Article
Psychology, Developmental
Lee Copping, Peter Tymms, Gabrijela Aleksic, Tiago Bartholo, Sarah J. Howie, Mariane Campelo Koslinski, Christine Merrell, Masa Vidmar, Helen Wildy
Summary: The study suggests that numerical symbol identification may serve as a universally predictive measure of early mathematical development, and finds that the order of ability clusters of numbers shows minor variations across different countries and instructional languages.
COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT
(2024)
Article
Computer Science, Artificial Intelligence
Ursula Addison
Summary: Goal reasoning is an essential functionality for artificial systems to manage and execute goals in complex and changing environments. This survey investigates motivated agents that simulate human integrated-self, exploring the potential benefits of internal motivations in goal reasoning. By evaluating different systems, the study concludes the potential advantages of motives, mental simulation, and emotion in the goal reasoning paradigm.
COGNITIVE SYSTEMS RESEARCH
(2024)
Review
Psychology, Biological
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
Computer Science, Artificial Intelligence
Leticia Berto, Leonardo Rossi, Eric Rohmer, Paula Costa, Ricardo Gudwin, Alexandre Simoes, Esther Colombini
Summary: Integrating robots into daily life is becoming a reality, and bridging the gap between human developmental theories and robotics applications is crucial. This research focuses on the early stages of human development from 0 to 2 years old and aims to simulate motor and cognitive growth in robots through progressive experiments.
COGNITIVE SYSTEMS RESEARCH
(2024)
Article
Psychology, Multidisciplinary
Liesel L. Sharabi, Elizabeth Dorrance-Hall
Summary: This study uses social ecology theory to compare marriages between couples who met through online dating and those who met offline. The findings suggest that online daters may have less satisfying and stable marriages, possibly due to societal marginalization and geographic distance pressures.
COMPUTERS IN HUMAN BEHAVIOR
(2024)
Article
Psychology, Experimental
Talya Sadeh, Morris Moscovitch
Summary: Temporal-structure is a fundamental principle of episodic memory organization, and recent studies suggest that it is encoded automatically. This study investigated whether strategic control processes influence the retrieval of temporal structure in memory. The results showed that while dividing attention negatively affected overall recall performance, it did not affect the ability to use temporal structure to drive recall.
Article
Psychology, Experimental
Hyung-Bum Park, Weiwei Zhang
Summary: This study examines the limit of working memory (WM)-guided attention using a novel task procedure and mouse trajectory analysis. The results suggest that only a single prioritized item held in WM can guide attention, as shown by the mouse trajectory analysis. The study highlights the utility of mouse trajectory analyses in hypothesis testing in experimental psychology.
Article
Psychology, Multidisciplinary
Junshu Ma, Shumin Gao, Peng Wang, Yongfang Liu
Summary: Self-disclosure on social networking sites has been found to affect people's cooperative behavior. High levels of self-disclosure lead to increased cooperation and the inclusion of image information can moderate this effect.
COMPUTERS IN HUMAN BEHAVIOR
(2024)
Article
Psychology, Multidisciplinary
Xiaohui Deng, Xiaojun Li, Yanhui Xiang
Summary: This study investigates the relationship between smartphone addiction, depression, and internalized/externalized aggression. The findings suggest a close association between smartphone addiction and internalized/externalized aggression. Depression has an indirect effect on the relationship between smartphone addiction and internalized aggression.
COMPUTERS IN HUMAN BEHAVIOR
(2024)
Article
Psychology, Multidisciplinary
Samuel Hardman Taylor, Kellie St. Cyr Brisini
Summary: This study explores how parents' algorithm awareness of TikTok's algorithm relates to perceived online risks and opportunities as well as parental mediation strategies. The study found that higher algorithm awareness was associated with more negative attitudes and a higher likelihood of prohibiting teenagers from using TikTok.
COMPUTERS IN HUMAN BEHAVIOR
(2024)
Article
Psychology, Multidisciplinary
Daisy Mui Hung Kee, Aizza Anwar, Ivana Vranjes
Summary: This study examines the impact of cyberbullying on suicide ideation among Malaysian youth. The findings reveal that victims of cyberbullying are at a higher risk of suicide ideation. Anxiety, exhaustion, and stress mediate the relationship between cyberbullying and depression, while depression significantly mediates the relationship between cyberbullying and suicide ideation. This highlights the need for cyberbullying prevention programs to educate youth about the consequences of cyberbullying.
COMPUTERS IN HUMAN BEHAVIOR
(2024)
Article
Computer Science, Artificial Intelligence
Beatriz Garcia-Martinez, Patricia Fernandez-Sotos, Jorge J. Ricarte, Eva M. Sanchez-Morla, Roberto Sanchez-Reolid, Roberto Rodriguez-Jimenez, Antonio Fernandez-Caballero
Summary: This study aims to detect auditory hallucinations (AH) in schizophrenia patients using a wireless EEG device. The results show that AH is mainly activated in the right frontal locations, while the left hemisphere demonstrates stronger activation during hallucination-free periods. Additionally, a decrease in spectral power during hallucination episodes compared to non-hallucination periods is observed.
COGNITIVE SYSTEMS RESEARCH
(2024)
Article
Psychology, Experimental
Angela Pasqualotto, Aaron Cochrane, Daphne Bavelier, Irene Altarelli
Summary: This article introduces a novel non-linguistic audio-visual associative learning task to study individual differences and learning rate, and correlates it with working memory performance and reading ability.
Article
Psychology, Experimental
Sarah A. Wu, Tobias Gerstenberg
Summary: How replaceable a person is affects responsibility judgments. The counterfactual replacement model predicts that people are held more responsible if it would have been difficult to replace them. Three experiments using a quantitatively controlled paradigm support this model's predictions and show that it explains responsibility judgments better than alternative models based solely on what actually happened.
Article
Psychology, Biological
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)
Article
Psychology, Experimental
Sebastian Holt, Judith E. Fan, David Barner
Summary: The ability to communicate about exact number is crucial in modern human practices. People use various strategies, such as 1-to-1 correspondence, configuration of sets, and salient numerical features of objects, to convey numbers.
Article
Psychology, Biological
Thomas M. Olino, Matthew Mattoni
Summary: This study examined brain function in offspring of mothers with and without depression using monetary and social reward tasks. The results showed no significant differences in task activation and functional connectivity between the two groups. The study discussed the possibility of developmental timing in finding differences.
BIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY
(2024)
Article
Psychology, Developmental
Chen Cheng, Melissa M. Kibbe
Summary: Reasoning by exclusion allows children to retroactively assign an identity to incomplete object representations, but this ability incurs some cognitive cost.
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL CHILD PSYCHOLOGY
(2024)
Article
Psychology, Developmental
Lisa-Marie Collimore, Mark A. Schmuckler
Summary: This study investigated the impact of perceptual-motor context on cognitive-spatial reasoning and found that reaching around a barrier affects infants' search behavior. Interestingly, reaching around a barrier improves B trial performance for younger infants.
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL CHILD PSYCHOLOGY
(2024)
Article
Psychology, Experimental
Karli Nave, Chantal Carrillo, Nori Jacoby, Laurel Trainor, Erin Hannon
Summary: Both children and adults preferentially produce and perceive rhythms with simple integer ratios. These preferences reflect specific rhythms that are common to one's cultural listening experience. Children as young as 6-years-old exhibit rhythmic biases that closely resemble those of adults in the same culture. Performance in rhythm perception tasks is correlated with tapping variability in rhythm production tasks.