Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (216)
- Postprint (162)
- Doctoral Thesis (16)
- Monograph/Edited Volume (7)
- Conference Proceeding (6)
- Review (6)
- Preprint (3)
- Master's Thesis (2)
- Habilitation Thesis (1)
- Part of Periodical (1)
Keywords
- exercise (15)
- football (14)
- embodied cognition (13)
- fMRI (12)
- working memory (12)
- performance (10)
- German (9)
- language acquisition (9)
- neuroimaging (9)
- adolescents (8)
- aging (8)
- SNARC (7)
- eye movements (7)
- major depressive disorder (7)
- Cardiac rehabilitation (6)
- Exercise (6)
- emotion (6)
- injury risk (6)
- locality (6)
- numerical cognition (6)
- physiology (6)
- resistance training (6)
- sentence processing (6)
- training load (6)
- young athletes (6)
- youth (6)
- Spanish (5)
- balance (5)
- individual differences (5)
- insula (5)
- interoception (5)
- interoceptive awareness (5)
- language (5)
- obesity (5)
- Adaptive Force (4)
- Adolescents (4)
- Children (4)
- Embodied cognition (4)
- Holding isometric muscle action (4)
- Mechanotendography (4)
- Mental number line (4)
- NutriAct Family Study (4)
- Performance (4)
- Predictors (4)
- Pushing isometric muscle action (4)
- Randomized controlled trial (4)
- Resistance training (4)
- TAVI (4)
- activation (4)
- biomechanics (4)
- childhood (4)
- diabetes (4)
- electromyography (4)
- elite athletes (4)
- exercise therapy (4)
- expectation (4)
- eye-tracking (4)
- fatigue (4)
- injury (4)
- mental arithmetic (4)
- mental simulation (4)
- mind wandering (4)
- monitoring (4)
- neuromuscular (4)
- operational momentum (4)
- osteoporosis (4)
- physical fitness (4)
- postural stability (4)
- rate of perceived exertion (4)
- recovery (4)
- rolling averages (4)
- sentence comprehension (4)
- sport-specific performance (4)
- sports (4)
- training (4)
- weighted moving averages (4)
- working memory capacity (4)
- ACT-R (3)
- Aftercare (3)
- Balance (3)
- Blickbewegungen (3)
- COVID-19 (3)
- COVID-19 pandemic (3)
- Decision making (3)
- English (3)
- Exercise therapy (3)
- Eye movements (3)
- Number processing (3)
- Psycholinguistik (3)
- Quality of life (3)
- SNARC effect (3)
- Satzverarbeitung (3)
- TMS (3)
- Working memory (3)
- cardiac rehabilitation (3)
- cognition (3)
- cognitive psychology (3)
- depression (3)
- discourse (3)
- doping (3)
- epidemiology (3)
- force (3)
- ground reaction force (3)
- ground reaction forces (3)
- hemispheric asymmetry (3)
- hospitalization (3)
- human-robot interaction (3)
- lipids (3)
- meta-analysis (3)
- muscle strength (3)
- oncology (3)
- physical performance (3)
- plyometric training (3)
- prevention (3)
- psycholinguistics (3)
- quality of life (3)
- relative clauses (3)
- reliability (3)
- remission (3)
- review (3)
- running mechanics (3)
- self-paced reading (3)
- spatial-numerical associations (3)
- speech perception (3)
- validity (3)
- ACWR (2)
- AUD (2)
- Achilles and patellar tendon (2)
- Acoustic Analysis (2)
- Adult-child interaction (2)
- Amygdala (2)
- Anti-doping guideline (2)
- Anti-doping program (2)
- Appearance (2)
- Arbeitsgedächtnis (2)
- Attrition (2)
- Back pain diagnosis (2)
- Back pain prognosis (2)
- Biomarker (2)
- Broca’s aphasia (2)
- Cardiovascular diseases (2)
- Catalan VCV Sequences (2)
- Child (2)
- Chronic conditions (2)
- Clinical psychology (2)
- Clinical supervision (2)
- Closure Positive Shift (CPS) (2)
- Cognition (2)
- Cognitive impairment (2)
- Cost-effectiveness (2)
- Cross-frequency PLV (2)
- Cross-sectoral care (2)
- DLT (2)
- Daily life (2)
- Data pooling (2)
- Delirium prevention (2)
- Dementia (2)
- Developmental hyperscanning (2)
- Diary study (2)
- Digital intervention (2)
- Doping (2)
- Dual EEG analysis (2)
- Dynamometry (2)
- EEG (2)
- ERPs (2)
- Eating behavior (2)
- Eccentric muscle action (2)
- Education (2)
- Elective surgery (2)
- Elite sports schools (2)
- Event-related Potentials (ERP) (2)
- Evidence-based psychotherapy (2)
- Experience sampling method (2)
- Facial Expressions (2)
- Fatigue (2)
- FieldTrip (2)
- Finger counting (2)
- Football (2)
- Frailty (2)
- GNAT (2)
- Games (2)
- Geriatric rehabilitation (2)
- Grip force (2)
- HDL (2)
- Hamstring-quadriceps ratio (2)
- Healthy aging (2)
- Home-based (2)
- Human physical conditioning (2)
- Iambic/Trochaic Law (2)
- Information (2)
- Injury (2)
- Injury risk (2)
- Interoception (2)
- Intuitive eating (2)
- Isometric contraction (2)
- Isometric muscle action (2)
- LDL (2)
- Learning (2)
- Lesen (2)
- Lingual Coarticulation (2)
- Locus Equations (2)
- Mandarin-English bilinguals (2)
- Martial arts (2)
- Mechanomyography (2)
- Metaanalysis (2)
- Microvascular blood filling (2)
- Mindfulness (2)
- Mixed methods (2)
- Mobility (2)
- Motor system (2)
- Movement (2)
- Muscle strength (2)
- Muscle twitch (2)
- Musculoskeletal and neural physiological phenomena (2)
- Music cognition (2)
- Non-invasive vagus nerve stimulation (2)
- Noradrenaline (2)
- Obesity (2)
- Older adults (2)
- Older patients (2)
- Outcome measures (2)
- Overhead athletes (2)
- Oxygen saturation (2)
- PLV (2)
- PROGRESS/TRIPOD (2)
- Pain screening (2)
- Partnership (2)
- Perception (2)
- Persian (2)
- Phase Locking Value (2)
- Plyometric exercise (2)
- Postoperative cognitive dysfunction (2)
- Prediction of disability/intensity (2)
- Psychotherapeutic competencies (2)
- Psychotherapy research (2)
- Pulling isometric muscle action (2)
- RPE (2)
- Randomized-controlled trial (2)
- Recognition Memory (2)
- Recollection (2)
- Recovery (2)
- Regulatory focus (2)
- Repeated sprint (2)
- Resistance (2)
- Role-playing (2)
- SEMG-pattern (2)
- SFON (2)
- Scale development (2)
- Self-stigmatization (2)
- Shoulder (2)
- Simulated patients (2)
- Speech Motor Control (2)
- Speed (2)
- Sport-specific performance (2)
- Spracherwerb (2)
- Standardized patients (2)
- State and trait measurement (2)
- Stress levels (2)
- Stroop effect (2)
- Supervision (2)
- Systematic review (2)
- Team sports (2)
- Telerehabilitation (2)
- Time to task failure (2)
- Total hip replacement (2)
- Total knee replacement (2)
- Treatment pathways (2)
- Trust (2)
- Trustworthiness (2)
- Two forms of isometric muscle action (2)
- Ultrasound (2)
- Video games (2)
- Vocal-Tract (2)
- Weight (2)
- Weight bias internalization (2)
- Weight management trial (2)
- Yellow flags (2)
- abstract concepts (2)
- academy (2)
- accommodation (2)
- achilles tendinopathy (2)
- action language (2)
- action processing (2)
- action segmentation (2)
- action words (2)
- acute chronic workload ratio (2)
- adaptability (2)
- adaptation to external force impact (2)
- addition (2)
- additive particles (2)
- adolescent sport (2)
- advanced disease (2)
- aftercare (2)
- aggression (2)
- agility (2)
- aging brain (2)
- alcohol consumption (2)
- alexithymia (2)
- allometry (2)
- alpha-2 (2)
- alternatives (2)
- amateur soccer players (2)
- ambiguities (2)
- anaphoricity (2)
- anger (2)
- animacy (2)
- ankles (2)
- antidepressants (2)
- antilocality (2)
- apoptosis (2)
- approach (2)
- arithmetic (2)
- athletes (2)
- athletic performance (2)
- attention (2)
- attitude (2)
- automatic facial expression analysis (2)
- avoidance (2)
- back pain (2)
- balance strategy (2)
- balance training (2)
- behavioral and self-report measures (2)
- behavioral weight loss (2)
- bilingualism (2)
- biological age (2)
- biological maturation (2)
- blood (2)
- body density (2)
- body limbs (2)
- body shape (2)
- body-specificity hypothesis (2)
- bone mineral density (2)
- bone pathologies (2)
- bone–brain–nervous system interactions (2)
- break interventions (2)
- broadband and narrowband dimensions of behavior (2)
- calcaneal eversion (2)
- cancer (2)
- canoe racing (2)
- carcinoma (2)
- cardiac catheterization (CC) (2)
- cardiomyopathy (2)
- carryover effects (2)
- central and peripheral vision (2)
- change (2)
- change of direction (2)
- change-of-direction speed (2)
- chemo-toxicity (2)
- children (2)
- children and adolescents (2)
- cholesterol (2)
- chronic health condition (2)
- clauses (2)
- clinical pain research (2)
- coarticulation (2)
- cognitive bias (2)
- cognitive decline (2)
- cognitive linguistics (2)
- cognitive module (2)
- cognitive resources (2)
- cognitive training (2)
- cognitive-postural dual task (2)
- cognitive/muscular fatigue (2)
- color (2)
- common ground (2)
- complaints (2)
- complex predicates (2)
- computer games (2)
- concurrent training (2)
- conditioning exercise (2)
- confidence (2)
- contractions (2)
- controlled trial (2)
- core strength (2)
- corpus dataset (2)
- counting (2)
- creative problem solving (2)
- creativity (2)
- cross-domain priming (2)
- cross-lagged panel analysis (2)
- cruciate ligament injury (2)
- deep learning (2)
- depressive disorder (2)
- derivation (2)
- development (2)
- developmental dyslexia (2)
- diabetes mellitus (2)
- dietary quality (2)
- distress (2)
- distributed processing (2)
- divergent thinking (2)
- drop jump (2)
- dual-task (2)
- early sport specialization (2)
- elf-determination theory (2)
- embodiment (2)
- emerging adults (2)
- emotion recognition (2)
- emotional intensity (2)
- emotional regulation (2)
- endocrine pathways (2)
- entropy (2)
- episodic memory (2)
- ethnic stereotypes (2)
- executive function (2)
- executive functions (2)
- exercise program (2)
- exercise training (2)
- experimental data (2)
- external load (2)
- external training load (2)
- eye tracking (2)
- eyedness (2)
- eyes (2)
- feeling of presence (2)
- feet (2)
- fiction (2)
- figurative language (2)
- fitness tests (2)
- food neophilia (2)
- footedness (2)
- freedom restriction (2)
- frustration (2)
- gastrointestinal cancer (2)
- gestural organization (2)
- global positioning system (2)
- goal frames (2)
- granularity (2)
- hamstring injuries (2)
- hamstring muscles (2)
- hand (2)
- health care (2)
- healthy eating (2)
- heart rate variability (2)
- hematocrit (2)
- heuristics and biases (2)
- high density lipoprotein cholesterol (2)
- high-intensity interval training (2)
- hip (2)
- home-based (2)
- hopelessness (2)
- hormones (2)
- human performance (2)
- human physical conditioning (2)
- humans (2)
- hypothesis (2)
- idiom (2)
- imaginary world (2)
- impact on pre-activated Achilles tendon (2)
- implicit associations (2)
- in-group stereotypes (2)
- inclusive education (2)
- incubation effect (2)
- information integration (2)
- input frequency (2)
- interference (2)
- internalizing behavior (2)
- interoceptive sensibility (2)
- isometric eccentric force (2)
- jump performance (2)
- jump training (2)
- jumping (2)
- kinematic boundary cues (2)
- kinematics (2)
- kinetics (2)
- knee osteoarthritis (2)
- knees (2)
- latency (2)
- laterality (2)
- lexicon size (2)
- life events (2)
- limb overuse conditions (2)
- lingering misinterpretation (2)
- literacy acquisition (2)
- long-term (2)
- longitudinal (2)
- longitudinal study (2)
- low density lipoprotein cholesterol (2)
- low-back-pain (2)
- lower-extremity kinematics (2)
- macrostructure (2)
- magnetoencephalography (2)
- magnitude estimation (2)
- material fatigue (2)
- mathematical precursor (2)
- maturity (2)
- measurement (2)
- mechanical tendinous oscillations (2)
- medial longitudinal arch (2)
- memory (2)
- mental number line (2)
- mental number line (MNL) (2)
- meta-science (2)
- metaphor (2)
- methodology (2)
- methods (2)
- miRNAs (2)
- microstructure (2)
- mindfulness-based stress reduction (2)
- mitochondrial adaptation (2)
- modality (2)
- modality compatibility (2)
- morphological decomposition (2)
- morphological errors (2)
- motivation (2)
- motor control (2)
- motor resonance (2)
- motor skills (2)
- motor system (2)
- motor unit synchronization (2)
- movement (2)
- mozart effect (2)
- muscle (2)
- muscle action (2)
- muscle activation (2)
- muscle coactivation (2)
- muscle fitness (2)
- muscle metabolism (2)
- muscle power (2)
- muscular activity (2)
- musculoskeletal and neural physiological phenomena (2)
- music cognition (2)
- music information retrieval (2)
- music perception (2)
- musicality (2)
- narrative (2)
- narrative skills (2)
- negation (2)
- negative expectation (2)
- neuroendocrine (2)
- neuromuscular pre-activation (2)
- neuroplasticity (2)
- newborns (2)
- non-athletes (2)
- number (2)
- number knowledge (2)
- oarsmen (2)
- object search (2)
- occupational prognosis (2)
- on-water performance (2)
- out-group stereotypes (2)
- overreaching (2)
- overtraining (2)
- overuse injuries (2)
- palliative care (2)
- paralinguistic features (2)
- passive stretching (2)
- patient-centered care (2)
- peak torque (2)
- pelvic alignment (2)
- perspective-taking (2)
- physical fitness expertise (2)
- plyometric exercise (2)
- plyometrics (2)
- postural control (2)
- postural sway (2)
- power (2)
- power improvement (2)
- pre-activity (2)
- pre-school (2)
- prediction (2)
- prefixes (2)
- preschoolers (2)
- presupposition (2)
- prevalence information (2)
- primary school (2)
- privileged ground (2)
- proactive aggression (2)
- problem solving (2)
- processing (2)
- prognosis (2)
- prosodic boundary cues (2)
- prosody processing (2)
- prototype-willingness-model (2)
- psychoeducation (2)
- psychopathology (2)
- psychophysiological (2)
- psychosocial stress (2)
- psychotherapy process (2)
- pupil diameter (2)
- quality (2)
- quality management (2)
- race time (2)
- randomized-controlled-trial (2)
- range of motion (2)
- reactance (2)
- reactive aggression (2)
- reading (2)
- recognition (2)
- recollection (2)
- rehabilitation (2)
- relational aggression (2)
- replication (2)
- representation learning (2)
- response inhibition (2)
- response styles theory (2)
- responses (2)
- return to work (2)
- rheumatic diseases (2)
- rhythm perception (2)
- rhythmic grouping (2)
- risk factors (2)
- risk-factors (2)
- role-play (2)
- rotation (2)
- rumination (2)
- runners (2)
- running (2)
- sAA (2)
- sACC (2)
- salivary alpha-amylase (2)
- scene memorization (2)
- scene viewing (2)
- schedule (2)
- scholastic demands (2)
- school learning (2)
- school mathematics (2)
- self threat (2)
- self-control (2)
- sensitivity (2)
- sensorimotor control (2)
- sex-differences (2)
- skeletal joints (2)
- social inclusion (2)
- social reactivity (2)
- sociometric neglect (2)
- sociometric status (2)
- solid tumor (2)
- sonography (2)
- spatial frequencies (2)
- spatial frequency (SF) (2)
- special educational needs (2)
- specificity (2)
- speech kinematics (2)
- speech motor control (2)
- speech segmentation (2)
- spelling (2)
- sprinting (2)
- standardized patient (2)
- standardized patient information (2)
- standards (2)
- standing position (2)
- strength measurement system (2)
- stress intervention (2)
- stress management (2)
- stretch-shortening cycle (2)
- striking combat sports (2)
- study designs (2)
- study protocol (2)
- subtraction (2)
- surprisal (2)
- symptoms (2)
- syntax (2)
- synthesized voice (2)
- systematic review (2)
- systems (2)
- tVNS (2)
- taekwondo electronic scoring system (2)
- taekwondo-specific testing (2)
- talent (2)
- task (2)
- tasks (2)
- team handball (2)
- team sport (2)
- telerehabilitation (2)
- temporal frequency (2)
- text-to-speech (2)
- therapist competence (2)
- therapy (2)
- theta (2)
- time (2)
- time-efficient exercise (2)
- total hip replacement (2)
- total knee replacement (2)
- training adaptation (2)
- training intensity (2)
- training-program (2)
- transcutaneous vagus nerve stimulation (2)
- transfer (2)
- transformation (2)
- treatment integrity (2)
- triglycerides (2)
- trunk (2)
- ultrasound imaging (2)
- uncanny valley (2)
- variability (2)
- verb-phrase ellipsis (2)
- virtual reality (2)
- virus infection (2)
- vowels (2)
- weightlifting (2)
- well-being (2)
- women (2)
- words (2)
- work capacity (2)
- yellow flags (2)
- youth football (2)
- youth sport (2)
- 1-to-1 Correspondence (1)
- AMSTAR 2 (1)
- Acquired dysgraphia (1)
- Adaptive control (1)
- Adipositas (1)
- Age of acquisition (1)
- Aggression (1)
- Aging (1)
- Agrammatismus (1)
- Anforderungen (1)
- Aortic valve (1)
- Aphasia (1)
- Aspekt (1)
- Assembly task (1)
- Assessment (1)
- Attention (1)
- Aufsatzsammlung (1)
- Autismus (1)
- Background (1)
- Bayesian decision theory (1)
- Bayesianische Entscheidungstheorie (1)
- Belohnungserwartungsfehler (1)
- Belohnungsgrößen (1)
- Bildgebung (1)
- Blickbewegungsmessung (1)
- Bulgarian (1)
- Bulgarisch (1)
- CHOP (1)
- Cardinality (1)
- Cardiovascular risk factors (1)
- Category verification (1)
- Chile (1)
- Chinese (1)
- Chinesisch (1)
- Chronic heart failure (CHF) (1)
- Chronic low back pain (1)
- Clinical study (1)
- Cloze predictability (1)
- Co-occurrence probability (1)
- Cognition motor (1)
- Cognitive development (1)
- Competitive sport (1)
- Computational modeling (1)
- Contrast (1)
- Coping (1)
- Coping skills and adjustment (1)
- Countermovement jump (1)
- Covert orienting (1)
- Cross-lagged panel analysis (1)
- Crossover fatigue (1)
- Cultural intelligence (1)
- Cystic fibrosis (1)
- Depressive symptoms (1)
- Desensibilisierung (1)
- Deutsch (1)
- Development (1)
- Disengagement (1)
- Dopamin (1)
- Dynamische kognitive Modellierung (1)
- EKP (1)
- ERP (1)
- Emotionserkennung (1)
- Endocrine (1)
- Engagement (1)
- Entscheidungen (1)
- Event-related potentials (1)
- Exercise tests (1)
- Eyetracking (1)
- Fall risk (1)
- Fall risk assessment (1)
- Finger-based numerical representations (1)
- Finger-digit mapping (1)
- Fitness performance (1)
- Fixation duration (1)
- Fixational eye movements (1)
- Flat feet (1)
- Focus (1)
- Footwear (1)
- Force (1)
- Forced drop-out (1)
- Frail elderly (1)
- Future (1)
- GADD153 (1)
- GRP78 (1)
- Gedächtnis (1)
- Generalisation (1)
- Generalised magnitude system (1)
- Genetics (1)
- Givenness (1)
- Ground reaction force (1)
- Growth curve models (1)
- Grundschüler/innen (1)
- Health economics (1)
- Health promotion (1)
- Heart (1)
- Hirnentwicklung (1)
- Hirnstimulation (1)
- Home telemonitoring (1)
- Hot and cool executive functioning (1)
- Hungarian (1)
- Hypercholesterolemia (1)
- Hypertension (1)
- IL-6 (1)
- Ibero-Romance (1)
- Incremental Cost-Effectiveness Ratio (ICER) (1)
- Individualized therapy (1)
- Information structure (1)
- Instability (1)
- Intensity Dose -response relationship (1)
- Intercultural competence (1)
- Jugendliche (1)
- Juvenile idiopathic arthritis (1)
- Kindergarten (1)
- Kognition (1)
- Kognitionspsychologie (1)
- Kognitionswissenschaft (1)
- Kognitionswissenschaften (1)
- Komplementsatzverstehen (1)
- Konzept (1)
- Lateral jumps (1)
- Lesespanne (1)
- Lesestrategie (1)
- Linguistik (1)
- Load (1)
- Measure validation (1)
- Mediengewalt (1)
- Melatonin receptor type 2 (1)
- Mental arithmetic (1)
- Mental disorders (1)
- Mental health (1)
- Mental time line (1)
- Mental time travel (1)
- Metabolism (1)
- Metaphors (1)
- Microsaccades (1)
- Middle childhood (1)
- Mortality (1)
- Multiple risk factor intervention (1)
- Multisensory (1)
- Muscle (1)
- Muscularity concern (1)
- N400 (1)
- Negation (1)
- Neurostimulation (1)
- Nuclear accent (1)
- Operational momentum (1)
- Oral anticoagulation (1)
- Oral anticoagulation therapy (1)
- Ordinality (1)
- Orienting (1)
- Overt attention (1)
- Partikelverben (1)
- Past (1)
- Patholinguistik (1)
- Patient self-management (1)
- Perception-action coupling (1)
- Pointing (1)
- Postural stability (1)
- Power (1)
- Preaktivierung (1)
- Predictability (1)
- Preventive therapy (1)
- Prinzipal-Agent (1)
- Prosodic phrasing (1)
- Prosody (1)
- Prospective (1)
- Protective factors (1)
- Prävention (1)
- Psychologie (1)
- Psychology (1)
- Raum (1)
- Reading (1)
- Rechenstörung (1)
- Reflex (1)
- Reflexivpronomen (1)
- Rehabilitation (1)
- Rehearsal (1)
- Relativsätze (1)
- Resilience (1)
- Resiliency (1)
- Risiko (1)
- SNARC-Effekt (1)
- SRT (1)
- Satzlesen (1)
- Schiedsrichter (1)
- School (1)
- Selection (1)
- Semantic priming (1)
- Semantic typicality (1)
- Semantik (1)
- Seniors (1)
- Sentence comprehension (1)
- Sequential instruction (1)
- Sequenzielle Likelihood (1)
- Situated cognition (1)
- Skill (1)
- Smoking (1)
- Smoking cessation (1)
- Spatial-temporal association (1)
- Spelling (1)
- Sportvereinsmitgliedschaft (1)
- Sprache (1)
- Sprachtherapie (1)
- Sprechapraxie (1)
- Stretch-shortening cycle (1)
- Swimming performance (1)
- Telemedicine (1)
- Theory of Mind (1)
- Therapie (1)
- Time course (1)
- Trainer (1)
- Training Sozialer Kognition (1)
- Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation (1)
- Travel (1)
- Treatment (1)
- Type 1 diabetes (1)
- Umschriebene Entwicklungsstörung (1)
- Unaccusativity (1)
- Unergative verbs (1)
- Urteilsverzerrung (1)
- Videospiele (1)
- Vitamin k-antagonists (1)
- Vorhersagen (1)
- Vorschulkinder (1)
- Weight/shape concern (1)
- Wohngegend (1)
- Word frequency (1)
- Working memory updating (1)
- Worterkennung (1)
- Young male gymnast (1)
- Young swimmers (1)
- Youth (1)
- Zahl (1)
- Zahlen- und Mengenverständnis (1)
- acoustic phonetics (1)
- adaptive force (1)
- adaptive holding capacity (1)
- adherence (1)
- adherence to medical treatment (1)
- adjectives (1)
- adolescence (1)
- adolescent (1)
- agrammatism (1)
- anterior cruciate ligament (1)
- antonymy (1)
- anxiety (1)
- aphasia treatment (1)
- apraxia of speech (1)
- aspect (1)
- autism (1)
- behavior (1)
- bias (1)
- bone (1)
- brain development (1)
- brain lesions (1)
- brain stimulation (1)
- bullying (1)
- cardiorespiratory fitness (1)
- child (1)
- child development (1)
- child language (1)
- cholinesterase inhibitors (1)
- chronic condition (1)
- chronic kidney disease (1)
- classroom climate (1)
- climbing (1)
- clinical study (1)
- cognitive enhancement (1)
- cognitive modeling (1)
- cognitive science (1)
- cognitive sciences (1)
- cognitive skills (1)
- compatibility effect (1)
- competence (1)
- complementation (1)
- complex sentence processing (1)
- comprehension (1)
- comprehension of complement sentences (1)
- computer aided dosage (1)
- concept analysis (1)
- concepts (1)
- conceptualisation (1)
- conditioning stimulus (1)
- conduction aphasia (1)
- connectivity (1)
- consultation (1)
- content-addressable memory (1)
- control rates (1)
- conversational implicature (1)
- core (1)
- corpus study (1)
- cross-modal generalisation (1)
- cyberbullying (1)
- cytochrome P450 17A1 (Cyp17A1) (1)
- decannulation protocol (1)
- decision making (1)
- desensitization (1)
- developmental dyscalculia (1)
- dialect (1)
- dilatational tracheostomy (1)
- dimensional (1)
- dimensional overlap (1)
- disease severity (1)
- dopamine (1)
- dose-response relation (1)
- dose-response relationship (1)
- dual task (1)
- dynamical cognitive modeling (1)
- dyslipidemia (1)
- dysphagia (1)
- early speech perception and later language performance (1)
- eccentric muscle action (1)
- eccentric-plyometric (1)
- elderly (1)
- elementare Bewegungsfertigkeiten (1)
- elite sport (1)
- emotional expression (1)
- endoplasmic reticulum stress (1)
- evidence-based (1)
- exercise capacity (1)
- exercise stress test (1)
- expert system (1)
- eye movement (1)
- fMRT (1)
- face morphing (1)
- facial feedback (1)
- family risk for SLI (1)
- frailty (1)
- frequency (1)
- function (1)
- functional performance (1)
- fundamental movement skills (1)
- funktionelle Magnetresonanztomografie (1)
- gait (1)
- geerdete („grounded“) Kognition (1)
- gender agreement (1)
- genetics (1)
- gestures (1)
- glomerular filtration rate (1)
- grounded cognition (1)
- heart (1)
- hebrew (1)
- hemisphärische Asymmetrie (1)
- human language processing (1)
- hypertension (1)
- impact loading (1)
- implicit (1)
- implicit learning (1)
- implizit (1)
- incorporation (1)
- indirect dependency (1)
- individuelle Unterschiede (1)
- infection (1)
- inflammation (1)
- inflection (1)
- information structure (1)
- internet use (1)
- intervention (1)
- intervertebral disc (1)
- isometric muscle action (1)
- joint Simon effect (1)
- jump height/power (1)
- junge Erwachsene (1)
- kindergarten (1)
- kindliche Entwicklung (1)
- kognitive Fähigkeiten (1)
- kognitive Modellierung (1)
- körperliche Fitness (1)
- language network (1)
- leg extensors (1)
- lesion studies (1)
- lexical databases (1)
- lexicon (1)
- lexikalische Datenbanken (1)
- lifespan (1)
- linguistic determinism (1)
- linguistics (1)
- linguistische Determinismushypothese (1)
- living area (1)
- long distance wh-movement (1)
- macroplanning (1)
- major depression (1)
- mathematical cognition (1)
- maximal isometric torque (1)
- maximal voluntary contraction (1)
- media violence (1)
- medicine (1)
- memantine (1)
- menschliche Sprachverarbeitung (1)
- mental health (1)
- methodological quality (1)
- morphology (1)
- morphosyntax (1)
- motivational interviewing (1)
- motor development (1)
- motorische Leistungsfähigkeit (1)
- multilingualism (1)
- multimodal cardiac rehabilitation (1)
- musculature (1)
- native dialects (1)
- neuroenhancement (1)
- neuromuscular functionality (1)
- neuroscience (1)
- non-adjacent dependencies (1)
- non-fluent aphasia (1)
- non-native dialects (1)
- non-native speech perception (1)
- numeracy training (1)
- numerical competence (1)
- numerical distance effect (1)
- numerische Kognition (1)
- numerischer Abstandseffekt (1)
- older adults (1)
- onlineharmful experiences (1)
- outcome (1)
- outcome measures (1)
- p38 MAPK (1)
- parafoveal-on-foveal effects (1)
- particle verbs (1)
- past-tense (1)
- patholinguistics (1)
- performance enhancement (1)
- perpetration (1)
- phenprocoumon (1)
- physical activity (1)
- physical conditioning human (1)
- physiologische Verfahren (1)
- plasticity (1)
- politeness (1)
- portuguese (1)
- postural balance (1)
- preactivation (1)
- preschool children (1)
- prior-likelihood integration (1)
- processing of auditory nonverbal stimuli (1)
- psychiatry (1)
- psycho-oncology (1)
- psychophysiological measures (1)
- public health (1)
- quality indicator (1)
- rate of torque development (1)
- reading strategy (1)
- reading-span (1)
- referees (1)
- referential coding (1)
- referring expression (1)
- reflexives (1)
- registry (1)
- rehabilitation outcome (1)
- relational bullying (1)
- requirements (1)
- respiration (1)
- return-to-sport (1)
- reward anticipation (1)
- reward prediction error (1)
- reward system (1)
- rhythmic discrimination (1)
- risk (1)
- risk factor (1)
- risk of bias (1)
- robot voice (1)
- rule learning (1)
- rules (1)
- räumlich-numerische Assoziationen (1)
- school (1)
- school-aged children (1)
- selbstbestimmtes Lesen (1)
- self-efficacy (1)
- semantics (1)
- sensomotorische Integration (1)
- sensory input (1)
- sentence production (1)
- sentence reading (1)
- sequential attention shifts (1)
- sequential likelihood (1)
- serial reaction time (SRT) task (1)
- sexual aggression (1)
- sharenting (1)
- shoulder girdle (1)
- situated cognition (1)
- situierte („situated“ Kognition (1)
- skills (1)
- skipping costs/benefits (1)
- soccer (1)
- social cognition training (1)
- social meaning (1)
- social robot (1)
- socioeconomic status (1)
- sozioökonomischer Status (1)
- spatial response coding (1)
- specific developmental disorder (1)
- speech and language therapy (1)
- speech pathology (1)
- speech production (1)
- sports club participation (1)
- stability (1)
- static/dynamic postural control (1)
- stoma button (1)
- success (1)
- syntactic expectation (1)
- systematic (1)
- task difficulty (1)
- theory of mind (1)
- therapy volume (1)
- transdiagnostic (1)
- transkranielle Magnetstimulation (1)
- trust (1)
- ventral striatum (1)
- verbal bullying (1)
- verbal working memory (1)
- verbales Arbeitsgedächtnis (1)
- verkörperte Kognition (1)
- verteilte Verarbeitung (1)
- victimization (1)
- video games (1)
- virus (1)
- visuell-räumliche Aufmerksamkeit (1)
- visuospatial attention (1)
- warfarin (1)
- web-based (1)
- wellbeing (1)
- wh-scope marker (1)
- willingness to intervene (1)
- word order (1)
- word processing (1)
- word recognition (1)
- young adults (1)
- youth sports (1)
- fixation duration (1)
Institute
- Strukturbereich Kognitionswissenschaften (420) (remove)
Proceedings of KogWis 2010 : 10th Biannual Meeting of the German Society for Cognitive Science
(2010)
As the latest biannual meeting of the German Society for Cognitive Science (Gesellschaft für Kognitionswissenschaft, GK), KogWis 2010 at Potsdam University reflects the current trends in a fascinating domain of research concerned with human and artificial cognition and the interaction of mind and brain. The Plenary talks provide a venue for questions of the numerical capacities and human arithmetic (Brian Butterworth), of the theoretical development of cognitive architectures and intelligent virtual agents (Pat Langley), of categorizations induced by linguistic constructions (Claudia Maienborn), and of a cross-level account of the “Self as a complex system“ (Paul Thagard). KogWis 2010 integrates a wealth of experimental research, cognitive modelling, and conceptual analysis in 5 invited symposia, over 150 individual talks, 6 symposia, and more than 40 poster contributions. Some of the invited symposia reflect local and regional strenghts of research in the Berlin-Brandenburg area: the two largests research fields of the university Cognitive Sciences Area of Excellence in Potsdam are represented by an invited symposium on “Information Structure” by the Special Research Area 632 (“Sonderforschungsbereich”, SFB) of the same name, of Potsdam University and Humboldt-University Berlin, and by a satellite conference of the research group “Mind and Brain Dynamics”. The Berlin School of Mind and Brain at Humboldt-University Berlin takes part with an invited symposium on “Decision Making” from a perspective of cognitive neuroscience and philosophy and the DFG Cluster of Excellence “Languages of Emotion” of Free University presents interdisciplinary research results in an invited symposium on “Symbolising Emotions”.
The predictions of two contrasting approaches to the acquisition of transitive relative clauses were tested within the same groups of German-speaking participants aged from 3 to 5 years old. The input frequency approach predicts that object relative clauses with inanimate heads (e.g., the pullover that the man is scratching) are comprehended earlier and more accurately than those with an animate head (e.g., the man that the boy is scratching). In contrast, the structural intervention approach predicts that object relative clauses with two full NP arguments mismatching in number (e.g., the man that the boys are scratching) are comprehended earlier and more accurately than those with number-matching NPs (e.g., the man that the boy is scratching). These approaches were tested in two steps. First, we ran a corpus analysis to ensure that object relative clauses with number-mismatching NPs are not more frequent than object relative clauses with number-matching NPs in child directed speech. Next, the comprehension of these structures was tested experimentally in 3-, 4-, and 5-year-olds respectively by means of a color naming task. By comparing the predictions of the two approaches within the same participant groups, we were able to uncover that the effects predicted by the input frequency and by the structural intervention approaches co-exist and that they both influence the performance of children on transitive relative clauses, but in a manner that is modulated by age. These results reveal a sensitivity to animacy mismatch already being demonstrated by 3-year-olds and show that animacy is initially deployed more reliably than number to interpret relative clauses correctly. In all age groups, the animacy mismatch appears to explain the performance of children, thus, showing that the comprehension of frequent object relative clauses is enhanced compared to the other conditions. Starting with 4-year-olds but especially in 5-year-olds, the number mismatch supported comprehension—a facilitation that is unlikely to be driven by input frequency. Once children fine-tune their sensitivity to verb agreement information around the age of four, they are also able to deploy number marking to overcome the intervention effects. This study highlights the importance of testing experimentally contrasting theoretical approaches in order to characterize the multifaceted, developmental nature of language acquisition.
The predictions of two contrasting approaches to the acquisition of transitive relative clauses were tested within the same groups of German-speaking participants aged from 3 to 5 years old. The input frequency approach predicts that object relative clauses with inanimate heads (e.g., the pullover that the man is scratching) are comprehended earlier and more accurately than those with an animate head (e.g., the man that the boy is scratching). In contrast, the structural intervention approach predicts that object relative clauses with two full NP arguments mismatching in number (e.g., the man that the boys are scratching) are comprehended earlier and more accurately than those with number-matching NPs (e.g., the man that the boy is scratching). These approaches were tested in two steps. First, we ran a corpus analysis to ensure that object relative clauses with number-mismatching NPs are not more frequent than object relative clauses with number-matching NPs in child directed speech. Next, the comprehension of these structures was tested experimentally in 3-, 4-, and 5-year-olds respectively by means of a color naming task. By comparing the predictions of the two approaches within the same participant groups, we were able to uncover that the effects predicted by the input frequency and by the structural intervention approaches co-exist and that they both influence the performance of children on transitive relative clauses, but in a manner that is modulated by age. These results reveal a sensitivity to animacy mismatch already being demonstrated by 3-year-olds and show that animacy is initially deployed more reliably than number to interpret relative clauses correctly. In all age groups, the animacy mismatch appears to explain the performance of children, thus, showing that the comprehension of frequent object relative clauses is enhanced compared to the other conditions. Starting with 4-year-olds but especially in 5-year-olds, the number mismatch supported comprehension—a facilitation that is unlikely to be driven by input frequency. Once children fine-tune their sensitivity to verb agreement information around the age of four, they are also able to deploy number marking to overcome the intervention effects. This study highlights the importance of testing experimentally contrasting theoretical approaches in order to characterize the multifaceted, developmental nature of language acquisition.
Exploring generalisation following treatment of language deficits in aphasia can provide insights into the functional relation of the cognitive processing systems involved. In the present study, we first review treatment outcomes of interventions targeting sentence processing deficits and, second report a treatment study examining the occurrence of practice effects and generalisation in sentence comprehension and production. In order to explore the potential linkage between processing systems involved in comprehending and producing sentences, we investigated whether improvements generalise within (i.e., uni-modal generalisation in comprehension or in production) and/or across modalities (i.e., cross-modal generalisation from comprehension to production or vice versa). Two individuals with aphasia displaying co-occurring deficits in sentence comprehension and production were trained on complex, non-canonical sentences in both modalities. Two evidence-based treatment protocols were applied in a crossover intervention study with sequence of treatment phases being randomly allocated. Both participants benefited significantly from treatment, leading to uni-modal generalisation in both comprehension and production. However, cross-modal generalisation did not occur. The magnitude of uni-modal generalisation in sentence production was related to participants’ sentence comprehension performance prior to treatment. These findings support the assumption of modality-specific sub-systems for sentence comprehension and production, being linked uni-directionally from comprehension to production.
Das 3. Herbsttreffen Patholinguistik fand am 21. November 2009 an der Universität Potsdam statt. Der vorliegende Tagungsband enthält die drei Hauptvorträge zum Schwerpunktthema „Von der Programmierung zu Artikulation: Sprechapraxie bei Kindern und Erwachsenen“. Darüber hinaus enthält der Band die Beiträge aus dem Spektrum Patholinguistik, sowie die Abstracts der Posterpräsentationen.
The purpose of this study was to examine the test-retest reliability, and convergent and discriminative validity of a new taekwondo-specific change-of-direction (COD) speed test with striking techniques (TST) in elite taekwondo athletes. Twenty (10 males and 10 females) elite (athletes who compete at national level) and top-elite (athletes who compete at national and international level) taekwondo athletes with an average training background of 8.9 ± 1.3 years of systematic taekwondo training participated in this study. During the two-week test-retest period, various generic performance tests measuring COD speed, balance, speed, and jump performance were carried out during the first week and as a retest during the second week. Three TST trials were conducted with each athlete and the best trial was used for further analyses. The relevant performance measure derived from the TST was the time with striking penalty (TST-TSP). TST-TSP performances amounted to 10.57 ± 1.08 s for males and 11.74 ± 1.34 s for females. The reliability analysis of the TST performance was conducted after logarithmic transformation, in order to address the problem of heteroscedasticity. In both groups, the TST demonstrated a high relative test-retest reliability (intraclass correlation coefficients and 90% compatibility limits were 0.80 and 0.47 to 0.93, respectively). For absolute reliability, the TST’s typical error of measurement (TEM), 90% compatibility limits, and magnitudes were 4.6%, 3.4 to 7.7, for males, and 5.4%, 3.9 to 9.0, for females. The homogeneous sample of taekwondo athletes meant that the TST’s TEM exceeded the usual smallest important change (SIC) with 0.2 effect size in the two groups. The new test showed mostly very large correlations with linear sprint speed (r = 0.71 to 0.85) and dynamic balance (r = −0.71 and −0.74), large correlations with COD speed (r = 0.57 to 0.60) and vertical jump performance (r = −0.50 to −0.65), and moderate correlations with horizontal jump performance (r = −0.34 to −0.45) and static balance (r = −0.39 to −0.44). Top-elite athletes showed better TST performances than elite counterparts. Receiver operating characteristic analysis indicated that the TST effectively discriminated between top-elite and elite taekwondo athletes. In conclusion, the TST is a valid, and sensitive test to evaluate the COD speed with taekwondo specific skills, and reliable when considering ICC and TEM. Although the usefulness of the TST is questioned to detect small performance changes in the present population, the TST can detect moderate changes in taekwondo-specific COD speed.
The purpose of this study was to examine the test-retest reliability, and convergent and discriminative validity of a new taekwondo-specific change-of-direction (COD) speed test with striking techniques (TST) in elite taekwondo athletes. Twenty (10 males and 10 females) elite (athletes who compete at national level) and top-elite (athletes who compete at national and international level) taekwondo athletes with an average training background of 8.9 ± 1.3 years of systematic taekwondo training participated in this study. During the two-week test-retest period, various generic performance tests measuring COD speed, balance, speed, and jump performance were carried out during the first week and as a retest during the second week. Three TST trials were conducted with each athlete and the best trial was used for further analyses. The relevant performance measure derived from the TST was the time with striking penalty (TST-TSP). TST-TSP performances amounted to 10.57 ± 1.08 s for males and 11.74 ± 1.34 s for females. The reliability analysis of the TST performance was conducted after logarithmic transformation, in order to address the problem of heteroscedasticity. In both groups, the TST demonstrated a high relative test-retest reliability (intraclass correlation coefficients and 90% compatibility limits were 0.80 and 0.47 to 0.93, respectively). For absolute reliability, the TST’s typical error of measurement (TEM), 90% compatibility limits, and magnitudes were 4.6%, 3.4 to 7.7, for males, and 5.4%, 3.9 to 9.0, for females. The homogeneous sample of taekwondo athletes meant that the TST’s TEM exceeded the usual smallest important change (SIC) with 0.2 effect size in the two groups. The new test showed mostly very large correlations with linear sprint speed (r = 0.71 to 0.85) and dynamic balance (r = −0.71 and −0.74), large correlations with COD speed (r = 0.57 to 0.60) and vertical jump performance (r = −0.50 to −0.65), and moderate correlations with horizontal jump performance (r = −0.34 to −0.45) and static balance (r = −0.39 to −0.44). Top-elite athletes showed better TST performances than elite counterparts. Receiver operating characteristic analysis indicated that the TST effectively discriminated between top-elite and elite taekwondo athletes. In conclusion, the TST is a valid, and sensitive test to evaluate the COD speed with taekwondo specific skills, and reliable when considering ICC and TEM. Although the usefulness of the TST is questioned to detect small performance changes in the present population, the TST can detect moderate changes in taekwondo-specific COD speed.
We investigated the mental rehearsal of complex action instructions by recording spontaneous eye movements of healthy adults as they looked at objects on a monitor. Participants heard consecutive instructions, each of the form "move [object] to [location]''. Instructions were only to be executed after a go signal, by manipulating all objects successively with a mouse. Participants re-inspected previously mentioned objects already while listening to further instructions. This rehearsal behavior broke down after 4 instructions, coincident with participants' instruction span, as determined from subsequent execution accuracy. These results suggest that spontaneous eye movements while listening to instructions predict their successful execution.
This study aimed to investigate the relationship between the acute to chronic workload ratio (ACWR), based upon participant session rating of perceived exertion (sRPE), using two models [(1) rolling averages (ACWRRA); and (2) exponentially weighted moving averages (ACWREWMA)] and the injury rate in young male team soccer players aged 17.1 ± 0.7 years during a competitive mesocycle. Twenty-two players were enrolled in this study and performed four training sessions per week with 2 days of recovery and 1 match day per week. During each training session and each weekly match, training time and sRPE were recorded. In addition, training impulse (TRIMP), monotony, and strain were subsequently calculated. The rate of injury was recorded for each soccer player over a period of 4 weeks (i.e., 28 days) using a daily questionnaire. The results showed that over the course of the study, the number of non-contact injuries was significantly higher than that for contact injuries (2.5 vs. 0.5, p = 0.01). There were also significant positive correlations between sRPE and training time (r = 0.411, p = 0.039), ACWRRA (r = 0.47, p = 0.049), and ACWREWMA (r = 0.51, p = 0.038). In addition, small-to-medium correlations were detected between ACWR and non-contact injury occurrence (ACWRRA, r = 0.31, p = 0.05; ACWREWMA, r = 0.53, p = 0.03). Explained variance (r 2) for non-contact injury was significantly greater using the ACWREWMA model (ranging between 21 and 52%) compared with ACWRRA (ranging between 17 and 39%). In conclusion, the results of this study showed that the ACWREWMA model is more sensitive than ACWRRA to identify non-contact injury occurrence in male team soccer players during a short period in the competitive season.
This study aimed to investigate the relationship between the acute to chronic workload ratio (ACWR), based upon participant session rating of perceived exertion (sRPE), using two models [(1) rolling averages (ACWRRA); and (2) exponentially weighted moving averages (ACWREWMA)] and the injury rate in young male team soccer players aged 17.1 ± 0.7 years during a competitive mesocycle. Twenty-two players were enrolled in this study and performed four training sessions per week with 2 days of recovery and 1 match day per week. During each training session and each weekly match, training time and sRPE were recorded. In addition, training impulse (TRIMP), monotony, and strain were subsequently calculated. The rate of injury was recorded for each soccer player over a period of 4 weeks (i.e., 28 days) using a daily questionnaire. The results showed that over the course of the study, the number of non-contact injuries was significantly higher than that for contact injuries (2.5 vs. 0.5, p = 0.01). There were also significant positive correlations between sRPE and training time (r = 0.411, p = 0.039), ACWRRA (r = 0.47, p = 0.049), and ACWREWMA (r = 0.51, p = 0.038). In addition, small-to-medium correlations were detected between ACWR and non-contact injury occurrence (ACWRRA, r = 0.31, p = 0.05; ACWREWMA, r = 0.53, p = 0.03). Explained variance (r²) for non-contact injury was significantly greater using the ACWREWMA model (ranging between 21 and 52%) compared with ACWRRA (ranging between 17 and 39%). In conclusion, the results of this study showed that the ACWREWMA model is more sensitive than ACWRRA to identify non-contact injury occurrence in male team soccer players during a short period in the competitive season.