Psychology

Article Linguistics

Understanding the complexity of computational models through optimization and sloppy parameter analyses: The case of the Connectionist Dual-Process Model

Conrad Perry, Rick Evertz, Marco Zorzi, Johannes C. Ziegler

Summary: The article discusses the advantages of computational cognitive models in accurately predicting empirical data and introduces a state-of-the-art technique to simplify complex models. It presents a study on the Connectionist Dual-Process model (CDP) of reading aloud and demonstrates that CDP performs well in predicting variance across different databases, outperforming previous models in the field.

JOURNAL OF MEMORY AND LANGUAGE (2024)

Article Linguistics

Moving experimental psychology online: How to obtain high quality data when we can't see our participants

Jennifer M. Rodd

Summary: This paper discusses the rapid growth of online data collection in the behavioral sciences and the potential issues that can affect the quality of data in online experiments. The author provides checklists to help researchers improve the data quality and emphasizes three key aspects of experimental design. The author argues that ensuring high data quality for online experiments requires significant effort prior to data collection to maintain the credibility of the evidence base.

JOURNAL OF MEMORY AND LANGUAGE (2024)

Article Linguistics

Romanian (subject-like) DPs attract more than bare nouns: Evidence from speeded continuations

Adina Camelia Bleotu, Brian Dillon

Summary: This paper investigates the impact of distributional properties on agreement attraction in Romanian, specifically examining the effects of bare nouns and full determiner phrases. The results show that overt determiner phrases cause significantly more attraction than bare nouns, suggesting the presence of a cue-based retrieval mechanism for forming agreement dependencies. These findings highlight the sensitivity of agreement attraction to morphophonological cues in Romanian.

JOURNAL OF MEMORY AND LANGUAGE (2024)

Article Linguistics

Interaction between the testing and forward testing effects in the case of Cued-Recall: Implications for Theory, individual difference Studies, and application

Mohan W. Gupta, Steven C. Pan, Timothy C. Rickard

Summary: This study reveals the existence of a confounding forward testing effect (FTE) in the test-first design but not in the mixed training design, through two experiments and analyses of different training phase task orderings. The predictions of the dual-memory model of test-enhanced learning are supported, and no evidence for proactive interference and reset of encoding hypotheses is found. However, the results are consistent with the strategy change and increasing effort hypotheses. Additionally, a novel and powerful individual differences effect of the FTE is identified through distribution analyses.

JOURNAL OF MEMORY AND LANGUAGE (2024)

Article Neurosciences

Spontaneity competes with intention to influence the coordination dynamics of interpersonal performance tendencies

John J. Buchanan, Alberto Cordova

Summary: Research has shown that spontaneous visual coupling supports frequency entrainment, phase attraction, and intermittent interpersonal coordination during the switch from a novision (NV) to vision (V) context among co-actors. The experiments demonstrate that similar self-paced frequencies result from same amplitude movements, while different amplitudes lead to disparate frequencies. In experiment 1, co-actors were instructed to maintain amplitude without explicit instructions for coordination, which limited frequency and phase entrainment in the V context. In experiment 2, co-actors were instructed to maintain amplitude and intentionally coordinate together, resulting in significant frequency modulations and the production of various stable relative phase patterns.

HUMAN MOVEMENT SCIENCE (2024)

Article Linguistics

Lexical choice and word formation in a taboo game paradigm

Vasilisa Pugacheva, Fritz Guenther

Summary: This study investigates the cognitive-semantic question of the words speakers use and produce to convey meaning. The results show that responses are semantically close to the targets, with existing words being closer than novel words and even novel compounds often closer than the targets' free associates. Additionally, other participants are more likely to guess the correct original word for responses closer to the original targets and for novel compound responses compared to existing word responses. This demonstrates that both existing and novel words can be accurately captured in a unified computational framework of the semantic mechanisms driving word choice.

JOURNAL OF MEMORY AND LANGUAGE (2024)

Article Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism

A psychosocial investigation of exercise preferences in real and virtual environments

Robyn L. Moffitt

Summary: These three studies examined exercise preferences in real-world and virtual environments and their relationship with social physique anxiety, social comparison, and self-presentational efficacy. The results showed that individuals who preferred exercising at home tended to have lower exercise behavior and more negative fitness-related social comparisons. Those with lower exercise behavior, negative social comparisons, lower self-presentational efficacy, or higher social physique anxiety were more likely to choose virtual reality exercise over real-world exercise. In a virtual reality exercise setting, individuals with higher social physique anxiety and more negative social comparisons preferred embodying a nonhuman and fantasy avatar. The findings suggest that individuals who value self-presentation and have low belief in their competence to project a positive image are more likely to prefer exercise contexts that minimize physique and fitness evaluations. Additionally, virtual reality may offer a less threatening environment for individuals who feel self-conscious or inferior during exercise.

PSYCHOLOGY OF SPORT AND EXERCISE (2024)

Article Psychology, Biological

Frequent media multitasking modulates the temporal dynamics of resting-state electroencephalography networks

Jie Zhang, Xiyan Li, Shiwei Liu, Can Xu, Zhijie Zhang

Summary: In this study, electroencephalogram data was analyzed to compare the resting network activation between heavy media multitaskers (HMM) and light media multitaskers (LMM). The results showed that HMM had weaker activation in the attention network, but enhanced activation in the salience network. They also had an enhanced visual network and may feel less comfortable during resting-state periods. This suggests that chronic media multitasking leads to a bottom-up or stimulus-driven allocation of attention for HMM, while LMM use a top-down approach.

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY (2024)

Article Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism

Golf skill learning: An external focus of attention enhances performance and motivation

Jongseong An, Gabriele Wulf

Summary: The study demonstrates that an external focus improves performance and learning of motor skills compared to an internal focus. Through a golf pitch shot experiment, it is found that external focus instructions enhance skill learning, increase positive affect, reduce negative affect, and improve self-efficacy. These findings support assumptions of the OPTIMAL theory and emphasize the attentional and motivational benefits of an external focus.

PSYCHOLOGY OF SPORT AND EXERCISE (2024)

Article Neurosciences

Success rates, near-response patterns, and learning trends with free-fusion stereograms

Chandrika Ravisankar, Christopher W. Tyler, Clifton M. Schor, Shrikant R. Bharadwaj

Summary: This study revealed that less than one-third of adults with normal binocular vision were able to successfully free-fuse random-dot image pairs and identify the embedded stereoscopic shapes. The successful participants showed a dissociation of vergence and accommodative responses, while the unsuccessful ones either exhibited strong vergence and accommodation or weak vergence and strong accommodation. Task performance of the unsuccessful cluster improved significantly with pharmacological paralysis of accommodation. A minority of participants also learned to dissociate one direction of their vergence and accommodation crosslinks with repeated free-fusion trials, optimizing their task performance.

VISION RESEARCH (2024)

Article Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism

Automatic processes moderate the association between reflective processes and movement behavior: A cross-sectional study

Andressa de Oliveira Araujo, Gledson Tavares Amorim Oliveira, Felipe de Oliveira Matos, Fivia de Araujo Lopes, Rodrigo Alberto Vieira Browne, Hassan Mohamed Elsangedy

Summary: This study investigated the influence of reflective and automatic processes on physical activity and sedentary behavior, and found direct associations and moderating effects between the two. The findings underline the importance of considering the interplay between reflective and automatic processes in shaping movement behavior.

PSYCHOLOGY OF SPORT AND EXERCISE (2024)

Review Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism

Martial arts, combat sports, and mental health in adults: A systematic review

Simone Ciaccioni, Oscar Castro, Fatimah Bahrami, Phillip D. Tomporowski, Laura Capranica, Stuart J. H. Biddle, Ineke Vergeer, Caterina Pesce

Summary: This systematic review examined the relationship between martial arts and combat sports training and the mental health of adult practitioners. The findings suggest inconclusive associations between martial arts and combat sports practice and self-related constructs, limited evidence of significant associations with sub-domains of ill-being and well-being, and consistent evidence of positive association with perceptual and inhibition abilities. However, the evidence on attention, memory, and the negative associations of boxing with changes in brain structure integrity was limited and inconclusive. The multifaceted nature of martial arts and combat sports may produce different outcomes on mental health, and factors such as activity exposure, expertise, level of competitive engagement, sex, and type of practice may moderate these effects. Further research is needed to enhance theoretical and practical approaches in this field.

PSYCHOLOGY OF SPORT AND EXERCISE (2024)

Review Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism

Professional development of sport psychology practitioners: From systematic review to a model of development

Janaina Lima Fogaca, Alessandro Quartiroli, Christopher R. D. Wagstaff

Summary: This article systematically reviews the professional development of sport psychology practitioners (SPPs) and creates a process model of professional development. Through reflexive thematic analysis, the researchers identify four developmental phases, four facilitating processes, and nine developmental elements. This model has potential contributions to future research, supervision, and training programs.

PSYCHOLOGY OF SPORT AND EXERCISE (2024)

Article Neurosciences

Alterations to foveal crowding with microsaccade preparation

Krishnamachari S. Prahalad, Daniel R. Coates

Summary: Visual stimuli presented around the time of a saccade can be perceived differently by the visual system, including a reduction in the harmful impact of flankers. This study investigated the effects of microsaccades on crowded stimuli placed 20 arc minutes from the center of gaze. The findings suggest two separate pre-saccadic benefits, one that regularizes the crowding zone and another that specifically benefits microsaccade targets surrounded by tangential flankers.

VISION RESEARCH (2024)

Review Psychology, Biological

Two's company: Biobehavioral research with dyads

Robert W. Levenson

Summary: This article describes the development of paradigms for studying dyadic interaction in the laboratory, methods, and analytics for dealing with dyadic data. It provides research findings from the author and others, with a particular focus on dyadic measures of linkage or synchrony in physiology, expressive behavior, and subjective affective experience.

BIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY (2024)

Article Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism

Does messaging matter? A registered report on appearance-versus health-based message framing in exercise appeals targeted towards women

Kimberly R. More, Curt More, Kayla A. Burd, Aikaterini Mentzou, L. Alison Phillips

Summary: This study aimed to investigate the prediction of psychological reactance through the matching of message framing and health message outcomes, and its impact on cognitive and behavioral outcomes related to exercise.

PSYCHOLOGY OF SPORT AND EXERCISE (2024)

Article Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism

Perfectionism and performance in sport: Exploring non-linear relationships with track and field athletes

Sanna M. Nordin-Bates, Daniel J. Madigan, Andrew P. Hill, Luke F. Olsson

Summary: This study explored the relationship between perfectionism and athletic performance and found a nonlinear relationship. In some cases, perfectionistic strivings may have both positive and negative effects on sport performance.

PSYCHOLOGY OF SPORT AND EXERCISE (2024)

Article Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism

Motivational climate dimensions predict youth soccer players' psychosocial well-being over time

Lindsay E. Kipp, Nicole D. Bolter

Summary: This study examines the relationships between psychological need satisfaction, personal and social responsibility in young athletes, using a longitudinal design and self-determination theory. The findings suggest that perceptions of coaches' punishment for mistakes can negatively impact the sense of relatedness with coaches and teammates, which in turn influences personal and social responsibility. Providing opportunities for collaborative learning and minimizing mistake-contingent punishment can enhance athletes' sense of connection and improve their psychosocial well-being.

PSYCHOLOGY OF SPORT AND EXERCISE (2024)

Article Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism

Effects of task difficulty on performance and event-related bradycardia during preparation for action

Jennifer Henderson, Maria Kavussanu, Germano Gallicchio, Christopher Ring

Summary: This study examines the relationship between heart rate changes and golf putting performance, finding that task difficulty affects heart rate deceleration characteristics and correlates with task performance.

PSYCHOLOGY OF SPORT AND EXERCISE (2024)

Article Psychology, Biological

Neural basis underlying the relation between internet addiction tendency and sleep quality: The intrinsic default-mode network connectivity pathways

Youling Bai, Jianguo Qu, Dan Li, Huazhan Yin

Summary: This study used resting-state functional connectivity analysis to investigate the neural pathways between internet addiction tendency and sleep quality, and found a positive correlation between internet addiction tendency and the strength of functional connectivity within the default-mode network. Furthermore, internet addiction tendency mediated the relationship between these functional couplings and sleep quality.

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY (2024)