174 results on '"Task control"'
Search Results
2. Task Control in the Affordance Task as the Underlying Mechanism for the Imbalance Between the Goal-Directed and Habit Formation Systems in Obsessive–Compulsive Disorder.
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Naftalovich, Hadar, Sacks, Dan, Keha, Eldad, and Kalanthroff, Eyal
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COMPULSIVE behavior , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *OBSESSIVE-compulsive disorder , *GOAL (Psychology) , *HANDEDNESS - Abstract
Background and Objectives: The habit formation model of obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD) suggests that overreliance on stimulus-driven behaviors leads to repetitive compulsive rituals. Failure in task control, which leads to the stimulus-driven behaviors overriding the goal-driven system, could explain the mechanisms involved in this process. Methods: Patients with OCD and non-psychiatric controls completed the affordance task to understand the role of task control in maintaining compulsive behaviors. In the affordance task, participants are required to respond to a stimulus with one hand, while the stimulus on screen triggers a motor activation in either the congruent (same) or incongruent (other) hand. The affordance effect (accuracy for incongruent minus congruent trials) measures task control—the ability to suppress irrelevant, stimulus-driven, behaviors. Results: The affordance effect was larger in the OCD group, indicating a deficit in task control in those patients. Furthermore, a binary logistic regression analysis, using the affordances effect as a predictor and group as the outcome variable, revealed that the affordance effect correctly classified about 65% of the individuals with OCD compared to the non-psychiatric controls. The correlation between the affordance effect and OCD symptom-severity was not significant. Limitations: Handedness was assessed through self-report and OCD symptoms were mild–moderate. Conclusions: These findings strengthen the notion that task control deficits might account for the imbalance between the goal-directed and habit formation systems and that this deficit might be a risk factor for OCD but does not account for symptom-severity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. An Approach to Automatic Flight Deviation Detection
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Pietracupa, Massimo, Ben Abdessalem, Hamdi, Frasson, Claude, Goos, Gerhard, Founding Editor, Hartmanis, Juris, Founding Editor, Bertino, Elisa, Editorial Board Member, Gao, Wen, Editorial Board Member, Steffen, Bernhard, Editorial Board Member, Yung, Moti, Editorial Board Member, Frasson, Claude, editor, Mylonas, Phivos, editor, and Troussas, Christos, editor
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- 2023
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4. Task-related gaze behaviour in face-to-face dyadic collaboration: Toward an interactive theory?
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Hessels, Roy S., Teunisse, Martin K., Niehorster, Diederick C., Nyström, Marcus, Benjamins, Jeroen S., Senju, Atsushi, and Hooge, Ignace T. C.
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EYE movements , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *ROBOTICS , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *VISION , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH funding - Abstract
Visual routines theory posits that vision is critical for guiding sequential actions in the world. Most studies on the link between vision and sequential action have considered individual agents, while substantial human behaviour is characterized by multi-party interaction. Here, the actions of each person may affect what the other can subsequently do. We investigated task execution and gaze allocation of 19 dyads completing a Duplo-model copying task together, while wearing the Pupil Invisible eye tracker. We varied whether all blocks were visible to both participants, and whether verbal communication was allowed. For models in which not all blocks were visible, participants seemed to coordinate their gaze: The distance between the participants' gaze positions was smaller and dyads looked longer at the model concurrently than for models in which all blocks were visible. This was most pronounced when verbal communication was allowed. We conclude that the way the collaborative task was executed depended both on whether visual information was available to both persons, and how communication took place. Modelling task structure and gaze allocation for human-human and human-robot collaboration thus requires more than the observable behaviour of either individual. We discuss whether an interactive visual routines theory ought to be pursued. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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5. Benefits of repeated alternations – Task-specific vs. task-general sequential adjustments of dual-task order control
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Tilo Strobach, Jens Kürten, and Lynn Huestegge
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Dual tasking ,Task coordination ,Task control ,Task-order control ,Adjustment ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
An important cognitive requirement in multitasking is the decision of how multiple tasks should be temporally scheduled (task order control). Specifically, task order switches (vs. repetitions) yield performance costs (i.e., task-order switch costs), suggesting that task order scheduling is a vital part of configuring a task set. Recently, it has been shown that this process takes specific task-related characteristics into account: task order switches were easier when switching to a preferred (vs. non-preferred) task order. Here, we ask whether another determinant of task order control, namely the phenomenon that a task order switch in a previous trial facilitates a task order switch in a current trial (i.e., a sequential modulation of task order switch effect) also takes task-specific characteristics into account. Based on three experiments involving task order switches between a preferred (dominant oculomotor task prior to non-dominant manual/pedal task) and a non-preferred (vice versa) order, we replicated the finding that task order switching (in Trial N) is facilitated after a previous switch (vs. repetition in Trial N - 1) in task order. There was no substantial evidence in favor of a significant difference when switching to the preferred vs. non-preferred order and in the analyses of the dominant oculomotor task and the non-dominant manual task. This indicates different mechanisms underlying the control of immediate task order configuration (indexed by task order switch costs) and the sequential modulation of these costs based on the task order transition type in the previous trial.
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- 2023
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6. Research on Intelligent Task Management and Control Mode of Space Information Networks Based on Big-Data Driven
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Yu, Xiaogang, Wang, Qi, Barbosa, Simone Diniz Junqueira, Editorial Board Member, Filipe, Joaquim, Editorial Board Member, Ghosh, Ashish, Editorial Board Member, Kotenko, Igor, Editorial Board Member, Zhou, Lizhu, Editorial Board Member, and Yu, Quan, editor
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- 2020
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7. Environment and task modeling of long-term-autonomous service robots
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Stüde, Marvin and Stüde, Marvin
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Utilizing service robots in real-world tasks can significantly improve efficiency, productivity, and safety in various fields such as healthcare, hospitality, and transportation. However, integrating these robots into complex, human-populated environments for continuous use is a significant challenge. A key potential for addressing this challenge lies in long-term modeling capabilities to navigate, understand, and proactively exploit these environments for increased safety and better task performance. For example, robots may use this long-term knowledge of human activity to avoid crowded spaces when navigating or improve their human-centric services. This thesis proposes comprehensive approaches to improve the mapping, localization, and task fulfillment capabilities of service robots by leveraging multi-modal sensor information and (long- term) environment modeling. Learned environmental dynamics are actively exploited to improve the task performance of service robots. As a first contribution, a new long-term-autonomous service robot is presented, designed for both inside and outside buildings. The multi-modal sensor information provided by the robot forms the basis for subsequent methods to model human-centric environments and human activity. It is shown that utilizing multi-modal data for localization and mapping improves long-term robustness and map quality. This especially applies to environments of varying types, i.e., mixed indoor and outdoor or small-scale and large-scale areas. Another essential contribution is a regression model for spatio-temporal prediction of human activity. The model is based on long-term observations of humans by a mobile robot. It is demonstrated that the proposed model can effectively represent the distribution of detected people resulting from moving robots and enables proactive navigation planning. Such model predictions are then used to adapt the robot’s behavior by synthesizing a modular task control model. A reactive executive s
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- 2024
8. Task Control Deficit in Individuals With Non-suicidal Self-Injury
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Seo Jeong Lee and Myoung Ho Hyun
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task control ,objective-interference effect ,non-suicidal self-injury ,executive control ,non-verbal Stroop task ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Background: Numerous people in clinical settings who have experienced repeated self-injuries explain their non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI) as “habitual” or due to “difficulty avoiding impulses related to NSSI.” Previous studies present retrospective reports, where they experience frequent self-injurious urges and try to resist but fail. However, no study has directly investigated repeated behavioral control problems of people who engage in chronic NSSI through behavioral measurements in an experimental setting. The current study sought to investigate whether people who repeatedly attempt NSSI demonstrate deficiency in task control ability called the object-interference (O-I effect).Methods: The current study performed object interference tasks on 90 participants, of which 45 were those who reported repeated NSSI while 45 comprised the control group.Results: We observed delayed reaction times for object stimulus compared to abstract stimulus in the NSSI group, indicative of the object interference effect. This reflects task control deficits and difficulties in NSSI related behavioral control in the repeated NSSI group. When NSSI tools were additionally presented as a target stimulus, longer reaction times and more errors were observed in the NSSI group compared to the control group.Discussion: The current study discusses the clinical implications of the results from diagnostic point of view and provides suggestions for future research for treatment and prevention.
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- 2021
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9. Task Control Deficit in Individuals With Non-suicidal Self-Injury.
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Lee, Seo Jeong and Hyun, Myoung Ho
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CONTROL (Psychology) ,SELF-injurious behavior ,TASKS ,CONTROL groups - Abstract
Background: Numerous people in clinical settings who have experienced repeated self-injuries explain their non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI) as "habitual" or due to "difficulty avoiding impulses related to NSSI." Previous studies present retrospective reports, where they experience frequent self-injurious urges and try to resist but fail. However, no study has directly investigated repeated behavioral control problems of people who engage in chronic NSSI through behavioral measurements in an experimental setting. The current study sought to investigate whether people who repeatedly attempt NSSI demonstrate deficiency in task control ability called the object-interference (O-I effect). Methods: The current study performed object interference tasks on 90 participants, of which 45 were those who reported repeated NSSI while 45 comprised the control group. Results: We observed delayed reaction times for object stimulus compared to abstract stimulus in the NSSI group, indicative of the object interference effect. This reflects task control deficits and difficulties in NSSI related behavioral control in the repeated NSSI group. When NSSI tools were additionally presented as a target stimulus, longer reaction times and more errors were observed in the NSSI group compared to the control group. Discussion: The current study discusses the clinical implications of the results from diagnostic point of view and provides suggestions for future research for treatment and prevention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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10. Task Conflict and Task Control: A Mini-Review
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Ran Littman, Eldad Keha, and Eyal Kalanthroff
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Stroop task ,cognitive control ,executive functions ,task conflict ,task control ,stimulus-driven behavior ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Stimulus-driven behaviors are triggered by the specific stimuli with which they are associated. For example, words elicit automatic reading behavior. When stimulus-driven behaviors are incongruent with one’s current goals, task conflict can emerge, requiring the activation of a task control mechanism. The Stroop task induces task conflict by asking participants to focus on color naming and ignore the automatic, stimulus-driven, irrelevant word reading task. Thus, task conflict manifests in Stroop incongruent as well as in congruent trials. Previous studies demonstrated that when task control fails, reaction times in congruent trials slow down, leading to a reversed facilitation effect. In the present mini-review, we review the literature on the manifestation of task conflict and the recruitment of task control in the Stroop task and present the physiological and behavioral signatures of task control and task conflict. We then suggest that the notion of task conflict is strongly related to the concept of stimulus-driven behaviors and present examples for the manifestation of stimulus-driven task conflict in the Stroop task and additional tasks, including object-interference and affordances tasks. The reviewed literature supports the illustration of task conflict as a specific type of conflict, which is different from other conflict types and may manifest in different tasks and under diverse modalities of response.
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- 2019
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11. Task Conflict and Task Control: A Mini-Review.
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Littman, Ran, Keha, Eldad, and Kalanthroff, Eyal
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CONFLICT management ,STROOP effect ,REACTION time ,TASKS ,TIME trials - Abstract
Stimulus-driven behaviors are triggered by the specific stimuli with which they are associated. For example, words elicit automatic reading behavior. When stimulus-driven behaviors are incongruent with one's current goals, task conflict can emerge, requiring the activation of a task control mechanism. The Stroop task induces task conflict by asking participants to focus on color naming and ignore the automatic, stimulus-driven, irrelevant word reading task. Thus, task conflict manifests in Stroop incongruent as well as in congruent trials. Previous studies demonstrated that when task control fails, reaction times in congruent trials slow down, leading to a reversed facilitation effect. In the present mini-review, we review the literature on the manifestation of task conflict and the recruitment of task control in the Stroop task and present the physiological and behavioral signatures of task control and task conflict. We then suggest that the notion of task conflict is strongly related to the concept of stimulus-driven behaviors and present examples for the manifestation of stimulus-driven task conflict in the Stroop task and additional tasks, including object-interference and affordances tasks. The reviewed literature supports the illustration of task conflict as a specific type of conflict, which is different from other conflict types and may manifest in different tasks and under diverse modalities of response. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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12. Controlling human causal inference through in silico task design.
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Lee, Jee Hang, Heo, Su Yeon, and Lee, Sang Wan
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Learning causal relationships is crucial for survival. The human brain's functional flexibility allows for effective causal inference, underlying various learning processes. While past studies focused on environmental factors influencing causal inference, a fundamental question remains: can these factors be manipulated for strategic causal inference control? This paper presents a task control framework for orchestrating causal learning task design. It utilizes a two-player game setting where a neural network learns to manipulate task variables by interacting with a human causal inference model. Training the task controller to generate experimental designs, we confirm its ability to accommodate complexities of environmental causal structure. Experiments involving 126 human subjects successfully validate the impact of task control on performance and learning efficiency. Additionally, we find that task control policy reflects the intrinsic nature of human causal inference: one-shot learning. This framework holds promising potential for applications paving the way for targeted behavioral outcomes in humans. [Display omitted] • Rapid and highly performative causal inference is the brain's remarkable ability • Propose the task control framework to guide human's causal inference process • Task controller fully taps into the brain's functional flexibility in causal learning • Confirm the behavioral effect of task control on learning performance and efficiency The human brain exhibits remarkable functional flexibility for rapid and highly performative causal learning, known as one-shot learning. Lee et al. present a computational framework that incorporates the brain's inherent flexibility to enable the learning of task variable manipulation, thereby controlling the human causal inference process in diverse ways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. Development of Posterior Medial Frontal Cortex Function in Pediatric Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder.
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Fitzgerald, Kate Dimond, Liu, Yanni, Johnson, Timothy D., Moser, Jason S., Marsh, Rachel, Hanna, Gregory L., and Taylor, Stephan F.
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FUNCTIONAL magnetic resonance imaging , *OBSESSIVE-compulsive disorder , *REGRESSION analysis , *INSULAR cortex , *COMPULSIVE behavior , *PATIENTS - Abstract
Objective: Abnormal engagement of the posterior medial frontal cortex (pMFC) occurs during performance monitoring in obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), including in pediatric patients. Yet, the development of pMFC function in OCD-affected youth remains poorly understood.Method: A total of 69 patients with pediatric OCD and 72 healthy controls (HC), 8 to 19 years of age, were scanned during the Multisource Interference Task (MSIT). The effects of group, age, performance, and interactions on pMFC response to errors and interference were tested in the region of interest [ROI]) and whole-brain analyses. Secondary analyses considered bilateral anterior insula/frontal operculum (aI/fO), given the contribution of these regions with pMFC to a cingulo-opercular network (CON) for task control (e.g., error and interference processing).Results: Error-related pMFC activity was greater for OCD patients than for HC, increased with age in OCD patients, but decreased with age in HC. Greater pMFC activation associated with better performance in HC but not OCD patients. In the patients, greater pMFC activation to errors was associated with lower OCD severity. Altered error-related activation and performance associations were also observed in the right aI/fO in OCD patients, whereas the left aI/fO response to interference was associated with lower OCD severity.Conclusion: Atypical increase in error-related pMFC activation with age in pediatric OCD suggests altered development of pMFC function during the early course of illness. Greater pMFC activation with better performance in HC, and with age and lower symptom severity in OCD patients, suggests an adaptive function of heightened pMFC response to errors that could be further enhanced (e.g., via cognitive training) to improve outcomes in OCD from the early course of illness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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14. Components of Executive Control in Autism Spectrum Disorder: A Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Examination of Dual-Mechanism Accounts
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Cameron S. Carter, Rachel Wulff, Marjorie Solomon, Marie K. Krug, Matthew V. Elliott, Andrew Gordon, Tyler A. Lesh, and Jeremy Hogeveen
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Autism Spectrum Disorder ,Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (IDD) ,Autism ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Audiology ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Dual mechanism ,050105 experimental psychology ,Executive control ,Executive functions ,Executive Function ,Functional connectivity ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Clinical Research ,Salience (neuroscience) ,Behavioral and Social Science ,medicine ,Humans ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Task control ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Aetiology ,Biological Psychiatry ,Default mode network ,Cerebral Cortex ,Pediatric ,Reactive control ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,05 social sciences ,Neurosciences ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Brain Disorders ,Functional recruitment ,Mental Health ,Autism spectrum disorder ,Cognitive control ,Neurology (clinical) ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background It remains unclear whether executive control (EC) deficits in autism spectrum disorder (ASD) represent a failure in proactive EC (engaged and maintained before a cognitively demanding event) or in reactive EC (engaged transiently as the event occurs). We addressed this question by administering a paradigm investigating components of EC in a sample of individuals with ASD and typically developing individuals during functional magnetic resonance imaging. Methods During functional magnetic resonance imaging, 141 participants (64 ASD, 77 typically developing) completed a rapid preparing to overcome prepotency task that required participants to respond to an arrow probe based on the color of an initially presented cue. We examined functional recruitment and connectivity in the frontoparietal task control, cingulo-opercular task control, salience, and default mode networks during cue and probe phases of the task. Results ASD participants showed evidence of behavioral EC impairment. Analyses of functional recruitment and connectivity revealed that ASD participants showed significantly greater activity during the cue in networks associated with proactive control processes, but on the less cognitively demanding trials. On the more cognitively demanding trials, cue activity was similar across groups. During the probe, connectivity between regions associated with reactive control processes was uniquely enhanced on more-demanding (relative to less-demanding) trials in individuals with ASD but not in typically developing individuals. Conclusions The current data suggest that rather than arising from a specific failure to engage proactive or reactive forms of EC, the deficits in EC commonly observed in ASD may be due to reduced proactive EC and a consequent overreliance on reactive EC on more cognitively demanding tasks.
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- 2021
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15. Compositional Design of Multi-Agent Systems: Modelling Dynamics and Control
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Brazier, Frances M. T., Jonker, Catholijn M., Treur, Jan, Gabbay, Dov M., editor, Smets, Philippe, editor, Meyer, John-Jules Ch., editor, and Treur, Jan, editor
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- 2002
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16. Modelling Internal Dynamic Behaviour of BDI Agents
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Brazier, Frances M. T., Dunin-Keplicz, Barbara, Treur, Jan, Verbrugge, Rineke, Gabbay, Dov M., editor, Smets, Philippe, editor, Meyer, John-Jules Ch., editor, and Treur, Jan, editor
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- 2001
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17. Modulation of dual-task control with right prefrontal transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS).
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Strobach, Tilo, Antonenko, Daria, Abbarin, Maral, Escher, Malvin, Flöel, Agnes, and Schubert, Torsten
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HUMAN multitasking , *TRANSCRANIAL direct current stimulation , *PREFRONTAL cortex , *EXECUTIVE function , *CEREBRAL hemispheres , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Executive functioning of two simultaneous component tasks in dual-task situations is primarily associated with activation of the lateral prefrontal cortex (PFC), as demonstrated in functional imaging studies. However, the precise role of the lateral PFC and the causal relation between this area’s activity and executive functioning in dual tasks has exclusively been demonstrated for the left lateral PFC so far. To investigate this relation for the right lateral PFC, we used anodal transcranial direct current stimulation (atDCS; 1 mA, 20 min) in contrast to sham stimulation (1 mA, 30 s) in Experiment 1 (
N = 30) as well as cathodal transcranial direct current stimulation (ctDCS; 1 mA, 20 min) in contrast to sham stimulation (1 mA, 30 s) in Experiment 2 (N = 25) over the right inferior frontal junction under conditions of random task order in dual tasks; random dual tasks require decisions on task order and thus high demands on executive functioning. Across these experiments, our results showed different tDCS-related effects: while atDCS improved performance evident from reduced error rates (Experiment 1), ctDCS impaired dual-task performance and increased these rates (Experiment 2). Moreover, baseline performance correlated with tDCS-induced performance changes, indicating that baseline performance was associated with atDCS-induced improvement. Our findings suggest that dual-task performance is causally related to right lateral PFC activation under conditions that require executive functioning as well as cognitive control of task sets and task order. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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18. To Do or Not to Do? Task Control Deficit in Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder.
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Kalanthroff, Eyal, Henik, Avishai, Simpson, Helen Blair, Todder, Doron, and Anholt, Gideon E.
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OBSESSIVE-compulsive disorder , *SYMPTOMS , *GENERALIZED anxiety disorder , *EXECUTIVE function , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *ANXIETY disorders , *BEHAVIOR , *CASE-control method , *PSYCHOLOGICAL factors , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Task control is an executive control mechanism that facilitates goal-directed task selection by suppressing irrelevant automatic "stimulus-driven" behaviors. In the current study, we test the hypothesis that less efficient task control in individuals diagnosed with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is associated with OCD symptoms, and specifically, with the inability to inhibit unwanted behaviors in OCD. Thirty-five healthy controls, 30 participants with OCD, and 26 participants with generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) completed the object-interference (OI) task to measure task control, the stop-signal task to measure response inhibition, and the arrow-flanker task to evaluate executive abilities not contingent upon task control. OCD patients, but not GAD patients or healthy controls, exhibited impaired performance on the OI task. The deficit in task control, but not in response inhibition, correlated with OCD symptom severity. We suggest that reduced task control may be one of the neurocognitive processes that underlie the inability to inhibit unwanted behaviors in OCD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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19. 실시간 데이터 분류 기반 상황별 작업 제어 시스템.
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송현옥, 김학진, and 정회경
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Recently, IoT(Internet of Things) has been utilized in various fields provide a service to users by configuring a smart environment in a particular place. However, since the existing system does not change the operation and the task of the device according to the change of the surrounding environment, the user must operate passively every time the environment and the situation change. In this paper, we propose Situation-specific Task Control System based on real-time data classification. Sensor data is sent to the server and classified into real-time and non-real-time data, and then inserted into the decision tree to identify tasks according to the situation. In addition, the danger situation is divided into two stages, such as gas leakage and fire, and a warning message is sent. Therefore, it is possible to reduce the waste of electric power and the occurrence of malfunction, and it can be expected that the service with increased work efficiency will be provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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20. Process Tracking for Parallel Job Control
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Franke, Hubertus, Moreira, José E., Pattnaik, Pratap, Goos, Gerhard, editor, Hartmanis, Juris, editor, van Leeuwen, Jan, editor, Feitelson, Dror G., editor, and Rudolph, Larry, editor
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- 1999
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21. ANÁLISE DA GESTÃO DA MANUTENÇÃO EM UMA EMPRESA DE TRANSFORMAÇÃO DE POLÍMEROS
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Silvio Cesar Ferreira da Rosa, José Otávio de Moura Leitão, André Luiz Emmel Silva, and Flávio Thier
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Corrective maintenance ,Computer science ,Action plan ,Task control ,Operations management ,Maintenance management - Abstract
No momento em que há altos índices de manutenção corretiva em uma organização, isso indica que a gestão da manutenção não está adequada para tal e precisa ser revista. Nesse intuito foi realizado um estudo sobre manutenções em injetoras de polímero de uma empresa do ramo polimérico para propor uma solução ao alto número de manutenções corretivas. Utilizou-se a ferramenta MASP para compor a metodologia adotada que coletou dados, analisou-os e propôs soluções para os problemas encontrados. Nesse estudo observou-se que os principais problemas que resultam em manutenção corretiva em injetoras são vazamentos de óleo, falhas elétricas/eletrônicas e quebras. Sendo que as causas raízes para esses são basicamente a falta de controle de tarefas, falta de planejamento e a falta de treinamento. Por fim, foi proposto um plano de ação para a readequação da gestão da manutenção.
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- 2020
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22. Modeling and simulation of firm-leading self-organization evolution process in open source product design project
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Shuo Zhang and Yingzi Li
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Self-organization ,0209 industrial biotechnology ,021103 operations research ,Product design ,Computer science ,Process (engineering) ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,02 engineering and technology ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,Manufacturing engineering ,Modeling and simulation ,020901 industrial engineering & automation ,Open source ,Control and Systems Engineering ,Task control ,Organizational structure - Abstract
Open source product design is characterized by dynamic evolution, autonomous task control, loose organization structure, and frequent collaboration, which shows the process is full of high uncertai...
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- 2020
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23. Modeling Distributed Industrial Processes in a Multi-Agent Framework
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Brazier, Frances M. T., Dunin-Keplicz, Barbara, Jennings, Nick R., Treur, Jan, Diaper, Dan, editor, Sanger, Colston, editor, Kirn, Stefan, editor, and O’Hare, Gregory, editor
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- 1997
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24. Imagery rescripting of autobiographical memories versus intrusive images in individuals with disordered eating
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Laurence Claes, Fortesa Kadriu, Julie Krans, and Cilia L. M. Witteman
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Autobiographical memories ,Autobiographical memory ,Psychology, Clinical ,Outcome measures ,EXAMINATION-QUESTIONNAIRE ,Social Sciences ,WOMEN ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,THERAPY ,NORMS ,Experimental Psychopathology and Treatment ,Clinical Psychology ,Imagery rescripting ,PSYCHOMETRIC PROPERTIES ,BULIMIA-NERVOSA ,Intrusive images ,Intervention (counseling) ,Eating disorders ,Task control ,Psychology ,Disordered eating ,Developmental Psychopathology ,Clinical psychology ,Quality of Life Research - Abstract
Background This study compared the effect of imagery rescripting (ImRs) of early autobiographical memories to ImRs of intrusive images and a no task control condition on eating disorder (ED) related core beliefs and ED symptoms in individuals at risk of developing an eating disorder. We qualitatively explored the content of ImRs scripts. Method Participants (N = 66, 87.8% females) were allocated to one of three conditions: ImRs of autobiographical memories, ImRs of intrusive images, or a no task control condition. Participants in the ImRs conditions received a 9-min self-guided ImRs intervention in the lab and practiced ImRs daily for the next 6 days online. Participants in the no task control condition took a 9-min break and did not do any further tasks. All participants attended a follow-up testing 1 week after the lab session. Results Both ImRs manipulations resulted in greater reductions in negative core beliefs and ED symptoms compared to the no task control group. However, there were no differences among the two ImRs groups. The most widely used rescripting strategy was self-compassion, followed by unhealthy, ED-confirming strategies. No significant associations were found between the ImRs strategies and any of the outcome measures. Conclusion ImRs may be a promising intervention for individuals with disordered eating and both early memories as well as intrusive images may be useful targets.
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- 2022
25. Evidence for Two Independent Factors that Modify Brain Networks to Meet Task Goals.
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Gratton, Caterina, Laumann, Timothy O., Gordon, Evan M., Adeyemo, Babatunde, and Petersen, Steven E.
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Summary Humans easily and flexibly complete a wide variety of tasks. To accomplish this feat, the brain appears to subtly adjust stable brain networks. Here, we investigate what regional factors underlie these modifications, asking whether networks are either altered at (1) regions activated by a given task or (2) hubs that interconnect different networks. We used fMRI “functional connectivity” (FC) to compare networks during rest and three distinct tasks requiring semantic judgments, mental rotation, and visual coherence. We found that network modifications during these tasks were independently associated with both regional activation and network hubs. Furthermore, active and hub regions were associated with distinct patterns of network modification (differing in their localization, topography of FC changes, and variability across tasks), with activated hubs exhibiting patterns consistent with task control. These findings indicate that task goals modify brain networks through two separate processes linked to local brain function and network hubs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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26. The typical development of posterior medial frontal cortex function and connectivity during task control demands in youth 8–19 years old.
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Liu, Yanni, Angstadt, Mike, Taylor, Stephan F., and Fitzgerald, Kate D.
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TASK analysis , *NEURAL circuitry , *FUNCTIONAL magnetic resonance imaging , *PREFRONTAL cortex , *BRAIN function localization , *NEURAL development - Abstract
To characterize the development of neural substrate for interference processing and task control, this study examined both linear and non-linear effects of age on activation and connectivity during an interference task designed to engage the posterior medial frontal cortex (pMFC). Seventy-two youth, ages 8–19 years, performed the Multi-Source Interference Task (MSIT) during functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). With increasing age, overall performance across high-interference incongruent and low-interference congruent trials became faster and more accurate. Effects of age on activation to interference- (incongruent versus congruent conditions), error- (errors versus correct trials during the incongruent condition) and overall task-processing (incongruent plus congruent conditions, relative to implicit baseline) were tested in whole-brain voxel-wise analyses. Age differentially impacted activation to overall task processing in discrete sub-regions of the pMFC: activation in the pre-supplementary motor area (pre-SMA) decreased with age, whereas activation in the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC) followed a non-linear (i.e., U-shaped) pattern in relation to age. In addition, connectivity of pre-SMA with anterior insula/frontal operculum (AI/FO) increased with age. These findings suggest differential development of pre-SMA and dACC sub-regions within the pMFC. Moreover, as children age, decreases in pre-SMA activation may couple with increases in pre-SMA–AI/FO connectivity to support gains in processing speed in response to demands for task control. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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27. Task-based fMRI predicts response and remission to exposure therapy in obsessive-compulsive disorder
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Shari A. Steinman, Ivar Snorrason, Dianne M. Hezel, Raphael Campeas, Marina Gershkovich, H. Blair Simpson, Rachel Marsh, Rachel Middleton, David Pagliaccio, Page E. Van Meter, and Anthony Pinto
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Adult ,Male ,Oncology ,Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Brain activity and meditation ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Exposure therapy ,Implosive Therapy ,Task (project management) ,Young Adult ,Neural activity ,Obsessive compulsive ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Task control ,Default mode network ,Multidisciplinary ,business.industry ,Cognition ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,PNAS Plus ,Case-Control Studies ,Female ,business - Abstract
Exposure and ritual prevention (EX/RP) is an effective first-line treatment for obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), but only some patients achieve minimal symptoms following EX/RP. Herein, we investigate whether task-based neural activity can predict who responds best to EX/RP. Unmedicated adult patients with OCD ( n = 36) and healthy participants ( n = 33) completed the Simon Spatial Incompatibility Task during high-resolution, multiband functional MRI (fMRI); patients were then offered twice-weekly EX/RP (17 sessions). Linear mixed-effects models were used to identify brain regions where conflict-related activity moderated the slope of change in Yale–Brown Obsessive-Compulsive Scale (Y-BOCS) scores across treatment. Conflict-related activity in the left pallidum and 35 cortical parcels/regions significantly predicted symptom improvement with EX/RP for patients with OCD (false discovery rate-corrected P < 0.05). Significant parcels/regions included cingulo-opercular and default mode network regions, specifically the anterior insula and anterior and posterior cingulate. Summarizing across these parcels/regions, greater conflict-related activity predicted greater EX/RP response and which patients achieved remission (Y-BOCS score ≤ 12; Cohen’s d = 1.68) with >80% sensitivity and specificity. The association between brain activity and treatment response was partially mediated by patient EX/RP adherence (b = −2.99; 43.61% of total effect; P = 0.02). Brain activity and adherence together were highly predictive of remission. Together, these findings suggest that cingulo-opercular and default mode regions typically implicated in task control and introspective processes, respectively, may be targets for novel treatments that augment the ability of persons with OCD to resolve cognitive conflict and thereby facilitate adherence to EX/RP, increasing the likelihood of remission.
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- 2019
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28. Efficacy of Personalized-Computerized Inhibitory Training program (PCIT) combined with exposure and response prevention on treatment outcomes in patients with contamination obsessive-compulsive disorder.
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Dehkordi FJ, Farani AR, Gharraee B, Shati M, and Ashouri A
- Abstract
Background: Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) including exposure and response prevention (ERP) is the most effective and first-line treatment for obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). However, a significant number of people leave it or do not respond to it effectively. The present study aimed to examine the efficacy of personalized-computerized inhibitory training (P-CIT) program combined with ERP on treatment outcomes in patients with contamination OCD., Materials and Methods: The present research method was based on an experimental design with pre-test, post-test, and the two intervention and control groups. Thirty patients with contamination OCD were randomly assigned to the two groups of intervention and control based on the inclusion and exclusion criteria. The measures used in this study were Yale-Brown Scale, Stroop task, World Health Organization's Quality of Life Questionnaire, Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-5, and Depression Anxiety and Stress Scales -21., Results: The results showed a significant reduction in severity of symptoms (F = 0.75, P < 001) and severity of anxiety (F = 0.75, P < 001) for the intervention group. Furthermore, task control (F = 12.44, P < 001), mental health (F = 28.32, P < 001), physical health (F = 2.48, P < 001), and overall quality of life (F = 0.19, P = 001) improved in the intervention group after the intervention., Conclusion: When P-CIT is exerted along with ERP, it may enhance inhibition of compulsions and increase the efficacy of ERP through improved task control, thereby resulting in reduced symptom severity and improved treatment outcomes in patients with contamination OCD., Competing Interests: There are no conflicts of interest., (Copyright: © 2023 Journal of Education and Health Promotion.)
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- 2023
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29. ProtoAI: Model-Informed Prototyping for AI-Powered Interfaces
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Eytan Adar, Colleen M. Seifert, and Hariharan Subramonyam
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Forcing (recursion theory) ,Operationalization ,Training set ,business.industry ,Computer science ,Interface (computing) ,05 social sciences ,020207 software engineering ,02 engineering and technology ,USable ,Automation ,Workflow ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Task control ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Software engineering ,business ,050107 human factors - Abstract
When prototyping AI experiences (AIX), interface designers seek useful and usable ways to support end-user tasks through AI capabilities. However, AI poses challenges to design due to its dynamic behavior in response to training data, end-user data, and feedback. Designers must consider AI’s uncertainties and offer adaptations such as explainability, error recovery, and automation vs. human task control. Unfortunately, current prototyping tools assume a black-box view of AI, forcing designers to work with separate tools to explore machine learning models, understand model performance, and align interface choices with model behavior. This introduces friction to rapid and iterative prototyping. We propose Model-Informed Prototyping (MIP), a workflow for AIX design that combines model exploration with UI prototyping tasks. Our system, ProtoAI, allows designers to directly incorporate model outputs into interface designs, evaluate design choices across different inputs, and iteratively revise designs by analyzing model breakdowns. We demonstrate how ProtoAI can readily operationalize human-AI design guidelines. Our user study finds that designers can effectively engage in MIP to create and evaluate AI-powered interfaces during AIX design.
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- 2021
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30. Spatial and Temporal Characteristics of Error-Related Activity in the Human Brain.
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Neta, Maital, Miezin, Francis M., Nelson, Steven M., Dubis, Joseph W., Dosenbach, Nico U. F., Schlaggar, Bradley L., and Petersen, Steven E.
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- *
NEURAL development , *BRAIN physiology , *CINGULATE cortex , *FUNCTIONAL magnetic resonance imaging , *VISUAL cortex - Abstract
A number of studies have focused on the role of specific brain regions, such as the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex during trials on which participants make errors, whereas others have implicated a host of more widely distributed regions in the human brain. Previous work has proposed that there are multiple cognitive control networks, raising the question of whether error-related activity can be found in each of these networks. Thus, to examine error-related activity broadly, we conducted a meta-analysis consisting of 12 tasks that included both error and correct trials. These tasks varied by stimulus input (visual, auditory), response output (button press, speech), stimulus category (words, pictures), and task type (e.g., recognition memory, mental rotation). We identified 41 brain regions that showed a differential fMRI BOLD response to error and correct trials across a majority of tasks. These regions displayed three unique response profiles: (1) fast, (2) prolonged, and (3) a delayed response to errors, as well as a more canonical response to correct trials. These regions were found mostly in several control networks, each network predominantly displaying one response profile. The one exception to this "one network, one response profile" observation is the frontoparietal network, which showed prolonged response profiles (all in the right hemisphere), and fast profiles (all but one in the left hemisphere). We suggest that, in the place of a single localized error mechanism, these findings point toa large-scale set of error-related regions across multiple systems that likely subserve different functions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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31. Regulatory focus moderates the relationship between task control and physiological and psychological markers of stress: A work simulation study.
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Parker, Stacey L., Laurie, Kaitlan R., Newton, Cameron J., and Jimmieson, Nerina L.
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TASK performance , *JOB stress , *HEART beat , *EMPLOYEE promotions , *SATISFACTION , *BRAIN stimulation - Abstract
This experiment examined whether trait regulatory focus moderates the effects of task control on stress reactions during a demanding work simulation. Regulatory focus describes two ways in which individuals self-regulate toward desired goals: promotion and prevention. As highly promotion-focused individuals are oriented toward growth and challenge, it was expected that they would show better adaptation to demanding work under high task control. In contrast, as highly prevention-focused individuals are oriented toward safety and responsibility they were expected to show better adaptation under low task control. Participants ( N = 110) completed a measure of trait regulatory focus and then three trials of a demanding inbox activity under either low, neutral, or high task control. Heart rate variability (HRV), affective reactions (anxiety & task dissatisfaction), and task performance were measured at each trial. As predicted, highly promotion-focused individuals found high (compared to neutral) task control stress-buffering for performance. Moreover, highly prevention-focused individuals found high (compared to low) task control stress-exacerbating for dissatisfaction. In addition, highly prevention-focused individuals found low task control stress-buffering for dissatisfaction, performance, and HRV. However, these effects of low task control for highly prevention-focused individuals depended on their promotion focus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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32. Development of the brain functional connectome follows puberty-dependent nonlinear trajectories
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Sarael Alcauter, Fernando A. Barrios, Martha Beatriz Moreno, and Zeus Gracia-Tabuenca
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Longitudinal sample ,Male ,Adolescent ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,resting state fMRI ,Brain Structure and Function ,cognitive flexibility ,050105 experimental psychology ,lcsh:RC321-571 ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Connectome ,Task control ,Functional connectome ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Longitudinal Studies ,Child ,lcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,Brain network ,brain network ,Resting state fMRI ,Functional connectivity ,functional connectivity ,05 social sciences ,Puberty ,Cognitive flexibility ,Brain ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Neurology ,Nonlinear Dynamics ,adolescence ,Female ,Functional organization ,Nerve Net ,Psychology ,Centrality ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Adolescence is a developmental period that dramatically impacts body and behavior, with pubertal hormones playing an important role not only in the morphological changes in the body but also in brain structure and function. Understanding brain development during adolescence has become a priority in neuroscience because it coincides with the onset of many psychiatric and behavioral disorders. However, little is known about how puberty influences the brain functional connectome. In this study, taking a longitudinal human sample of typically developing children and adolescents (of both sexes), we demonstrate that the development of the brain functional connectome better fits pubertal status than chronological age. In particular, centrality, segregation, efficiency, and integration of the brain functional connectome increase after the onset of the pubertal markers. We found that these effects are stronger in attention and task control networks. Lastly, after controlling for this effect, we showed that functional connectivity between these networks is related to better performance in cognitive flexibility. This study points out the importance of considering longitudinal nonlinear trends when exploring developmental trajectories, and emphasizes the impact of puberty on the functional organization of the brain in adolescence.Significance StatementUnderstanding the brain organization along development is a crucial challenge for Neuroscience. In particular, during adolescence there is a great impact in body and cognitive functions as well as substantial incidence of mental health disruptions. Here, we tested how brain organization changes along this period based on the properties of the functional connectome in a longitudinal pediatric sample. We found a nonlinear increase in the connectivity and the brain network efficiency, particularly after the onset of puberty. These effects were more prominent in association networks. In addition, higher connectivity in those areas was associated with better performance in cognitive flexibility. These results demonstrate the importance of considering pubertal assessment as well as nonlinear trends in developmental studies.
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- 2020
33. Mobile Services as a Means to Control: An Empirical Assessment
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Khawaja A. Saeed
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Mobile banking ,Computer Networks and Communications ,05 social sciences ,Applied psychology ,Control (management) ,Context (language use) ,02 engineering and technology ,Education ,Empirical assessment ,Alertness ,020204 information systems ,0502 economics and business ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Task control ,050211 marketing ,Psychology ,Information Systems - Abstract
Perceived task control is proposed as an important belief and its relationship with use intentions is examined in the context of mobile services. Furthermore, the study examines ubiquity, alertness...
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- 2018
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34. The mixed block/event-related design
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Petersen, Steven E. and Dubis, Joseph W.
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EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *BRAIN imaging , *BRAIN function localization , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging of the brain , *NEURONS , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *SIGNAL processing - Abstract
Abstract: Neuroimaging studies began using block design and event-related design experiments. While providing many insights into brain functions, these fMRI design types ignore components of the BOLD signal that can teach us additional elements. The development of the mixed block/event-related fMRI design allowed for a fuller characterization of nonlinear and time-sensitive neuronal responses: for example, the interaction between block and event related factors and the simultaneous extraction of transient activity related to trials and block transitions and sustained activity related to task-level processing. This review traces the origins of the mixed block/event-related design from conceptual precursors to a seminal paper and on to subsequent studies using the method. The review also comments on aspects of the experimental design that must be considered when attempting to use the mixed block/event-related design. When taking into account these considerations, the mixed block/event-related design allows fuller utilization of the BOLD signal allowing deeper interpretation of how regions of the brain function on multiple timescales. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2012
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35. Understanding the impact of task granularity in the energy consumption of parallel programs
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Alcides Fonseca and Bruno Cabral
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Multi-core processor ,General Computer Science ,Computer science ,Distributed computing ,Energy efficient algorithms ,020207 software engineering ,Workload ,02 engineering and technology ,Energy consumption ,020202 computer hardware & architecture ,Scheduling (computing) ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Task control ,Granularity ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Mobile device - Abstract
Recently, there is a concern about reducing the energy consumption of data centers and clusters for economical and environmental reasons. Furthermore, energy consumption on mobile devices is also important to improve battery life. In this work we address the performance-energy trade-off on shared-memory multicore devices in parallel programs. In particular, we assess the impact of task granularity in performance and energy consumption. Our aim is to give programmers the knowledge they need to understand how to maximize performance of parallel programs while minimizing energy spending. Parallel programs typically divide work in subproblems that are solved in parallel. Each subproblem can then be recursively subdivided until it is no longer worthwhile to spawn smaller tasks. Ideally, the number of parallel tasks should match the number of hardware threads in order to maximize performance and reduce scheduling overheads. Cut-off algorithms are used to stop spawning new parallel tasks and, thus, switching to sequential execution. We evaluate cut-off approaches such as MaxTasks, MaxLevel, Surplus, Adaptive Task Control and LoadBased to understand how they influence performance and energy consumption. Additionally, we also introduce and evaluate three novel approaches: MaxTasksInQueue, StackSize and MaxTasksWithStackSize. Our experiments and analysis show how branching, workload, depth and balance influence the execution time and energy spending over a set of synthetic and real world programs. We concluded that MaxLevel was the fastest overall, while MaxTasksInQueue was the most energy efficient algorithm. Also, despite MaxTasks being slower than the prior two, it can be used by a wider range of programs.
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- 2018
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36. A longitudinal functional magnetic resonance imaging study of task control circuits and bulimic symptoms over adolescence
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Rachel Marsh, Kate Terranova, Evelyn Attia, Daniel C. Kopala-Sibley, B S Martine Fontaine, Mihaela S. Stefan, and Marilyn Cyr
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Bulimia nervosa ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Psychological intervention ,Cognition ,Self-control ,Audiology ,medicine.disease ,Functional magnetic resonance images ,030227 psychiatry ,Developmental psychology ,Task (project management) ,03 medical and health sciences ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Task control ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,media_common - Abstract
Background Previous cross-sectional findings from adolescents and adults with Bulimia Nervosa (BN) suggest disturbances in fronto-striatal and cingulo-opercular task control circuits that support self-regulatory processes, including the resolution of cognitive conflict. Herein, we used longitudinal data to examine the developmental trajectories of such disturbances and how the functioning of these circuits relates to changes in BN symptoms over adolescence. Methods Thirty-two adolescent females with BN symptoms and 28 healthy control (HC) adolescents participated in the study. Functional magnetic resonance images (fMRI) during performance of a Simon task were acquired at three time points within 2-year intervals over adolescence. From the initial sample, 70% and 30% of the participants completed the second and third time points, respectively. Participants who completed all study time points did not differ from those lost to attrition on baseline demographic characteristics or any outcome measures. Using a region-of-interest approach, growth curve models tested group differences in the trajectory of conflict-related activation in task control circuits over time. Cross-lagged panel models examined transactional relationships between conflict-related activation in the same regions and BN symptoms over time. Results Growth curve models revealed different trajectories of conflict-related activation in right task control regions across BN and HC adolescents, such that HC but not BN adolescents showed activation decreases over time. These group differences were greatest when including only the BN adolescents whose symptoms remitted over time. Cross-lagged panel models revealed that less frequent bulimic episodes at first follow-up predicted later increases in conflict-related activation in bilateral task control regions. Conclusions These longitudinal findings suggest overengagement of task control circuits in BN adolescents, especially those most resilient to persistent illness. Such overengagement may compensate for regulatory disturbances, allowing them to regulate eating behaviors over development. Thus, task control circuits may constitute targets for early interventions that enhance self-regulatory control.
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- 2017
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37. Using stress and resource theories to examine the incentive effects of a performance-based extrinsic reward
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Pirathat Techakesari, Stacey L. Parker, and Nerina L. Jimmieson
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Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management ,Coping (psychology) ,05 social sciences ,050109 social psychology ,Incentive Effects ,Incentive ,Interactive effects ,Stress and Resource Theories ,0502 economics and business ,Trait ,Task control ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Performance-based Extrinsic Reward ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,150311 Organisational Behaviour ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,psychological phenomena and processes ,050203 business & management ,General Psychology ,Applied Psychology - Abstract
We expected a positive boosting effect of a performance-based extrinsic reward on motivation and performance for those with higher control-related resources (i.e., perceived task control and trait self-control) and a positive compensating effect for those who lacked these resources. Study 1 supported compensation. Those with lower resources experienced a beneficial effect of reward on motivation and performance (i.e., compared to no reward). In Study 2, coping was examined as a mechanism. Again, reward compensated for lower resources, enhancing motivation, and performance due to enhanced coping. For those with higher resources, reward boosted motivation and performance due to coping. Thus, the interactive effects of reward and resources are paradoxical: higher resources can maximize the utility of a reward, but reward can also compensate for low resources.
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- 2017
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38. Parsing the Roles of the Frontal Lobes and Basal Ganglia in Task Control Using Multivoxel Pattern Analysis
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Trevor W. Robbins, James B. Rowe, Angie A. Kehagia, Rong Ye, Dan W. Joyce, and Orla Doyle
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Adult ,Male ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Brain mapping ,Basal Ganglia ,Article ,050105 experimental psychology ,Developmental psychology ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Healthy volunteers ,Basal ganglia ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Reaction Time ,medicine ,Humans ,Task control ,Attention ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,In patient ,Analysis of Variance ,Brain Mapping ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,05 social sciences ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Cognition ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Healthy Volunteers ,Frontal Lobe ,Oxygen ,Female ,Cues ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,Psychomotor Performance ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Multivoxel pattern analysis - Abstract
Cognitive control has traditionally been associated with pFC based on observations of deficits in patients with frontal lesions. However, evidence from patients with Parkinson disease indicates that subcortical regions also contribute to control under certain conditions. We scanned 17 healthy volunteers while they performed a task-switching paradigm that previously dissociated performance deficits arising from frontal lesions in comparison with Parkinson disease, as a function of the abstraction of the rules that are switched. From a multivoxel pattern analysis by Gaussian Process Classification, we then estimated the forward (generative) model to infer regional patterns of activity that predict Switch/Repeat behavior between rule conditions. At 1000 permutations, Switch/Repeat classification accuracy for concrete rules was significant in the BG, but at chance in the frontal lobe. The inverse pattern was obtained for abstract rules, whereby the conditions were successfully discriminated in the frontal lobe but not in the BG. This double dissociation highlights the difference between cortical and subcortical contributions to cognitive control and demonstrates the utility of multivariate approaches in investigations of functions that rely on distributed and overlapping neural substrates.
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- 2017
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39. Sustained lean transformation of working conditions: A Swedish longitudinal case study
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Måns Waldenström, Malin Håkansson, Lotta Dellve, and Richard J. Holden
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Longitudinal study ,Engineering ,Family business ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Human Factors and Ergonomics ,Job enlargement ,Lean manufacturing ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,Lean practices ,Work (electrical) ,0502 economics and business ,Task control ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Operations management ,business ,Psychosocial ,050203 business & management ,050107 human factors - Abstract
Studies of lean production's effect on working conditions are mixed but point toward worsened conditions. The aim of this longitudinal study was to assess how lean contributes to transforming work characteristics in a medium-sized specialized industrial family business. A mixed methods approach was used to combine an external assessment of work characteristics with self-reported employee questionnaires. Favorable psychosocial working conditions were indicated, with role conflicts decreasing over time. The assessment of work provided descriptions of how lean practices contributed to decreased task control due to standardized work and simplified work processes. At the same time, employees still had opportunities to influence their long-term work assignment. There was also a trend toward job enlargement through new, higher-skilled tasks, multiskilling, and extended opportunities to influence work through different continuous improvement activities. The participative lean approach and type of skilled jobs may have contributed to this transformation.
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- 2017
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40. To Match or Not to Match? Methodological Issues in Autism-Related Research.
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Jarrold, Christopher and Brock, Jon
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DEVELOPMENTAL disabilities , *AUTISM , *INTELLECTUAL disabilities , *REGRESSION analysis , *TASK analysis , *METHODOLOGY - Abstract
Studies of autism typically adopt a factorial matched-groups design aimed at eliminating nonspecific factors such as mental retardation as explanations of performance on experimental tasks. This paper reviews the issues involved in designing such studies and interpreting their results and suggests that the best approach to matching may be to equate performance on carefully designed control tasks. However, we also argue that the interpretation of such studies is often complicated by the fact that associations between background measures and experimental task performance are not clear. Consequently, we also advocate the use of regression techniques that allow the researcher to determine the factors that relate to task performance and to assess the extent of group differences on the task of interest having taken these factors into account. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
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41. Stroop task performance across the lifespan: High cognitive reserve in older age is associated with enhanced proactive and reactive interference control
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Edmund Wascher, Sven Thönes, Patrick D. Gajewski, and Michael Falkenstein
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Aging ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Individuality ,Cognitive reserve ,Audiology ,Interference (genetic) ,050105 experimental psychology ,Task (project management) ,lcsh:RC321-571 ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cognition ,0302 clinical medicine ,Task Performance and Analysis ,medicine ,Humans ,Task control ,Attention ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Control (linguistics) ,Evoked Potentials ,lcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,Aged ,Lifespan ,05 social sciences ,Middle Aged ,Contingent negative variation ,Neurology ,Female ,Stroop ,Psychology ,Interference ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,ERP ,lifespan ,cognitive reserve ,DMC ,interference ,aging ,Stroop effect - Abstract
Susceptibility to interference increases with age but there is large inter-individual variability in interference control in older adults due to a number of biological and environmental factors. The present study aims at analyzing behavior and ERPs in a Stroop interference task with increasing difficulty in a sample of 246 young, middle-aged and healthy old participants. The old age group was divided into three subgroups based on performance scores. The results show a gradual performance reduction with increasing age and task difficulty. However, old high performers reached a performance level comparable to middle-aged subjects. The contingent negative variation (CNV) reflecting preparation and proactive task control and the target-locked P2/N2 complex associated with retrieval and implementation of S-R mappings during reactive task control were larger in the old high than low performers and similar to middle-aged or even young participants. High performance was limited to executive control tasks, while other cognitive functions were less affected. In addition, high performance was associated with higher level of education, usage of foreign languages and higher IQ. Thus, the performance differences in old age were discussed in the framework of cognitive reserve that constitutes individual differences in neural networks underlying task performance.
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- 2020
42. Variability in locomotor dynamics reveals the critical role of feedback in task control
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Sarah A. Stamper, Kyoung A. Cho, Eric S. Fortune, Shahin Sefati, Ismail Uyanik, M. Mert Ankarali, and Noah J. Cowan
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0301 basic medicine ,Kinematics ,Physics of Living Systems ,Task (project management) ,0302 clinical medicine ,Eigenmannia virescens ,Task Performance and Analysis ,Task control ,Biology (General) ,biology ,Movement (music) ,General Neuroscience ,Robotics ,General Medicine ,Biomechanical Phenomena ,Unexpected events ,Dynamics (music) ,%22">Fish ,Medicine ,Robust control ,Locomotion ,locomotor dynamics ,Eigenmannia ,Research Article ,Cognitive psychology ,sensory feedback ,Fin ,QH301-705.5 ,Science ,Sensory system ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Feedback ,03 medical and health sciences ,Control theory ,Animals ,Swimming ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,business.industry ,Gymnotiformes ,biology.organism_classification ,System dynamics ,030104 developmental biology ,Robot ,Other ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,sensorimotor control ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Animals vary considerably in size, shape, and physiological features across individuals, but yet achieve remarkably similar behavioral performances. We examined how animals compensate for morphophysiological variation by measuring the system dynamics of individual knifefish (Eigenmannia virescens) in a refuge tracking task. Kinematic measurements of Eigenmannia were used to generate individualized estimates of each fish’s locomotor plant and controller, revealing substantial variability between fish. To test the impact of this variability on behavioral performance, these models were used to perform simulated ‘brain transplants’—computationally swapping controllers and plants between individuals. We found that simulated closed-loop performance was robust to mismatch between plant and controller. This suggests that animals rely on feedback rather than precisely tuned neural controllers to compensate for morphophysiological variability., eLife digest People come in different shapes and sizes, but most will perform similarly well if asked to complete a task requiring fine manual dexterity – such as holding a pen or picking up a single grape. How can different individuals, with different sized hands and muscles, produce such similar movements? One explanation is that an individual’s brain and nervous system become precisely tuned to mechanics of the body’s muscles and skeleton. An alternative explanation is that brain and nervous system use a more “robust” control policy that can compensate for differences in the body by relying on feedback from the senses to guide the movements. To distinguish between these two explanations, Uyanik et al. turned to weakly electric freshwater fish known as glass knifefish. These fish seek refuge within root systems, reed grass and among other objects in the water. They swim backwards and forwards to stay hidden despite constantly changing currents. Each fish shuttles back and forth by moving a long ribbon-like fin on the underside of its body. Uyanik et al. measured the movements of the ribbon fin under controlled conditions in the laboratory, and then used the data to create computer models of the brain and body of each fish. The models of each fish’s brain and body were quite different. To study how the brain interacts with the body, Uyanik et al. then conducted experiments reminiscent of those described in the story of Frankenstein and transplanted the brain from each computer model into the body of different model fish. These “brain swaps” had almost no effect on the model’s simulated swimming behavior. Instead, these “Frankenfish” used sensory feedback to compensate for any mismatch between their brain and body. This suggests that, for some behaviors, an animal’s brain does not need to be precisely tuned to the specific characteristics of its body. Instead, robust control of movement relies on many seemingly redundant systems that provide sensory feedback. This has implications for the field of robotics. It further suggests that when designing robots, engineers should prioritize enabling the robots to use sensory feedback to cope with unexpected events, a well-known idea in control engineering.
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- 2020
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43. Resting state fMRI based multilayer network configuration in patients with schizophrenia
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George Gifford, Sarah E. Morgan, Paola Dazzan, Jonathan Young, Nicolas Crossley, Philip McGuire, Matthew J. Kempton, Young, Jonathan [0000-0002-4013-2409], McGuire, Philip [0000-0003-4381-0532], Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository, and Morgan, Sarah [0000-0002-1261-5884]
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Schizophrenia (object-oriented programming) ,Modularity ,Audiology ,Module allegiance ,Network configuration ,lcsh:Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,050105 experimental psychology ,lcsh:RC346-429 ,Left thalamus ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Group differences ,Network switching ,Cerebellum ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Connectome ,Task control ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,In patient ,Gray Matter ,lcsh:Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,Mathematics ,Dynamic functional connectivity ,Cerebral Cortex ,Resting state fMRI ,05 social sciences ,Regular Article ,Middle Aged ,Resting State fMRI ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Transition matrix ,Neurology ,Multilayer community detection ,Schizophrenia ,lcsh:R858-859.7 ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Nerve Net ,Flexibility ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Highlights • Higher flexibility in schizophrenia at the resting state network and node level. • Higher flexibility in the thalamus due to default-mode sensory/motor transitions. • Altered between sub-network dynamic modular configuration in schizophrenia. • Flexibility scores affected by methodological choices such as window size., Novel methods for measuring large-scale dynamic brain organisation are needed to provide new biomarkers of schizophrenia. Using a method for modelling dynamic modular organisation (Mucha et al., 2010), evidence suggests higher ‘flexibility’ (switching between multilayer network communities) to be a feature of schizophrenia (Braun et al., 2016). The current study compared flexibility between 55 patients with schizophrenia and 72 controls (the COBRE Dataset). In addition, novel methods of ‘between resting state network synchronisation’ (BRSNS) and the probability of transition from one community to another were used to further describe group differences in dynamic community structure. There was significantly higher schizophrenia group flexibility scores in cerebellar (F (1124) = 9.33, p (FDR) = 0.017), subcortical (F (1124) = 13.14, p (FDR) = 0.005), and fronto-parietal task control (F (1124) = 7.19, p (FDR) = 0.033) resting state networks (RSNs), as well as in the left thalamus (MNI XYZ: -2, -13, 12; F(1, 124) = 17.1, p (FDR) < 0.001) and the right crus I (MNI XYZ: 35, -67, -34; F (1, 124) = 19.65, p (FDR) < 0.001). Flexibility in the left thalamus reflected transitions between communities covering default mode and sensory-somatomotor RSNs. BRSNS scores suggested altered dynamic inter-RSN modular configuration in schizophrenia. This study suggests less stable community structure in a schizophrenia group at an RSN and node level and provides novel methods of exploring dynamic community structure. Mediation of group differences by mean time window correlation did however suggest flexibility to be no better as a schizophrenia biomarker than simpler measures and a range of methodological choices affected results.
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- 2020
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44. Creating Build Pipelines – Classic – Variables, Triggers, Filters, Options, and Retaining
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Chaminda Chandrasekara and Pushpa Herath
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Pipeline transport ,Set (abstract data type) ,Template ,Installation ,Computer science ,Distributed computing ,Control system ,Parallelism (grammar) ,Task control ,Pipeline (software) - Abstract
In the previous chapter, we looked at a couple of features that you can use while setting up Azure build pipelines with the classic editor. Those included the capability to use different source control systems, applying common step templates to set up a build, usage of multiple jobs inside a build, and parallelism including multi-configuration builds. Further, you explored the capability to add tasks or build steps to a build pipeline and even getting additional tasks by installing the marketplace extensions. Then you had a good look at the task control conditions and usage of custom conditions to satisfy for various scenarios.
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- 2020
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45. Author response: Variability in locomotor dynamics reveals the critical role of feedback in task control
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Ismail Uyanik, M. Mert Ankarali, Kyoung-A Cho, Noah J. Cowan, Shahin Sefati, Sarah A. Stamper, and Eric S. Fortune
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Dynamics (music) ,Task control ,Psychology ,Response Variability ,Cognitive psychology - Published
- 2019
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46. Control over task conflict in the stroop and affordances tasks: an individual differences study
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Eyal Kalanthroff and Ran Littman
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Word reading ,Modalities ,Psychological research ,Individuality ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Cognition ,General Medicine ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Conflict, Psychological ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Reading ,Stroop Test ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Reaction Time ,Task control ,Humans ,Psychology ,Affordance ,Cognitive psychology ,Stroop effect - Abstract
Task conflict is a type of conflict that emerges when a stimulus triggers two or more competing tasks. In the Stroop task, task conflict occurs between the relevant color-naming task and irrelevant word reading task and can be observed mainly on congruent trials, which only involve task conflict and are devoid of additional conflict types. We hypothesized that task conflict also manifests in the affordances task between the relevant task (e.g., classifying manipulatable objects), and the automatic task afforded by the object (e.g., grasping the object), and is mostly evident on congruent trials. Using an individual differences design we assessed the relationship between control mechanisms operating on Stroop congruent and affordances congruent trials under conditions of high and low cognitive control requirements. We hypothesized that task control is employed in both tasks. One-hundred and twenty-three participants performed an affordances task and two blocks of a Stroop task, each requiring a different level of task control (high vs. low). In a hierarchical regression model, we found a significant and specific correlation between affordances congruent and Stroop congruent conditions only in the high-control block, designed to greatly engage participants' task control, thus linking the task control mechanism in both tasks. These results indicate that task control underlies diverse modalities of response (visuomotor and linguistic), independently of other conflict types. We suggest that the affordances task may serve as a supplementary tool for the assessment of task control in the lab.
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- 2019
47. Flexible coordinator and switcher hubs for adaptive task control
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Danielle S. Bassett, Douglas H. Schultz, Takuya Ito, Carrisa Cocuzza, and Michael W. Cole
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Adult ,Male ,Dissociation (neuropsychology) ,Dynamic network analysis ,Computer science ,Network science ,Dissociation (psychology) ,Task (project management) ,Executive Function ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cognition ,0302 clinical medicine ,Connectome ,medicine ,Humans ,Task control ,Control (linguistics) ,Research Articles ,030304 developmental biology ,Cerebral Cortex ,Cognitive science ,0303 health sciences ,Mechanism (biology) ,General Neuroscience ,Cognitive flexibility ,Network dynamics ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Goals ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Functional connectivity studies have identified at least two large-scale neural systems that constitute cognitive control networks – the frontoparietal network (FPN) and cingulo-opercular network (CON). Control networks are thought to support goal-directed cognition and behavior. It was previously shown that the FPN flexibly shifts its global connectivity pattern according to task goal, consistent with a “flexible hub” mechanism for cognitive control. Our aim was to build on this finding to develop a functional cartography (a multi-metric profile) of control networks in terms of dynamic network properties. We quantified network properties in (male and female) humans using a high-control-demand cognitive paradigm involving switching among 64 task sets. We hypothesized that cognitive control is enacted by the FPN and CON via distinct but complementary roles reflected in network dynamics. Consistent with a flexible “coordinator” mechanism, FPN connections were varied across tasks, while maintaining within-network connectivity to aid cross-region coordination. Consistent with a flexible “switcher” mechanism, CON regions switched to other networks in a task-dependent manner, driven primarily by reduced within-network connections to other CON regions. This pattern of results suggests FPN acts as a dynamic, global coordinator of goal-relevant information, while CON transiently disbands to lend processing resources to other goal-relevant networks. This cartography of network dynamics reveals a dissociation between two prominent cognitive control networks, suggesting complementary mechanisms underlying goal-directed cognition.Significance StatementCognitive control supports a variety of behaviors requiring flexible cognition, such as rapidly switching between tasks. Furthermore, cognitive control is negatively impacted in a variety of mental illnesses. We used tools from network science to characterize the implementation of cognitive control by large-scale brain systems. This revealed that two systems – the frontoparietal (FPN) and cingulo-opercular (CON) networks – have distinct but complementary roles in controlling global network reconfigurations. The FPN exhibited properties of a flexible coordinator (orchestrating task changes), while CON acted as a flexible switcher (switching specific regions to other systems to lend processing resources). These findings reveal an underlying distinction in cognitive processes that may be applicable to clinical, educational, and machine learning work targeting cognitive flexibility.
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- 2019
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48. Decision letter: Variability in locomotor dynamics reveals the critical role of feedback in task control
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Len Maler
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Computer science ,Dynamics (music) ,Task control ,Cognitive psychology - Published
- 2019
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49. Motor sources of dual-task interference: Evidence for effector-based prioritization in dual-task control
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Iring Koch, Mareike A. Hoffmann, Aleks Pieczykolan, and Lynn Huestegge
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Prioritization ,Adult ,Male ,Computer science ,Speech recognition ,Poison control ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Motor Activity ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Executive Function ,Young Adult ,Stimulus modality ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Reaction Time ,Task control ,Humans ,Attention ,Eye Movement Measurements ,Effector ,Middle Aged ,Weighting ,Space Perception ,Auditory Perception ,Pairwise comparison ,Female ,Psychomotor Performance - Abstract
Dual tasking is known to yield performance costs. Corresponding research has often focused on early or central task processing stages, that is, on features related to stimulus processing or response selection. Here, we demonstrate the important role of the final (late) stage of task processing by studying effects of effector system combinations. We used pairwise combinations of tasks requiring oculomotor, manual, vocal, and pedal responses, triggered by visual/auditory stimuli. Across task combinations, we compared dual-task costs among effector systems (e.g., oculomotor, vocal, and pedal) under controlled conditions, that is, when combined with the same "context effector" (e.g., manual) in the other task. The dual-task cost pattern was strongly determined by the particular combination of effector systems in line with the assumption of an ordinal effector-based prioritization pattern (oculomotor > pedal > vocal > manual), and could not be explained by classic "first-come, first-served" accounts of central processing. Stimulus modality and its mapping to effector systems affected reaction times (RTs), but the impact on the general prioritization scheme was negligible, suggesting a more substantial influence of output (compared with input) system characteristics on dual-task capacity scheduling. The results call for a distinct effector system weighting mechanism in models of dual-task control. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2019
50. Task Conflict and Task Control: A Mini-Review
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Eyal Kalanthroff, Ran Littman, and Eldad Keha
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Mini Review ,media_common.quotation_subject ,lcsh:BF1-990 ,050105 experimental psychology ,Task (project management) ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Reading (process) ,Stroop task ,Psychology ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,cognitive control ,Affordance ,General Psychology ,media_common ,Modalities ,Mechanism (biology) ,task control ,stimulus-driven behavior ,05 social sciences ,Executive functions ,executive functions ,task conflict ,lcsh:Psychology ,Facilitation ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology ,Stroop effect - Abstract
Stimulus-driven behaviors are triggered by the specific stimuli with which they are associated. For example, words elicit automatic reading behavior. When stimulus-driven behaviors are incongruent with one’s current goals, task conflict can emerge, requiring the activation of a task control mechanism. The Stroop task induces task conflict by asking participants to focus on color naming and ignore the automatic, stimulus-driven, irrelevant word reading task. Thus, task conflict manifests in Stroop incongruent as well as in congruent trials. Previous studies demonstrated that when task control fails, reaction times in congruent trials slow down, leading to a reversed facilitation effect. In the present mini-review, we review the literature on the manifestation of task conflict and the recruitment of task control in the Stroop task and present the physiological and behavioral signatures of task control and task conflict. We then suggest that the notion of task conflict is strongly related to the concept of stimulus-driven behaviors and present examples for the manifestation of stimulus-driven task conflict in the Stroop task and additional tasks, including object-interference and affordances tasks. The reviewed literature supports the illustration of task conflict as a specific type of conflict, which is different from other conflict types and may manifest in different tasks and under diverse modalities of response.
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- 2019
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