journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38663115/don-t-snarc-me-now-intraindividual-variability-of-cognitive-phenomena-insights-from-the-ironman-paradigm
#1
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lilly Roth, Verena Jordan, Stefania Schwarz, Klaus Willmes, Hans-Christoph Nuerk, Jean-Philippe van Dijck, Krzysztof Cipora
Two implicit generalizations are often made from group-level studies in cognitive experimental psychology and their common statistical analysis in the general linear model: (1) Group-level phenomena are assumed to be present in every participant with variations between participants being often treated as random error in data analyses; (2) phenomena are assumed to be stable over time. In this preregistered study, we investigated the validity of these generalizations in the commonly used parity judgment task...
April 24, 2024: Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38653181/mapping-semantic-space-exploring-the-higher-order-structure-of-word-meaning
#2
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Veronica Diveica, Emiko J Muraki, Richard J Binney, Penny M Pexman
Multiple representation theories posit that concepts are represented via a combination of properties derived from sensorimotor, affective, and linguistic experiences. Recently, it has been proposed that information derived from social experience, or socialness, represents another key aspect of conceptual representation. How these various dimensions interact to form a coherent conceptual space has yet to be fully explored. To address this, we capitalized on openly available word property norms for 6339 words and conducted a large-scale investigation into the relationships between 18 dimensions...
April 22, 2024: Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38636164/auditory-and-motor-priming-of-metric-structure-improves-understanding-of-degraded-speech
#3
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emma Berthault, Sophie Chen, Simone Falk, Benjamin Morillon, Daniele Schön
Speech comprehension is enhanced when preceded (or accompanied) by a congruent rhythmic prime reflecting the metrical sentence structure. Although these phenomena have been described for auditory and motor primes separately, their respective and synergistic contribution has not been addressed. In this experiment, participants performed a speech comprehension task on degraded speech signals that were preceded by a rhythmic prime that could be auditory, motor or audiomotor. Both auditory and audiomotor rhythmic primes facilitated speech comprehension speed...
April 16, 2024: Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38631174/revisiting-causal-pluralism-intention-process-and-dependency-in-cases-of-double-prevention
#4
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Huseina Thanawala, Christopher D Erb
Causal pluralism proposes that humans can reason about causes and effects in terms of both dependency and process relations, depending on the scenario. Support for this view is provided by responses to double prevention scenarios in which an affector attempts to bring about an outcome, a preventer attempts to prevent the outcome, and a double preventer intervenes to stop the preventer's prevention attempt. Previous research indicates that reasoners award the affector high causal ratings regardless of whether their action was executed intentionally, whereas reasoners only award the double preventer high causal ratings when the double preventer acts intentionally...
April 16, 2024: Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38599142/dynamic-changes-in-task-preparation-in-a-multi-task-environment-the-task-transformation-paradigm
#5
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mengqiao Chai, Clay B Holroyd, Marcel Brass, Senne Braem
A key element of human flexible behavior concerns the ability to continuously predict and prepare for sudden changes in tasks or actions. Here, we tested whether people can dynamically modulate task preparation processes and decision-making strategies when the identity of a to-be-performed task becomes uncertain. To this end, we developed a new paradigm where participants need to prepare for one of nine tasks on each trial. Crucially, in some blocks, the task being prepared could suddenly shift to a different task after a longer cue-target interval, by changing either the stimulus category or categorization rule that defined the initial task...
April 9, 2024: Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38593569/tell-me-your-cognitive-budget-and-i-ll-tell-you-what-you-value
#6
JOURNAL ARTICLE
David Kinney, Tania Lombrozo
Consider the following two (hypothetical) generic causal claims: "Living in a neighborhood with many families with children increases purchases of bicycles" and "living in an affluent neighborhood with many families with children increases purchases of bicycles." These claims not only differ in what they suggest about how bicycle ownership is distributed across different neighborhoods (i.e., "the data"), but also have the potential to communicate something about the speakers' values: namely, the prominence they accord to affluence in representing and making decisions about the social world...
April 8, 2024: Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38593568/illusions-of-knowledge-due-to-mere-repetition
#7
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Felix Speckmann, Christian Unkelbach
Repeating information increases people's belief that the repeated information is true. This truth effect has been widely researched and is relevant for topics such as fake news and misinformation. Another effect of repetition, which is also relevant to those topics, has not been extensively studied so far: Do people believe they knew something before it was repeated? We used a standard truth effect paradigm in four pre-registered experiments (total N = 773), including a presentation and judgment phase...
April 8, 2024: Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38583324/me-or-we-action-outcome-learning-in-synchronous-joint-action
#8
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maximilian Marschner, David Dignath, Günther Knoblich
Goal-directed behaviour requires mental representations that encode instrumental relationships between actions and their outcomes. The present study investigated how people acquire representations of joint actions where co-actors perform synchronized action contributions to produce joint outcomes in the environment. Adapting an experimental procedure to assess individual action-outcome learning, we tested whether co-acting individuals link jointly produced action outcomes to individual-level features of their own action contributions or to group-level features of their joint action instead...
April 6, 2024: Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38583323/category-locality-theory-a-unified-account-of-locality-effects-in-sentence-comprehension
#9
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Shinnosuke Isono
In real-time sentence comprehension, the comprehender is often required to establish syntactic dependencies between words that are linearly distant. Major models of sentence comprehension assume that longer dependencies are more difficult to process because of working memory limitations. While the expected effect of distance on reading times (locality effect) has been robustly observed in certain constructions, such as relative clauses in English, its generalizability to a wider range of constructions has been empirically questioned...
April 6, 2024: Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38583322/working-memory-capacity-for-continuous-events-the-root-of-temporal-compression-in-episodic-memory
#10
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nathan Leroy, Steve Majerus, Arnaud D'Argembeau
Remembering the unfolding of past episodes usually takes less time than their actual duration. In this study, we evaluated whether such temporal compression emerges when continuous events are too long to be fully held in working memory. To do so, we asked 90 young adults to watch and mentally replay video clips showing people performing a continuous action (e.g., turning a car jack) that lasted 3, 6, 9, 12, or 15 s. For each clip, participants had to carefully watch the event and then to mentally replay it as accurately and precisely as possible...
April 6, 2024: Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38583321/cognitive-offloading-is-value-based-decision-making-modelling-cognitive-effort-and-the-expected-value-of-memory
#11
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sam J Gilbert
How do people decide between maintaining information in short-term memory or offloading it to external reminders? How does this affect subsequent memory? This article presents a simple computational model based on two principles: A) items stored in brain-based memory occupy its limited capacity, generating an opportunity cost; B) reminders incur a small physical-action cost, but capacity is effectively unlimited. These costs are balanced against the value of remembering, which determines the optimal strategy...
April 6, 2024: Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38583320/three-key-questions-to-move-towards-a-theoretical-framework-of-visuospatial-perspective-taking
#12
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Steven Samuel, Thorsten M Erle, Louise P Kirsch, Andrew Surtees, Ian Apperly, Henryk Bukowski, Malika Auvray, Caroline Catmur, Klaus Kessler, Francois Quesque
What would a theory of visuospatial perspective taking (VSPT) look like? Here, ten researchers in the field, many with different theoretical viewpoints and empirical approaches, present their consensus on the three big questions we need to answer in order to bring this theory (or these theories) closer.
April 6, 2024: Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38579638/finding-the-meaning-in-meaning-maps-quantifying-the-roles-of-semantic-and-non-semantic-scene-information-in-guiding-visual-attention
#13
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maarten Leemans, Claudia Damiano, Johan Wagemans
In real-world vision, people prioritise the most informative scene regions via eye-movements. According to the cognitive guidance theory of visual attention, viewers allocate visual attention to those parts of the scene that are expected to be the most informative. The expected information of a scene region is coded in the semantic distribution of that scene. Meaning maps have been proposed to capture the spatial distribution of local scene semantics in order to test cognitive guidance theories of attention...
April 4, 2024: Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38574652/emotions-before-actions-when-children-see-costs-as-causal
#14
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Claudia G Sehl, Ori Friedman, Stephanie Denison
Adults expect people to be biased by sunk costs, but young children do not. We tested between two accounts for why children overlook the sunk cost bias. On one account, children do not see sunk costs as causal. The other account posits that children see sunk costs as causal, but unlike adults, think future actions cannot make up for sunk costs. These accounts make opposing predictions about whether children should see sunk costs as affecting emotions. Across three experiments, 4-7-year-olds (total N = 320) and adults (total N = 429) saw stories about characters who collected items that were easy or difficult to obtain, and predicted characters' emotions and actions...
April 2, 2024: Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38569229/perceived-gaze-dynamics-in-social-interactions-can-alter-and-even-reverse-the-perceived-temporal-order-of-events
#15
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Clara Colombatto, Yi-Chia Chen 陳鴨嘉, Brian J Scholl
Here's an all-too-familiar scenario: Person A is staring at person B, and then B turns toward A, and A immediately looks away (a phenomenon we call 'gaze deflection'). Beyond perceiving lower-level properties here - such as the timing of the eye/head turns - you can also readily perceive seemingly higher-level social dynamics: A got caught staring, and frantically looked away in embarrassment! It seems natural to assume that such social impressions are based on more fundamental representations of what happened when - but here we show that social gaze dynamics are unexpectedly powerful in that they can actually alter (and even reverse) the perceived temporal order of the underlying events...
April 2, 2024: Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38564850/what-drives-disagreement-about-moral-hypocrisy-perceived-comparability-and-how-people-exploit-it-to-criticize-enemies-and-defend-allies
#16
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ike Silver, Jonathan Z Berman
Charges of hypocrisy are usually thought to be to be damning. Yet when a hypocrisy charge is made, there often remains disagreement about whether or not its target really is a hypocrite. Why? Three pre-registered experiments (N = 2599) conceptualize and test the role of perceived comparability in evaluating hypocrisy. Calling someone a hypocrite typically entails invoking a comparison-one meant to highlight internal contradiction and cast moral character into question. Yet there is ambiguity about which sorts of comparisons are valid in the first place...
April 1, 2024: Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38552560/oblique-warping-a-general-distortion-of-spatial-perception
#17
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sami R Yousif, Samuel D McDougle
There are many putatively distinct phenomena related to perception in the oblique regions of space. For instance, the classic oblique effect describes a deficit in visual acuity for oriented lines in the obliques, and classic "prototype effects" reflect a bias to misplace objects towards the oblique regions of space. Yet these effects are explained in very different terms: The oblique effect itself is often understood as arising from orientation-selective neurons, whereas prototype effects are described as arising from categorical biases...
March 28, 2024: Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38522219/a-bias-free-test-of-human-temporal-bisection-evidence-against-bisection-at-the-arithmetic-mean
#18
JOURNAL ARTICLE
David J Sanderson
The temporal bisection procedure has been used to assess theories of time perception. A problem with the procedure for measuring the perceived midpoint of two durations is that the spacing of probe durations affects the length of the bisection point. Linear spacing results in longer bisection points closer to the arithmetic mean of the durations than logarithmic spacing. In three experiments, the influence of probe duration distribution was avoided by presenting a single probe duration of either the arithmetic or geometric mean of the trained durations...
March 23, 2024: Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38522218/explaining-contentious-political-issues-promotes-open-minded-thinking
#19
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Abdo Elnakouri, Alex C Huynh, Igor Grossmann
Cognitive scientists suggest that inviting people to explain contentious political issues might reduce intergroup toxicity because it exposes people to how poorly they understand the issue. However, whether providing explanations can result in more open-minded political thinking remains unclear. On one hand, inviting people to explain a political issue might make them more impartial and open-minded in their thinking. On the other hand, an invitation to explain a contentious political issue might lead to myside bias-rationalization of one's default position...
March 23, 2024: Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38520794/relative-cue-precision-and-prior-knowledge-contribute-to-the-preference-of-proximal-and-distal-landmarks-in-human-orientation
#20
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yafei Qi, Weimin Mou
A prevailing argument posits that distal landmarks dominate over proximal landmarks as orientation cues. However, no studies have tested this argument or examined the underlying mechanisms. This project aimed to close this gap by examining the roles of relative cue precision and prior knowledge in cue preference. Participants learned object locations with proximal and distal landmarks in an immersive virtual environment. After walking a path without seeing objects or landmarks, participants disoriented themselves by spinning in place and pointed to the objects with the reappearance of a proximal landmark being rotated -50°, a distal landmark being rotated 50°, or both (Conflict)...
March 22, 2024: Cognition
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