Refine
Has Fulltext
- yes (161)
Year of publication
Document Type
- Postprint (161) (remove)
Language
- English (161) (remove)
Keywords
- exercise (7)
- football (7)
- embodied cognition (6)
- performance (5)
- working memory (5)
- fMRI (4)
- German (3)
- SNARC (3)
- adolescents (3)
- aging (3)
- balance (3)
- emotion (3)
- injury risk (3)
- interoception (3)
- language acquisition (3)
- locality (3)
- major depressive disorder (3)
- neuroimaging (3)
- physiology (3)
- training load (3)
- young athletes (3)
- youth (3)
- Adaptive Force (2)
- Aftercare (2)
- Children (2)
- Chronic conditions (2)
- Exercise (2)
- Holding isometric muscle action (2)
- Mechanotendography (2)
- NutriAct Family Study (2)
- Performance (2)
- Predictors (2)
- Pushing isometric muscle action (2)
- Quality of life (2)
- Randomized controlled trial (2)
- Spanish (2)
- activation (2)
- biomechanics (2)
- childhood (2)
- diabetes (2)
- doping (2)
- elite athletes (2)
- exercise therapy (2)
- expectation (2)
- eye movements (2)
- eye-tracking (2)
- fatigue (2)
- individual differences (2)
- injury (2)
- insula (2)
- interoceptive awareness (2)
- language (2)
- mental arithmetic (2)
- mental simulation (2)
- mind wandering (2)
- monitoring (2)
- neuromuscular (2)
- numerical cognition (2)
- obesity (2)
- oncology (2)
- operational momentum (2)
- osteoporosis (2)
- postural stability (2)
- rate of perceived exertion (2)
- recovery (2)
- reliability (2)
- resistance training (2)
- rolling averages (2)
- sentence comprehension (2)
- sentence processing (2)
- sport-specific performance (2)
- sports (2)
- training (2)
- validity (2)
- weighted moving averages (2)
- working memory capacity (2)
- ACT-R (1)
- ACWR (1)
- AUD (1)
- Achilles and patellar tendon (1)
- Acoustic Analysis (1)
- Adolescents (1)
- Adult-child interaction (1)
- Amygdala (1)
- Anti-doping guideline (1)
- Anti-doping program (1)
- Appearance (1)
- Attrition (1)
- Back pain diagnosis (1)
- Back pain prognosis (1)
- Balance (1)
- Biomarker (1)
- Broca’s aphasia (1)
- COVID-19 (1)
- COVID-19 pandemic (1)
- Cardiac rehabilitation (1)
- Cardiovascular diseases (1)
- Catalan VCV Sequences (1)
- Child (1)
- Chronic low back pain (1)
- Clinical psychology (1)
- Clinical supervision (1)
- Closure Positive Shift (CPS) (1)
- Cloze predictability (1)
- Co-occurrence probability (1)
- Cognition (1)
- Cognitive impairment (1)
- Coping (1)
- Coping skills and adjustment (1)
- Cost-effectiveness (1)
- Covert orienting (1)
- Cross-frequency PLV (1)
- Cross-sectoral care (1)
- Cystic fibrosis (1)
- DLT (1)
- Daily life (1)
- Data pooling (1)
- Decision making (1)
- Delirium prevention (1)
- Dementia (1)
- Developmental hyperscanning (1)
- Diary study (1)
- Digital intervention (1)
- Doping (1)
- Dual EEG analysis (1)
- Dynamometry (1)
- EEG (1)
- ERPs (1)
- Eating behavior (1)
- Eccentric muscle action (1)
- Education (1)
- Elective surgery (1)
- Elite sports schools (1)
- Embodied cognition (1)
- English (1)
- Event-related Potentials (ERP) (1)
- Evidence-based psychotherapy (1)
- Exercise therapy (1)
- Experience sampling method (1)
- Facial Expressions (1)
- Fatigue (1)
- FieldTrip (1)
- Fixational eye movements (1)
- Flat feet (1)
- Football (1)
- Footwear (1)
- Frailty (1)
- GNAT (1)
- Games (1)
- Geriatric rehabilitation (1)
- Grip force (1)
- Ground reaction force (1)
- HDL (1)
- Hamstring-quadriceps ratio (1)
- Healthy aging (1)
- Home-based (1)
- Human physical conditioning (1)
- Iambic/Trochaic Law (1)
- Individualized therapy (1)
- Information (1)
- Injury (1)
- Injury risk (1)
- Interoception (1)
- Intuitive eating (1)
- Isometric contraction (1)
- Isometric muscle action (1)
- Juvenile idiopathic arthritis (1)
- LDL (1)
- Learning (1)
- Lingual Coarticulation (1)
- Locus Equations (1)
- Mandarin-English bilinguals (1)
- Martial arts (1)
- Measure validation (1)
- Mechanomyography (1)
- Mental number line (1)
- Metaanalysis (1)
- Microsaccades (1)
- Microvascular blood filling (1)
- Mindfulness (1)
- Mixed methods (1)
- Mobility (1)
- Motor system (1)
- Movement (1)
- Multisensory (1)
- Muscle strength (1)
- Muscle twitch (1)
- Musculoskeletal and neural physiological phenomena (1)
- Music cognition (1)
- Non-invasive vagus nerve stimulation (1)
- Noradrenaline (1)
- Number processing (1)
- Obesity (1)
- Older adults (1)
- Older patients (1)
- Outcome measures (1)
- Overhead athletes (1)
- Oxygen saturation (1)
- PLV (1)
- PROGRESS/TRIPOD (1)
- Pain screening (1)
- Partnership (1)
- Perception (1)
- Persian (1)
- Phase Locking Value (1)
- Plyometric exercise (1)
- Postoperative cognitive dysfunction (1)
- Prediction of disability/intensity (1)
- Prospective (1)
- Protective factors (1)
- Psychotherapeutic competencies (1)
- Psychotherapy research (1)
- Pulling isometric muscle action (1)
- RPE (1)
- Randomized-controlled trial (1)
- Recognition Memory (1)
- Recollection (1)
- Recovery (1)
- Regulatory focus (1)
- Rehabilitation (1)
- Repeated sprint (1)
- Resilience (1)
- Resiliency (1)
- Resistance (1)
- Resistance training (1)
- Role-playing (1)
- SEMG-pattern (1)
- SFON (1)
- SNARC effect (1)
- SRT (1)
- Scale development (1)
- Self-stigmatization (1)
- Shoulder (1)
- Simulated patients (1)
- Speech Motor Control (1)
- Speed (1)
- Sport-specific performance (1)
- Standardized patients (1)
- State and trait measurement (1)
- Stress levels (1)
- Stretch-shortening cycle (1)
- Stroop effect (1)
- Supervision (1)
- Swimming performance (1)
- Systematic review (1)
- TAVI (1)
- TMS (1)
- Team sports (1)
- Telerehabilitation (1)
- Time to task failure (1)
- Total hip replacement (1)
- Total knee replacement (1)
- Treatment pathways (1)
- Trust (1)
- Trustworthiness (1)
- Two forms of isometric muscle action (1)
- Type 1 diabetes (1)
- Ultrasound (1)
- Video games (1)
- Vocal-Tract (1)
- Weight (1)
- Weight bias internalization (1)
- Weight management trial (1)
- Working memory (1)
- Yellow flags (1)
- Young swimmers (1)
- Youth (1)
- abstract concepts (1)
- academy (1)
- accommodation (1)
- achilles tendinopathy (1)
- action language (1)
- action processing (1)
- action segmentation (1)
- action words (1)
- acute chronic workload ratio (1)
- adaptability (1)
- adaptation to external force impact (1)
- adaptive force (1)
- adaptive holding capacity (1)
- addition (1)
- additive particles (1)
- adjectives (1)
- adolescent sport (1)
- advanced disease (1)
- aftercare (1)
- aggression (1)
- agility (1)
- aging brain (1)
- alcohol consumption (1)
- alexithymia (1)
- allometry (1)
- alpha-2 (1)
- alternatives (1)
- amateur soccer players (1)
- ambiguities (1)
- anaphoricity (1)
- anger (1)
- animacy (1)
- ankles (1)
- anterior cruciate ligament (1)
- antidepressants (1)
- antilocality (1)
- antonymy (1)
- apoptosis (1)
- approach (1)
- arithmetic (1)
- athletes (1)
- attention (1)
- attitude (1)
- automatic facial expression analysis (1)
- avoidance (1)
- back pain (1)
- balance strategy (1)
- balance training (1)
- behavior (1)
- behavioral and self-report measures (1)
- behavioral weight loss (1)
- bilingualism (1)
- biological age (1)
- biological maturation (1)
- blood (1)
- body density (1)
- body limbs (1)
- body shape (1)
- body-specificity hypothesis (1)
- bone mineral density (1)
- bone pathologies (1)
- bone–brain–nervous system interactions (1)
- break interventions (1)
- broadband and narrowband dimensions of behavior (1)
- bullying (1)
- calcaneal eversion (1)
- cancer (1)
- canoe racing (1)
- carcinoma (1)
- cardiac catheterization (CC) (1)
- cardiac rehabilitation (1)
- cardiomyopathy (1)
- carryover effects (1)
- central and peripheral vision (1)
- change (1)
- change of direction (1)
- change-of-direction speed (1)
- chemo-toxicity (1)
- child language (1)
- children and adolescents (1)
- cholesterol (1)
- chronic health condition (1)
- classroom climate (1)
- clauses (1)
- clinical pain research (1)
- coarticulation (1)
- cognition (1)
- cognitive bias (1)
- cognitive decline (1)
- cognitive enhancement (1)
- cognitive linguistics (1)
- cognitive module (1)
- cognitive psychology (1)
- cognitive resources (1)
- cognitive training (1)
- cognitive-postural dual task (1)
- cognitive/muscular fatigue (1)
- color (1)
- common ground (1)
- complaints (1)
- complex predicates (1)
- computer games (1)
- concurrent training (1)
- conditioning exercise (1)
- confidence (1)
- consultation (1)
- contractions (1)
- controlled trial (1)
- conversational implicature (1)
- core strength (1)
- corpus dataset (1)
- counting (1)
- creative problem solving (1)
- creativity (1)
- cross-domain priming (1)
- cross-lagged panel analysis (1)
- cruciate ligament injury (1)
- deep learning (1)
- depressive disorder (1)
- derivation (1)
- development (1)
- developmental dyslexia (1)
- diabetes mellitus (1)
- dietary quality (1)
- discourse (1)
- distress (1)
- divergent thinking (1)
- drop jump (1)
- dual task (1)
- dual-task (1)
- early sport specialization (1)
- eccentric muscle action (1)
- eccentric-plyometric (1)
- electromyography (1)
- elf-determination theory (1)
- embodiment (1)
- emerging adults (1)
- emotion recognition (1)
- emotional expression (1)
- emotional intensity (1)
- emotional regulation (1)
- endocrine pathways (1)
- entropy (1)
- epidemiology (1)
- episodic memory (1)
- ethnic stereotypes (1)
- executive function (1)
- executive functions (1)
- exercise program (1)
- exercise training (1)
- experimental data (1)
- external load (1)
- external training load (1)
- eye movement (1)
- eyedness (1)
- eyes (1)
- face morphing (1)
- facial feedback (1)
- feeling of presence (1)
- feet (1)
- fiction (1)
- figurative language (1)
- fitness tests (1)
- food neophilia (1)
- footedness (1)
- force (1)
- freedom restriction (1)
- frequency (1)
- frustration (1)
- functional performance (1)
- gastrointestinal cancer (1)
- gestural organization (1)
- global positioning system (1)
- goal frames (1)
- granularity (1)
- ground reaction force (1)
- ground reaction forces (1)
- hamstring injuries (1)
- hamstring muscles (1)
- hand (1)
- health care (1)
- healthy eating (1)
- heart rate variability (1)
- hebrew (1)
- hematocrit (1)
- hemispheric asymmetry (1)
- heuristics and biases (1)
- high density lipoprotein cholesterol (1)
- high-intensity interval training (1)
- hip (1)
- home-based (1)
- hopelessness (1)
- hormones (1)
- hospitalization (1)
- human performance (1)
- human physical conditioning (1)
- human-robot interaction (1)
- humans (1)
- hypothesis (1)
- idiom (1)
- imaginary world (1)
- impact on pre-activated Achilles tendon (1)
- implicit associations (1)
- implicit learning (1)
- in-group stereotypes (1)
- inclusive education (1)
- incubation effect (1)
- inflection (1)
- information integration (1)
- input frequency (1)
- interference (1)
- internalizing behavior (1)
- interoceptive sensibility (1)
- intervention (1)
- isometric eccentric force (1)
- isometric muscle action (1)
- jump performance (1)
- jump training (1)
- jumping (1)
- kinematic boundary cues (1)
- kinematics (1)
- kinetics (1)
- knee osteoarthritis (1)
- knees (1)
- latency (1)
- laterality (1)
- lexicon (1)
- lexicon size (1)
- life events (1)
- limb overuse conditions (1)
- lingering misinterpretation (1)
- lipids (1)
- literacy acquisition (1)
- long-term (1)
- longitudinal (1)
- longitudinal study (1)
- low density lipoprotein cholesterol (1)
- low-back-pain (1)
- lower-extremity kinematics (1)
- macrostructure (1)
- magnetoencephalography (1)
- magnitude estimation (1)
- material fatigue (1)
- mathematical precursor (1)
- maturity (1)
- maximal voluntary contraction (1)
- measurement (1)
- mechanical tendinous oscillations (1)
- medial longitudinal arch (1)
- memory (1)
- mental health (1)
- mental number line (1)
- mental number line (MNL) (1)
- meta-analysis (1)
- meta-science (1)
- metaphor (1)
- methodology (1)
- methods (1)
- miRNAs (1)
- microstructure (1)
- mindfulness-based stress reduction (1)
- mitochondrial adaptation (1)
- modality (1)
- modality compatibility (1)
- morphological decomposition (1)
- morphological errors (1)
- morphology (1)
- motivation (1)
- motor control (1)
- motor resonance (1)
- motor skills (1)
- motor system (1)
- motor unit synchronization (1)
- movement (1)
- mozart effect (1)
- muscle (1)
- muscle action (1)
- muscle activation (1)
- muscle coactivation (1)
- muscle fitness (1)
- muscle metabolism (1)
- muscle power (1)
- muscle strength (1)
- muscular activity (1)
- musculoskeletal and neural physiological phenomena (1)
- music cognition (1)
- music information retrieval (1)
- music perception (1)
- musicality (1)
- narrative (1)
- narrative skills (1)
- negation (1)
- negative expectation (1)
- neuroendocrine (1)
- neuroenhancement (1)
- neuromuscular functionality (1)
- neuromuscular pre-activation (1)
- neuroplasticity (1)
- newborns (1)
- non-adjacent dependencies (1)
- non-athletes (1)
- number (1)
- number knowledge (1)
- oarsmen (1)
- object search (1)
- occupational prognosis (1)
- on-water performance (1)
- out-group stereotypes (1)
- overreaching (1)
- overtraining (1)
- overuse injuries (1)
- palliative care (1)
- paralinguistic features (1)
- passive stretching (1)
- past-tense (1)
- patient-centered care (1)
- peak torque (1)
- pelvic alignment (1)
- performance enhancement (1)
- perspective-taking (1)
- physical fitness (1)
- physical fitness expertise (1)
- physical performance (1)
- plyometric exercise (1)
- plyometric training (1)
- plyometrics (1)
- politeness (1)
- portuguese (1)
- postural control (1)
- postural sway (1)
- power (1)
- power improvement (1)
- pre-activity (1)
- pre-school (1)
- prefixes (1)
- preschoolers (1)
- presupposition (1)
- prevalence information (1)
- prevention (1)
- primary school (1)
- privileged ground (1)
- proactive aggression (1)
- problem solving (1)
- processing (1)
- prognosis (1)
- prosodic boundary cues (1)
- prosody processing (1)
- prototype-willingness-model (1)
- psycho-oncology (1)
- psychoeducation (1)
- psychopathology (1)
- psychophysiological (1)
- psychosocial stress (1)
- psychotherapy process (1)
- pupil diameter (1)
- quality (1)
- quality of life (1)
- race time (1)
- randomized-controlled-trial (1)
- range of motion (1)
- reactance (1)
- reactive aggression (1)
- recognition (1)
- recollection (1)
- rehabilitation (1)
- relational aggression (1)
- relational bullying (1)
- relative clauses (1)
- remission (1)
- replication (1)
- representation learning (1)
- response inhibition (1)
- response styles theory (1)
- responses (1)
- return to work (1)
- return-to-sport (1)
- rheumatic diseases (1)
- rhythm perception (1)
- rhythmic grouping (1)
- risk factors (1)
- risk-factors (1)
- role-play (1)
- rotation (1)
- rule learning (1)
- rules (1)
- rumination (1)
- runners (1)
- running (1)
- running mechanics (1)
- sAA (1)
- sACC (1)
- salivary alpha-amylase (1)
- scene memorization (1)
- scene viewing (1)
- schedule (1)
- scholastic demands (1)
- school (1)
- school learning (1)
- school mathematics (1)
- self threat (1)
- self-control (1)
- self-efficacy (1)
- self-paced reading (1)
- sensitivity (1)
- sensorimotor control (1)
- serial reaction time (SRT) task (1)
- sex-differences (1)
- skeletal joints (1)
- skills (1)
- social inclusion (1)
- social meaning (1)
- social reactivity (1)
- sociometric neglect (1)
- sociometric status (1)
- solid tumor (1)
- sonography (1)
- spatial frequencies (1)
- spatial frequency (SF) (1)
- spatial-numerical associations (1)
- special educational needs (1)
- specificity (1)
- speech kinematics (1)
- speech motor control (1)
- speech perception (1)
- speech segmentation (1)
- spelling (1)
- sprinting (1)
- stability (1)
- standardized patient (1)
- standardized patient information (1)
- standards (1)
- standing position (1)
- strength measurement system (1)
- stress intervention (1)
- stress management (1)
- stretch-shortening cycle (1)
- striking combat sports (1)
- study designs (1)
- study protocol (1)
- subtraction (1)
- surprisal (1)
- symptoms (1)
- syntax (1)
- synthesized voice (1)
- systematic review (1)
- systems (1)
- tVNS (1)
- taekwondo electronic scoring system (1)
- taekwondo-specific testing (1)
- talent (1)
- task (1)
- tasks (1)
- team handball (1)
- team sport (1)
- telerehabilitation (1)
- temporal frequency (1)
- text-to-speech (1)
- therapist competence (1)
- theta (1)
- time (1)
- time-efficient exercise (1)
- total hip replacement (1)
- total knee replacement (1)
- training adaptation (1)
- training intensity (1)
- training-program (1)
- transcutaneous vagus nerve stimulation (1)
- transfer (1)
- transformation (1)
- treatment integrity (1)
- triglycerides (1)
- trunk (1)
- ultrasound imaging (1)
- uncanny valley (1)
- variability (1)
- verb-phrase ellipsis (1)
- verbal bullying (1)
- virtual reality (1)
- virus infection (1)
- vowels (1)
- web-based (1)
- weightlifting (1)
- well-being (1)
- willingness to intervene (1)
- women (1)
- word processing (1)
- words (1)
- work capacity (1)
- yellow flags (1)
- youth football (1)
- youth sport (1)
- fixation duration (1)
Institute
- Strukturbereich Kognitionswissenschaften (161) (remove)
Poor dietary quality is a major cause of morbidity, making the promotion of healthy eating a societal priority. Older adults are a critical target group for promoting healthy eating to enable healthy aging. One factor suggested to promote healthy eating is the willingness to try unfamiliar foods, referred to as food neophilia. This two-wave longitudinal study explored the stability of food neophilia and dietary quality and their prospective relationship over three years, analyzing self-reported data from N = 960 older adults (MT1 = 63.4, range = 50–84) participating in the NutriAct Family Study (NFS) in a cross-lagged panel design. Dietary quality was rated using the NutriAct diet score, based on the current evidence for chronic disease prevention. Food neophilia was measured using the Variety Seeking Tendency Scale. The analyses revealed high a longitudinal stability of both constructs and a small positive cross-sectional correlation between them. Food neophilia had no prospective effect on dietary quality, whereas a very small positive prospective effect of dietary quality on food neophilia was found. Our findings give initial insights into the positive relation of food neophilia and a health-promoting diet in aging and underscore the need for more in-depth research, e.g., on the constructs’ developmental trajectories and potential critical windows of opportunity for promoting food neophilia.
Achilles tendinopathy (AT) is a debilitating injury in athletes, especially for those engaged in repetitive stretch-shortening cycle activities. Clinical risk factors are numerous, but it has been suggested that altered biomechanics might be associated with AT. No systematic review has been conducted investigating these biomechanical alterations in specifically athletic populations. Therefore, the aim of this systematic review was to compare the lower-limb biomechanics of athletes with AT to athletically matched asymptomatic controls. Databases were searched for relevant studies investigating biomechanics during gait activities and other motor tasks such as hopping, isolated strength tasks, and reflex responses. Inclusion criteria for studies were an AT diagnosis in at least one group, cross-sectional or prospective data, at least one outcome comparing biomechanical data between an AT and healthy group, and athletic populations. Studies were excluded if patients had Achilles tendon rupture/surgery, participants reported injuries other than AT, and when only within-subject data was available.. Effect sizes (Cohen's d) with 95% confidence intervals were calculated for relevant outcomes. The initial search yielded 4,442 studies. After screening, twenty studies (775 total participants) were synthesised, reporting on a wide range of biomechanical outcomes. Females were under-represented and patients in the AT group were three years older on average. Biomechanical alterations were identified in some studies during running, hopping, jumping, strength tasks and reflex activity. Equally, several biomechanical variables studied were not associated with AT in included studies, indicating a conflicting picture. Kinematics in AT patients appeared to be altered in the lower limb, potentially indicating a pattern of “medial collapse”. Muscular activity of the calf and hips was different between groups, whereby AT patients exhibited greater calf electromyographic amplitudes despite lower plantar flexor strength. Overall, dynamic maximal strength of the plantar flexors, and isometric strength of the hips might be reduced in the AT group. This systematic review reports on several biomechanical alterations in athletes with AT. With further research, these factors could potentially form treatment targets for clinicians, although clinical approaches should take other contributing health factors into account. The studies included were of low quality, and currently no solid conclusions can be drawn.
Research within the framework of Basic Psychological Need Theory (BPNT) finds strong associations between basic need frustration and depressive symptoms. This study examined the role of rumination as an underlying mechanism in the association between basic psychological need frustration and depressive symptoms. A cross-sectional sample of N = 221 adults (55.2% female, mean age = 27.95, range = 18–62, SD = 10.51) completed measures assessing their level of basic psychological need frustration, rumination, and depressive symptoms. Correlational analyses and multiple mediation models were conducted. Brooding partially mediated the relation between need frustration and depressive symptoms. BPNT and Response Styles Theory are compatible and can further advance knowledge about depression vulnerabilities.
Background: As the number of cardiac diseases continuously increases within the last years in modern society, so does cardiac treatment, especially cardiac catheterization. The procedure of a cardiac catheterization is challenging for both patients and practitioners. Several potential stressors of psychological or physical nature can occur during the procedure. The objective of the study is to develop and implement a stress management intervention for both practitioners and patients that aims to reduce the psychological and physical strain of a cardiac catheterization.
Methods: The clinical study (DRKS00026624) includes two randomized controlled intervention trials with parallel groups, for patients with elective cardiac catheterization and practitioners at the catheterization lab, in two clinic sites of the Ernst-von-Bergmann clinic network in Brandenburg, Germany. Both groups received different interventions for stress management. The intervention for patients comprises a psychoeducational video with different stress management technics and additional a standardized medical information about the cardiac catheterization examination. The control condition includes the in hospitals practiced medical patient education before the examination (usual care). Primary and secondary outcomes are measured by physiological parameters and validated questionnaires, the day before (M1) and after (M2) the cardiac catheterization and at a postal follow-up 6 months later (M3). It is expected that people with standardized information and psychoeducation show reduced complications during cardiac catheterization procedures, better pre- and post-operative wellbeing, regeneration, mood and lower stress levels over time. The intervention for practitioners includes a Mindfulness-based stress reduction program (MBSR) over 8 weeks supervised by an experienced MBSR practitioner directly at the clinic site and an operative guideline. It is expected that practitioners with intervention show improved perceived and chronic stress, occupational health, physical and mental function, higher effort-reward balance, regeneration and quality of life. Primary and secondary outcomes are measured by physiological parameters (heart rate variability, saliva cortisol) and validated questionnaires and will be assessed before (M1) and after (M2) the MBSR intervention and at a postal follow-up 6 months later (M3). Physiological biomarkers in practitioners will be assessed before (M1) and after intervention (M2) on two work days and a two days off. Intervention effects in both groups (practitioners and patients) will be evaluated separately using multivariate variance analysis.
Discussion: This study evaluates the effectiveness of two stress management intervention programs for patients and practitioners within cardiac catheter laboratory. Study will disclose strains during a cardiac catheterization affecting both patients and practitioners. For practitioners it may contribute to improved working conditions and occupational safety, preservation of earning capacity, avoidance of participation restrictions and loss of performance. In both groups less anxiety, stress and complications before and during the procedures can be expected. The study may add knowledge how to eliminate stressful exposures and to contribute to more (psychological) security, less output losses and exhaustion during work. The evolved stress management guidelines, training manuals and the standardized patient education should be transferred into clinical routines
Cutting-edge hyperscanning methods led to a paradigm shift in social neuroscience. It allowed researchers to measure dynamic mutual alignment of neural processes between two or more individuals in naturalistic contexts. The ever-growing interest in hyperscanning research calls for the development of transparent and validated data analysis methods to further advance the field. We have developed and tested a dual electroencephalography (EEG) analysis pipeline, namely DEEP. Following the preprocessing of the data, DEEP allows users to calculate Phase Locking Values (PLVs) and cross-frequency PLVs as indices of inter-brain phase alignment of dyads as well as time-frequency responses and EEG power for each participant. The pipeline also includes scripts to control for spurious correlations. Our goal is to contribute to open and reproducible science practices by making DEEP publicly available together with an example mother-infant EEG hyperscanning dataset.
Background
Benefit finding, defined as perceiving positive life changes resulting from adversity and negative life stressors, gains growing attention in the context of chronic illness. The study aimed at examining the psychometric properties of the Benefit Finding Scale for Children (BFSC) in a sample of German youth facing chronic conditions.
Methods
A sample of adolescents with various chronic conditions (N = 304; 12 – 21years) completed the 10-item BFSC along with measures of intra- and interpersonal resources, coping strategies, and health-related quality of life (hrQoL). The total sample was randomly divided into two subsamples for conducting exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses (EFA/CFA).
Results
EFA revealed that the BFSC scores had a one-dimensional factor structure. CFA verified the one-dimensional factor structure with an acceptable fit. The BFSC exhibited acceptable internal consistency (α = 0.87 – 0.88) and construct validity. In line with our hypotheses, benefit finding was positively correlated with optimism, self-esteem, self-efficacy, sense of coherence, and support seeking. There were no correlations with avoidance, wishful thinking, emotional reaction, and hrQoL. Sex differences in benefit finding were not consistent across subsamples. Benefit finding was also positively associated with age, disease severity, and social status.
Conclusions
The BFSC is a psychometrically sound instrument to assess benefit finding in adolescents with chronic illness and may facilitate further research on positive adaptation processes in adolescents, irrespective of their specific diagnosis.
Background: Children’s spontaneous focusing on numerosity (SFON) is related to numerical skills. This study aimed to examine (1) the developmental trajectory of SFON and (2) the interrelations between SFON and early numerical skills at pre-school as well as their influence on arithmetical skills at school. Method: Overall, 1868 German pre-school children were repeatedly assessed until second grade. Nonverbal intelligence, visual attention, visuospatial working memory, SFON and numerical skills were assessed at age five (M = 63 months, Time 1) and age six (M = 72 months, Time 2), and arithmetic was assessed at second grade (M = 95 months, Time 3). Results: SFON increased significantly during pre-school. Path analyses revealed interrelations between SFON and several numerical skills, except number knowledge. Magnitude estimation and basic calculation skills (Time 1 and Time 2), and to a small degree number knowledge (Time 2), contributed directly to arithmetic in second grade. The connection between SFON and arithmetic was fully mediated by magnitude estimation and calculation skills at pre-school. Conclusion: Our results indicate that SFON first and foremost influences deeper understanding of numerical concepts at pre-school and—in contrast to previous findings –affects only indirectly children’s arithmetical development at school.
Studies have revealed mixed results on how antidepressant drugs affect lipid profiles of patients with major depression disorder (MDD). Even less is known about how patients respond to a switch of antidepressant medication with respect to their metabolic profile. For this, effects of a switch in antidepressants medication on lipid markers were studied in MDD patients. 15 participants (females = 86.67%; males = 13.33%; age: 49.45 ± 7.45 years) with MDD and a prescribed switch in their antidepressant medication were recruited at a psychosomatic rehabilitation clinic. Participants were characterized (with questionnaires and blood samples) at admission to the rehabilitation clinic (baseline, T0) and followed up with a blood sample two weeks (T1) later. HDL, LDL, total cholesterol, and triglycerides were determined (T0), and their change analyzed (Wilcoxon test) at follow up (T1). Decrements in HDL (p = 0.041), LDL (p < 0.001), and total cholesterol (p < 0.001) were observed two weeks after a switch in antidepressant medication. Triglycerides showed no difference (p = 0.699). Overall, LDL, HDL, and total cholesterol are affected by a change in antidepressant drugs in patients with MDD. These observations are of clinical relevance for medical practitioners in the planning and management of treatment strategies for MDD patients.
In numerical processing, the functional role of Spatial-Numerical Associations (SNAs, such as the association of smaller numbers with left space and larger numbers with right space, the Mental Number Line hypothesis) is debated. Most studies demonstrate SNAs with lateralized responses, and there is little evidence that SNAs appear when no response is required. We recorded passive holding grip forces in no-go trials during number processing. In Experiment 1, participants performed a surface numerical decision task (“Is it a number or a letter?”). In Experiment 2, we used a deeper semantic task (“Is this number larger or smaller than five?”). Despite instruction to keep their grip force constant, participants' spontaneous grip force changed in both experiments: Smaller numbers led to larger force increase in the left than in the right hand in the numerical decision task (500–700 ms after stimulus onset). In the semantic task, smaller numbers again led to larger force increase in the left hand, and larger numbers increased the right-hand holding force. This effect appeared earlier (180 ms) and lasted longer (until 580 ms after stimulus onset). This is the first demonstration of SNAs with passive holding force. Our result suggests that (1) explicit motor response is not a prerequisite for SNAs to appear, and (2) the timing and strength of SNAs are task-dependent. (216 words).
This study examined the spoken narrative skills of a group of bilingual Mandarin–English speaking 3–6-year-olds (N = 25) in Australia, using a remote online story-retell task. Bilingual preschoolers are an understudied population, especially those who are speaking typologically distinct languages such as Mandarin and English which have fewer structural overlaps compared to language pairs that are typologically closer, reducing cross-linguistic positive transfer. We examined these preschoolers’ spoken narrative skills as measured by macrostructures (the global organization of a story) and microstructures (linguistic structures, e.g., total number of utterances, nouns, verbs, phrases, and modifiers) across and within each language, and how various factors such as age and language experiences contribute to individual variability. The results indicate that our bilingual preschoolers acquired spoken narrative skills similarly across their two languages, i.e., showing similar patterns of productivity for macrostructure and microstructure elements in both of their two languages. While chronological age was positively correlated with macrostructures in both languages (showing developmental effects), there were no significant correlations between measures of language experiences and the measures of spoken narrative skills (no effects for language input/output). The findings suggest that although these preschoolers acquire two typologically diverse languages in different learning environments, Mandarin at home with highly educated parents, and English at preschool, they displayed similar levels of oral narrative skills as far as these macro−/micro-structure measures are concerned. This study provides further evidence for the feasibility of remote online assessment of preschoolers’ narrative skills.