstract
Attentional selection of a second target in a rapid stream of stimuli embedding two targets tends to be briefly impaired when two targets are presented in close temporal proximity, an effect known as an attentional blink (AB). Two target sounds (T1 and T2) were embedded in a rapid serial auditory presentation of environmental sounds with a short (Lag 3) or long lag (Lag 9). Participants were to first identify T1 (bell or sine tone) and then to detect T2 (present or absent). Individual stimuli had durations of either 30 or 90 ms, and were presented in streams of 20 sounds. The T2 varied in category: human voice, cello, or dog sound. Previous research has introduced pupillometry as a useful marker of the intensity of cognitive processing and attentional allocation in the visual AB paradigm. Results suggest that the interplay of stimulus factors is critical for target detection accuracy and provides support for the hypothesis that the human voice is the least likely to show an auditory AB (in the 90 ms condition). For the other stimuli, accuracy for T2 was significantly worse at Lag 3 than at Lag 9 in the 90 ms condition, suggesting the presence of an auditory AB. When AB occurred (at Lag 3), we observed smaller pupil dilations, time-locked to the onset of T2, compared to Lag 9, reflecting lower attentional processing when 'blinking' during target detection. Taken together, these findings support the conclusion that human voices escape the AB and that the pupillary changes are consistent with the so-called T2 attentional deficit. In addition, we found some indication that salient stimuli like human voices could require a less intense allocation of attention, or noradrenergic potentiation, compared to other auditory stimuli., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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46. Beat alignment ability is associated with formal musical training not current music playing.
- Author
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Spiech C, Endestad T, Laeng B, Danielsen A, and Haghish EF
- Abstract
The ability to perceive the beat in music is crucial for both music listeners and players with expert musicians being notably skilled at noticing fine deviations in the beat. However, it is unclear whether this beat perception ability is enhanced in trained musicians who continue to practice relative to musicians who no longer play. Thus, we investigated this by comparing active musicians', inactive musicians', and nonmusicians' beat alignment ability scores on the Computerized Adaptive Beat Alignment Test (CA-BAT). 97 adults with diverse musical experience participated in the study, reporting their years of formal musical training, number of instruments played, hours of weekly music playing, and hours of weekly music listening, in addition to their demographic information. While initial tests between groups indicated active musicians outperformed inactive musicians and nonmusicians on the CA-BAT, a generalized linear regression analysis showed that there was no significant difference once differences in musical training had been accounted for. To ensure that our results were not impacted by multicollinearity between music-related variables, nonparametric and nonlinear machine learning regressions were employed and confirmed that years of formal musical training was the only significant predictor of beat alignment ability. These results suggest that expertly perceiving fine differences in the beat is not a use-dependent ability that degrades without regular maintenance through practice or musical engagement. Instead, better beat alignment appears to be associated with more musical training regardless of continued use., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Spiech, Endestad, Laeng, Danielsen and Haghish.)
- Published
- 2023
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47. Pupil drift rate indexes groove ratings.
- Author
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Spiech C, Sioros G, Endestad T, Danielsen A, and Laeng B
- Subjects
- Auditory Perception, Brain, Humans, Pupil, Music, Time Perception
- Abstract
Groove, understood as an enjoyable compulsion to move to musical rhythms, typically varies along an inverted U-curve with increasing rhythmic complexity (e.g., syncopation, pickups). Predictive coding accounts posit that moderate complexity drives us to move to reduce sensory prediction errors and model the temporal structure. While musicologists generally distinguish the effects of pickups (anacruses) and syncopations, their difference remains unexplored in groove. We used pupillometry as an index to noradrenergic arousal while subjects listened to and rated drumbeats varying in rhythmic complexity. We replicated the inverted U-shaped relationship between rhythmic complexity and groove and showed this is modulated by musical ability, based on a psychoacoustic beat perception test. The pupil drift rates suggest that groovier rhythms hold attention longer than ones rated less groovy. Moreover, we found complementary effects of syncopations and pickups on groove ratings and pupil size, respectively, discovering a distinct predictive process related to pickups. We suggest that the brain deploys attention to pickups to sharpen subsequent strong beats, augmenting the predictive scaffolding's focus on beats that reduce syncopations' prediction errors. This interpretation is in accordance with groove envisioned as an embodied resolution of precision-weighted prediction error., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
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48. Environmental risks to humans, the first database of valence and arousal ratings for images of natural hazards.
- Author
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Prete G, Laeng B, and Tommasi L
- Subjects
- Humans, Surveys and Questionnaires, Arousal, Databases, Factual, Emotions, Hazardous Substances
- Abstract
Due to their relevance for the entire society, environmental hazards have largely been investigated in terms of their psychological effects. However, a complete image database comprising different categories of catastrophes has not been proposed yet. We selected 200 photographs of the most frequent natural disasters with the aim to collect the emotional reactions of observers. In particular, 20 stimuli were selected for each of the following 10 categories: earthquake, volcanic activity, lightning, hailstorm, drought, fire, landslide, epidemic, and neutral and positive images as control categories. A sample of 605 participants completed an online survey, in which they were asked to rate either the valence or the arousal of each stimulus, by using a Self-Assessment Manikin. The Environmental Risk to Humans database associates the emotional reactions to these visual stimuli, together with the demographics of the sample (e.g., gender, age, marital status, income, previous experience of natural disasters). The database constitutes a tool to explore human reactions to natural hazards, providing a controlled set of stimuli for different types of catastrophes., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
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49. The Eye Pupil Adjusts to Illusorily Expanding Holes.
- Author
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Laeng B, Nabil S, and Kitaoka A
- Abstract
Some static patterns evoke the perception of an illusory expanding central region or "hole." We asked observers to rate the magnitudes of illusory motion or expansion of black holes, and these predicted the degree of dilation of the pupil, measured with an eye tracker. In contrast, when the "holes" were colored (including white), i.e., emitted light, these patterns constricted the pupils, but the subjective expansions were also weaker compared with the black holes. The change rates of pupil diameters were significantly related to the illusory motion phenomenology only with the black holes. These findings can be accounted for within a perceiving-the-present account of visual illusions, where both the illusory motion and the pupillary adjustments represent compensatory mechanisms to the perception of the next moment, based on shared experiences with the ecological regularities of light., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Laeng, Nabil and Kitaoka.)
- Published
- 2022
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50. The ascending arousal system promotes optimal performance through mesoscale network integration in a visuospatial attentional task.
- Author
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Wainstein G, Rojas-Líbano D, Medel V, Alnæs D, Kolskår KK, Endestad T, Laeng B, Ossandon T, Crossley N, Matar E, and Shine JM
- Abstract
Previous research has shown that the autonomic nervous system provides essential constraints over ongoing cognitive function. However, there is currently a relative lack of direct empirical evidence for how this interaction manifests in the brain at the macroscale level. Here, we examine the role of ascending arousal and attentional load on large-scale network dynamics by combining pupillometry, functional MRI, and graph theoretical analysis to analyze data from a visual motion-tracking task with a parametric load manipulation. We found that attentional load effects were observable in measures of pupil diameter and in a set of brain regions that parametrically modulated their BOLD activity and mesoscale network-level integration. In addition, the regional patterns of network reconfiguration were correlated with the spatial distribution of the α2a adrenergic receptor. Our results further solidify the relationship between ascending noradrenergic activity, large-scale network integration, and cognitive task performance., Competing Interests: Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (© 2021 Massachusetts Institute of Technology.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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