59 results on '"Voracek, Martin"'
Search Results
2. Brief assessment of schizotypal traits: A multinational study
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Fonseca-Pedrero, Eduardo, Ortuño-Sierra, Javier, Lucas-Molina, Beatriz, Debbané, Martin, Chan, Raymond C.K., Cicero, David C., Zhang, Lisa C., Brenner, Colleen, Barkus, Emma, Linscott, Richard J., Kwapil, Thomas, Barrantes-Vidal, Neus, Cohen, Alex, Raine, Adrian, Compton, Michael T., Tone, Erin B., Suhr, Julie, Bobes, Julio, Fumero, Axit, Giakoumaki, Stella, Tsaousis, Ioannis, Preti, Antonio, Chmielewski, Michael, Laloyaux, Julien, Mechri, Anwar, Lahmar, Mohamed Aymen, Wuthrich, Viviana, Larøi, Frank, Badcock, Johanna C., Jablensky, Assen, Barron, David, Swami, Viren, Tran, Ulrich S., and Voracek, Martin
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- 2018
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3. Tax compliance across sociodemographic categories: Meta-analyses of survey studies in 111 countries
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Hofmann, Eva, Voracek, Martin, Bock, Christine, and Kirchler, Erich
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- 2017
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4. Analytic thinking reduces belief in conspiracy theories
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Swami, Viren, Voracek, Martin, Stieger, Stefan, Tran, Ulrich S., and Furnham, Adrian
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- 2014
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5. Support for weight-related anti-discrimination laws and policies: Modelling the role of attitudes toward poverty alongside weight stigma, causal attributions about weight, and prejudice.
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Swami, Viren, Voracek, Martin, Furnham, Adrian, Robinson, Charlotte, and Tran, Ulrich S.
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In the present study, we sought to position support for weight-related anti-discrimination laws and policies within a broader political and socioeconomic context. Specifically, we hypothesised that individualistic (rather than structural) anti-poverty attitudes would provide the basis for negative weight-related dispositions. To test this hypothesis, we asked 392 respondents from the United Kingdom to complete measures of support for weight-related anti-discrimination laws and policies, attributions about the causes of being larger-bodied, and weight-related stigma and prejudice. Path analysis with robust maximum likelihood estimation indicated that greater individualistic anti-poverty attitudes were significantly and directly associated with lower support for weight-related anti-discrimination laws and policies. This direct association was also significantly mediated by weight-related stigma and via a serial mediation involving both weight-related stigma and prejudice. Although greater individualistic anti-poverty attitudes were significantly associated with greater personal attributions for being larger-bodied, the latter did not emerge as a significant mediation pathway. The present findings highlight the importance of considering broader political and socioeconomic contextual factors that may provide a basis for the development, maintenance, and manifestation of negative weight-related dispositions. • Attitudes toward poverty directly associated with support for weight-related laws and policies. • Direct relationship also mediated by weight-related stigma and prejudice. • Mediational pathways involving attributions of being larger-bodied were not significant. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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6. Sex differences in tax compliance: Differentiating between demographic sex, gender-role orientation, and prenatal masculinization (2D:4D)
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Kastlunger, Barbara, Dressler, Stefan G., Kirchler, Erich, Mittone, Luigi, and Voracek, Martin
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- 2010
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7. Developing a model linking self-reported nature exposure and positive body image: A study protocol for the body image in nature survey (BINS).
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Swami, Viren, Tran, Ulrich S., Stieger, Stefan, and Voracek, Martin
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• A conceptual model linking nature exposure and positive body image is introduced. • The model will be tested via the Body Image in Nature Survey (BINS). • Invariance of the model will be tested across nations, gender, and other sociodemographics. Exposure to natural environments has been shown to be associated with more positive body image, but much of the existing research is limited to Western European nations and little is known about the robustness of these associations in other national contexts. In this protocol paper, we present a conceptual model of the direct and indirect associations (i.e., via self-compassion, connectedness to nature, and restorative experiences in nature) between nature exposure and body appreciation. This model brings together conceptualisations from existing research, but also extends it in a number of important ways. The model will be tested through the Body Image in Nature Survey (BINS), a researcher-crowdsourced project involving researchers in multiple nations worldwide. Data collection began in December 2020 and is expected to be completed in February 2022. Data will be analysed to examine the extent to which our conceptual model is robust across nations, as well as other sociodemographic characteristics. We will also determine the extent to which key variables included in our survey are invariant across nations and associated with cultural, socioeconomic, and gender-related factors. The BINS will likely have important implications for the development of nature-based interventions to promote healthier body appreciation in diverse national contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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8. Positive self-beliefs mediate the association between body appreciation and positive mental health.
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Swami, Viren, Voracek, Martin, Todd, Jennifer, Furnham, Adrian, Horne, George, and Tran, Ulrich S.
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Previous work has supported direct, positive associations between body appreciation and positive mental health, but has largely neglected to examine possible indirect mechanistic pathways. Here, we propose one relevant mediational pathway, wherein body appreciation is associated with positive mental health via positive self-beliefs (i.e., cognitions that lead individuals to view themselves, their lives, and/or their futures under a positive outlook). To test this hypothesis, we asked an online sample of 496 adults (249 women, 247 men) from the United Kingdom to complete measures of body appreciation, positive self-beliefs, and positive mental health. Participants also completed measures of self-efficacy and resilience, and provided their demographic information. Correlational analysis revealed significant, positive, and strong associations between body appreciation and facets of positive self-beliefs and positive mental health, respectively. Structural equation modelling showed that positive self-beliefs mediated the association between body appreciation and positive mental health after controlling for self-efficacy and resilience. This model was robust across women and men separately, and the mediational effects remained intact in sensitivity and robustness analyses. We discuss ways in which greater body appreciation may help individuals develop and maintain positive self-beliefs, which in turn shape mental health outcomes. • Positive self-beliefs mediate association between body appreciation and positive mental health. • Model remains robust after controlling for self-efficacy and resilience. • Model is stable across women and men, and after controlling for participant demographics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. Corrigendum to "Semantic and sentiment similarities contribute to construct overlaps between mindfulness, Big Five, emotion regulation, and mental health" [Pers. Individ. Differ. 210 (2023) 112241].
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Fischer, Aileen, Voracek, Martin, and Tran, Ulrich S.
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EMOTION regulation , *MENTAL health , *MINDFULNESS - Published
- 2023
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10. Semantic and sentiment similarities contribute to construct overlaps between mindfulness, Big Five, emotion regulation, and mental health.
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Fischer, Aileen, Voracek, Martin, and Tran, Ulrich S.
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MENTAL health , *LATENT semantic analysis , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *MINDFULNESS , *SENTIMENT analysis - Abstract
Psychological measurement and theories face a constant proliferation of allegedly new constructs and scales, leading to numerous semantic overlaps between these. Additionally, common-method variance can be responsible for construct overlap, which itself can be influenced by respondents' affectivity and mood. The construct of mindfulness may also be affected by such phenomena, as its boundaries are not yet clearly defined and because it shows noticeable conceptual overlap with other constructs, like the Big Five, emotion regulation, or mental health. This study examined semantic and sentiment similarities between widely used scales assessing mindfulness (FFMQ, FFMQ-S, KIMS, MAAS), the Big Five (NEO-PI-R, NEO-FFI, BFI), emotion regulation (ERQ, CERQ, PANRS), and mental health (SCL-90, BSI-53, BSI-18, STAI, PANAS, BDI-2, PSS, PSWQ). Construct overlap was assessed via latent semantic analysis, sentiment analysis, and a qualitative content analysis. Mindfulness scales showed high construct overlap among each other (semantic and sentiment similarity: 0.93 and 0.63) and the Big Five (0.85 and 0.64), as well as substantial construct overlap with emotion regulation (0.84 and 0.51) and mental health scales (0.74 and 0.42). These findings suggest that semantic and sentiment similarities contribute to the high correlations of mindfulness measures with these other measures observed in extant research. • Mindfulness shows conceptual overlap with other constructs. • Semantic and sentiment similarities of item content may be responsible for this. • Similarities are high with Big Five, emotion regulation, and mental health scales. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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11. Are tattooed adults really more aggressive and rebellious than those without tattoos?
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Swami, Viren, Gaughan, Helen, Tran, Ulrich S., Kuhlmann, Tim, Stieger, Stefan, and Voracek, Martin
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One stereotype of people with tattoos is that they are more aggressive and rebellious than people without tattoos. However, studies examining differences in these traits between tattooed and non-tattooed individuals are dated and have returned equivocal results. To re-examine this issue, we asked 378 adults from London, UK, to complete self-report measures of aggression and rebelliousness, and to report the number of tattoos they possessed. Of this sample, 25.7% possessed at least one tattoo, with no sex difference in the distribution of tattoo status. We found that tattooed adults had significantly higher reactive rebelliousness, anger, and verbal aggression than non-tattooed adults. However, effect sizes were small and there were also no significant between-group differences in terms of proactive rebelliousness, physical aggression, and hostility. These results suggest that, while stereotypes may contain a kernel of truth, they likely present an outmoded picture of tattooed adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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12. Vulnerable narcissism and the dark factor of personality: Insights from a cross-validated item-level and scale-level factor-analytic approach.
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Starlinger, Alexander, Voracek, Martin, and Tran, Ulrich S.
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PERSONALITY , *NARCISSISTIC personality disorder , *NARCISSISM , *CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *FACTOR structure , *EGOISM - Abstract
Research on socially aversive personality traits has increasingly been concerned with establishing common elements between these constructs and recently has introduced the dark factor of personality (D). However, investigations into D have not yet considered the role of vulnerable narcissism. Drawing on a discovery-replication sample approach with two large samples (total N > 2400), we present two studies on the relation of vulnerable narcissism with D. Study 1 investigated the factorial structure of popular measures of Dark Triad Traits exploratorily, while Study 2 tested the obtained structures with confirmatory factor analysis and fitted a D-factor model on the data. We show that the Hypersensitive Narcissism Scale is not a unidimensional measure, but is better represented by two weakly correlated factors, sensitivity towards judgment and egocentricity. Only egocentricity had a salient loading on D, which suggests that egocentricity, but not sensitivity towards judgment, should be considered a dark trait. We discuss the implications of these findings for organizational and industrial psychology, particularly with regards to leadership narcissism and possible clinical-subclinical differences in vulnerable narcissism, especially concerning the relationship of egocentricity and D. • Investigations into D have not considered the role of vulnerable narcissism. • We present factor-analytic results with a discovery-replication sample approach. • Vulnerable narcissism, as measured with the HSNS, consists of two factors. • One of these factors, egocentrism, loads on D and thus appears to be a dark trait. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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13. Digit ratio (2D:4D) and sex-role orientation: Further evidence and meta-analysis
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Voracek, Martin, Pietschnig, Jakob, Nader, Ingo W., and Stieger, Stefan
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GENDER role , *SPATIAL orientation , *FINGERS , *RATIO & proportion , *TESTOSTERONE , *META-analysis , *GENDER differences (Psychology) , *MASCULINITY , *FEMININITY - Abstract
Abstract: Three new studies (N= 132, 623, 1112) did not yield hypothesized associations between digit ratio (2D:4D), an assumed negative correlate of prenatal testosterone, and psychometrically measured sex-role orientation (positive association with femininity, negative ones with masculinity and masculinity-femininity difference scores) among heterosexuals of either sex. Meta-analysis of the pertinent literature (N= 6311, 28 studies from 10 countries, 46% unpublished) showed only men’s (but not women’s) left-hand (but not right-hand) 2D:4D reliably related as expected (positively) to femininity. This effect was tiny (0.14% attributable variance) and possibly non-robust (crucially dependent on one large study included). Hence, the cumulative evidence does not support systematic, robust, noteworthy within-sex correlations between 2D:4D and the masculinity/femininity personality dimensions. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2011
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14. Special issue preamble: Digit ratio (2D:4D) and individual differences research
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Voracek, Martin
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INDIVIDUAL differences , *RATIO & proportion , *MASCULINITY , *GENDER differences (Psychology) , *BIOINDICATORS , *TESTOSTERONE , *FINGERS , *LENGTH measurement - Abstract
Abstract: The sexually differentiated second-to-fourth digit ratio (2D:4D) is currently frequently utilized in individual differences research as a putative indicator of the masculinizing brain organization effects of prenatal testosterone. This preamble introduces the journal special issue on this theme, entitled “Digit ratio (2D:4D) and individual differences research”. Notes regarding the background, history, and recent progress of 2D:4D research are provided, and the background of the special issue and the contents of its 11 research articles are briefly summarized. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2011
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15. Female Flynn effects: No sex differences in generational IQ gains
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Pietschnig, Jakob, Voracek, Martin, and Formann, Anton K.
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FLYNN effect , *GENDER differences (Psychology) , *INTELLIGENCE levels , *SPATIAL ability , *CROSS-sectional method , *PERFORMANCE evaluation - Abstract
Abstract: Generational changes of intelligence test performance in the general population (the Flynn effect) have been observed all over the world since the early 1940s. These changes are known to be country- and intelligence test domain-specific. To investigate whether such IQ gains are observable in three distinct domains of intelligence (verbal reasoning, spatial ability, mathematical reasoning) in German-speaking individuals, we examined a mixed-sex sample of 449 university students in a cross-sectional design. We assessed students’ IQs on three original (standardized in 1970) and revised subscales (standardized in 2000) of a widely used German intelligence test battery, thus allowing investigation of test score changes over a time span of 30years. Participants scored significantly higher on all subscales of the original test. Additionally, we observed higher performance of men than of women on all subscales, but only little evidence for sex differences regarding test score gains. In all, the Flynn effect appears to be progressive, robust, largely sex-independent, and intelligence domain-specific in respect to the magnitude of gains in German-speaking individuals. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2011
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16. Multi-method personality assessment of butchers and hunters: Beliefs and reality
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Voracek, Martin, Gabler, Daniela, Kreutzer, Carmen, Stieger, Stefan, Swami, Viren, and Formann, Anton K.
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PERSONALITY assessment , *HUNTERS , *BELIEF & doubt , *REALITY , *ANIMAL carcasses , *PROFESSIONS , *CIRCADIAN rhythms , *ACTIVITIES of daily living , *BUTCHERS , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Abstract: Two studies examined beliefs about the personality of male butchers and hunters and the factuality of such beliefs. These professions’ daily routines involve killing animals and handling their carcasses, acts that could be facilitated by specific personality constellations. Study 1 (102 raters) evidenced perceptions of higher aggressiveness and masculinity of butchers/hunters and higher self-esteem (hunters only), as compared with average men. In contrast, Study 2 found little evidence for the factuality of such beliefs, based on multi-method personality assessments in a case-control design of 96 men (23 and 25 dyads including one butcher or hunter, matched with same-generation, other-occupation friends or relatives). Only implicit, but not explicit, aggressiveness (measured with an Implicit Association Test) was higher in butchers/hunters than in controls. Both masculinity (whether measured unobtrusively [digit ratio, 2D:4D] or explicitly) and self-esteem (whether measured implicitly [name-letter effect] or explicitly) were comparable for butchers/hunters and controls. Lower self-reported conscientiousness, extraversion, and openness in butchers/hunters than controls were not generalizable to informant reports of these Big Five dimensions. Discussion focuses on the merits of utilizing belief-factuality contrasts, controlled designs, and multi-method assessments in personality research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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17. An investigation of weight bias against women and its associations with individual difference factors.
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Swami, Viren, Pietschnig, Jakob, Stieger, Stefan, Tovée, Martin J., and Voracek, Martin
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Abstract: This study explored weight bias against women from different weight categories in relation to occupational decisions, child adoption, and helping behaviour, as well as individual difference correlates of weight bias. A total of 1024 participants were randomly assigned to one of five conditions in which they were asked to select the women they would most and least likely hire, promote, or terminate, select for parental adoption, or assist following a traffic accident. They also completed measures of anti-fat attitudes, fat phobia, and attitudes toward obese persons. Results showed bias against both emaciated and obese women across conditions, and suggested that bias was strongest in relation to hiring and weakest in relation to helping behaviour. Further results showed that only greater concern about becoming fat significantly predicted weight bias. These results suggest that weight bias may affect women at both ends of the weight continuum, which require measures to reduce discrimination. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2010
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18. Mozart effect–Shmozart effect: A meta-analysis
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Pietschnig, Jakob, Voracek, Martin, and Formann, Anton K.
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META-analysis , *PUBLICATION bias , *SPATIAL ability , *RESEARCH bias , *VISUAL perception , *INFLUENCE of music - Abstract
Abstract: The transient enhancement of performance on spatial tasks in standardized tests after exposure to the first movement “allegro con spirito” of the Mozart sonata for two pianos in D major (KV 448) is referred to as the Mozart effect since its first observation by . These findings turned out to be amazingly hard to replicate, thus leading to an abundance of conflicting results. Sixteen years after initial publication we conduct the so far largest, most comprehensive, and up-to-date meta-analysis (nearly 40 studies, over 3000 subjects), including a diversity of unpublished research papers to finally clarify the scientific record about whether or not a specific Mozart effect exists. We could show that the overall estimated effect is small in size (d =0.37, 95% CI [0.23, 0.52]) for samples exposed to the Mozart sonata KV 448 and samples that had been exposed to a non-musical stimulus or no stimulus at all preceding spatial task performance. Additionally, calculation of effect sizes for samples exposed to any other musical stimulus and samples exposed to a non-musical stimulus or no stimulus at all yielded effects similar in strength (d =0.38, 95% CI [0.13, 0.63]), whereas there was a negligible effect between the two music conditions (d =0.15, 95% CI [0.02, 0.28]). Furthermore, formal tests yielded evidence for confounding publication bias, requiring downward correction of effects. The central finding of the present paper however, is certainly the noticeably higher overall effect in studies performed by Rauscher and colleagues than in studies performed by other researchers, indicating systematically moderating effects of lab affiliation. On the whole, there is little evidence left for a specific, performance-enhancing Mozart effect. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2010
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19. Digit ratio (2D:4D) and sensation seeking: New data and meta-analysis
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Voracek, Martin, Tran, Ulrich S., and Dressler, Stefan G.
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META-analysis , *TESTOSTERONE , *SENSATION seeking , *FINGERS , *DATA analysis , *INDIVIDUAL differences , *NEUROCHEMISTRY , *GENDER differences (Psychology) - Abstract
Abstract: Previously reported associations between low (male-typical) digit ratio (2D:4D), a putative pointer to prenatal testosterone exposure, and high (male-typical) sensation seeking have been inconsistent across studies (alternately present for men, women, either sex, or neither). Addressing this question again in three new studies (N =198, 188, 1118) produced similarly erratic findings. Meta-analysis of the entire literature (13 studies with nearly 3000 individuals, including unpublished accounts) showed that the current cumulative evidence does not support any negative correlations between 2D:4D and sensation seeking traits. The only significant meta-analytical finding was for right-hand 2D:4D and the experience seeking facet of sensation seeking in both sexes, but this effect accounted for merely 0.4% attributable variance, and moreover was directionally opposite to expectation (i.e., a positive correlation). Discussed are inherent limitations of narrow-scoped approaches (such as via 2D:4D) for elucidating the biological bases of individual difference variables with evidentially intricate neurochemical underpinnings (such as sensation seeking). [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2010
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20. Consistency of immigrant suicide rates in Austria with country-of-birth suicide rates: A role for genetic risk factors for suicide?
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Voracek, Martin, Loibl, Lisa Mariella, Dervic, Kanita, Kapusta, Nestor D., Niederkrotenthaler, Thomas, and Sonneck, Gernot
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SUICIDE risk factors , *IMMIGRANTS , *MOLECULAR genetics , *DISEASE prevalence , *QUALITY of life - Abstract
Abstract: Multifaceted evidence (family, twin, adoption, molecular genetic, geographic, and surname studies of suicide) suggests genetic risk factors for suicide. The migrant study design is also informative in this context, but underused. In particular, immigrant studies of suicide with a continental European host country are unavailable. The correspondence of suicide prevalence among 22 immigrant groups in Austria (1970–2006) with those of the homelands during the same period was analyzed. Immigrant and homeland suicide rates were significantly positively associated. Controls for age of suicide victim, immigrant group size, national pride, and quality of life in the homelands left the finding essentially unchanged. This correspondence of immigrant and country-of-birth suicide rates is consistent with the assumption of population differences in the prevalence of genetic risk factors for suicide, for which there is emerging evidence. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2009
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21. Preoperative radiochemotherapy in the treatment of advanced oral cancer: Outcome of 276 patients.
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Klug, Clemens, Berzaczy, Dominik, Voracek, Martin, Nell, Christina, Ploder, Oliver, Millesi, Werner, and Ewers, Rolf
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TREATMENT of oral cancer ,CANCER chemotherapy ,CANCER radiotherapy ,CANCER patients ,ONCOLOGIC surgery ,SQUAMOUS cell carcinoma ,SURVIVAL analysis (Biometry) - Abstract
Summary: Introduction: The aim of this study was to review survival and locoregional control in patients with advanced oral and oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma treated by multimodal therapy with preoperative radiochemotherapy and radical surgery. Material: Retrospective cohort study. Methods: Included in this analysis are 276 consecutive patients with UICC disease stages III and IV (T2: 13.0%; T3: 16.7%; T4: 70.3%; N0: 29.7%; N1: 20.3%; N2: 45.3%; N3: 4.7%; stage III: 16.3%; stage IV: 83.7%). All patients received preoperative radiochemotherapy (50Gy, Mitomycin and 5-Fluorouracil) and radical locoregional resection. Results: Median surveillance period was 101.4 months (24–202 months). 5-year overall survival probability was 53.9%. 5-year local control probability was 70.2%. Conclusion: These results underline the reliability of preoperative treatment of patients with oral and oropharyngeal cancer. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
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22. Who wants to believe? Associations between digit ratio (2D:4D) and paranormal and superstitious beliefs
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Voracek, Martin
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PARAPSYCHOLOGY , *SUPERSTITION , *BELIEF & doubt , *FINGERS , *MORPHOLOGY , *ANTHROPOMETRY , *STATISTICAL correlation , *GENDER differences (Psychology) , *INDIVIDUAL differences - Abstract
Abstract: Associations of paranormal and superstitious beliefs with digit ratio (2D:4D) and absolute finger length (putatively indexing prenatal and pubertal-adolescent androgen levels, respectively), fluctuating asymmetry (FA; indexing developmental instability), and body measures at birth (indexing non-optimal fetal growth) were examined in a sample of 1118 adults. Higher (feminised) 2D:4D correlated with stronger beliefs in men, even when controlled for age, education, adult height and weight, and birth length and weight. Shorter (feminised) finger length correlated with more superstition among women, but not when controlled for the same covariates. Finger FA was unrelated to beliefs in both sexes. Shorter birth length (in men and women) and lighter adult weight (in women) were associated with stronger beliefs. Effects of 2D:4D on men’s beliefs were weak (1–3% attributable variance), but commensurable with those of known non-biological belief correlates (age: 1%; education: 2%). This evidence may be informative for narrowing down possible developmental pathways of paranormal and superstitious beliefs. Propensities contributing to sex and individual differences in these beliefs probably arise in utero, may partly be due to prenatal testosterone and other prenatal programming effects, but less likely due to pubertal-adolescent androgen action or developmental instability. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
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23. Can Media Effects Counteract Legislation Reforms? The Case of Adolescent Firearm Suicides in the Wake of the Austrian Firearm Legislation.
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Niederkrotenthaler, Thomas, Till, Benedikt, Herberth, Arno, Kapusta, Nestor D., Voracek, Martin, Dervic, Kanita, Etzersdorfer, Elmar, and Sonneck, Gernot
- Abstract
Abstract: To assess the impact of the Austrian firearm legislation (1997) on adolescent suicides, we investigated time trends in youth suicide prevalence (1986–2006) with Poisson regression. A temporary increase in firearm suicides after the reform was observed, followed by a continuous decrease. The hypothesis that media reporting triggered the short-term backlash effect is discussed. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
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24. Preoperative chemoradiotherapy in the management of oral cancer: A review.
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Klug, Clemens, Berzaczy, Dominik, Voracek, Martin, and Millesi, Werner
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ORAL cancer ,RADIOTHERAPY ,SQUAMOUS cell carcinoma ,PREOPERATIVE care ,OPERATIVE surgery - Abstract
Summary: Introduction: Multi-modality treatment concepts involving preoperative radiotherapy (RT) or chemoradiotherapy (CRT) and subsequent radical resection are used much less frequently than postoperative treatment for oral and oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinomas. In some centres, however, the preoperative approach has been established for several years. Material: The present review is a compilation of the existing evidence on this subject. Methods: In a literature-based meta-analysis, the survival data of 1927 patients from 32 eligible publications were analysed. Results: The calculated survival rates of documented patients show remarkably good results with preoperative CRT and radical surgery. However, the findings of this analysis are based on data with a large proportion of studies using consecutive patient series. Conclusion: Hard evidence providing sufficient data from prospective randomised studies is as yet missing for preoperative CRT. Prospective randomised studies are mandatory in this area. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2008
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25. German translation and psychometric evaluation of the Body Appreciation Scale.
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Swami, Viren, Stieger, Stefan, Haubner, Tanja, and Voracek, Martin
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Abstract: This paper examined the psychometric properties of the German version of the Body Appreciation Scale (BAS), a novel scale for the assessment of positive body image. Based on a community sample of 156 women and 144 men in Austria, results showed good internal reliability and construct validity for the BAS scores, as well as a unidimensional factor structure for both women and men. Specifically, Cronbach''s alpha was high for both women (α =.90) and men (α =.85), and the BAS was correlated with the body esteem scale and self-esteem. In addition, women with lower BMIs reported greater body appreciation, but no such association was found for men. Finally, there were small sex differences in BAS scores, with men scoring more positively than women (Cohen''s d =0.26). The German BAS, a useful indicator of positive body image among Austrian adults, should prove valuable for the assessment of body image in German-speaking countries. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2008
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26. Dietary tryptophan intake and suicide rate in industrialized nations
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Voracek, Martin and Tran, Ulrich S.
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TRYPTOPHAN , *SUICIDE , *NEUROBIOLOGY , *NEUROSCIENCES - Abstract
Background: The objective of this study was to assess the ecological association of dietary tryptophan intake and suicide rates across industrialized nations. Tryptophan, an essential amino acid, is the rate-limiting precursor of serotonin biosynthesis. The serotonergic system has been strongly implicated in the neurobiology of suicide.Methods: Contemporary male and female suicide rates for the general population (42 countries) and the elderly (38 countries) were correlated with national estimates of dietary tryptophan intake.Results: Measures of tryptophan intake were significantly negatively associated to national suicide rates. Controlling for national affluence, total alcohol consumption and happiness levels slightly attenuated these associations, but left all of them negative.Limitations: The effect is an ecological (group-level) finding. Estimated per capita tryptophan supply is only a proxy for actual consumption.Conclusions: Developed nations ranking high in dietary tryptophan intake rank low in suicide rates, independent of national wealth, alcohol intake and happiness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2007
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27. Lack of correlation between digit ratio (2D:4D) and Baron-Cohen’s “Reading the Mind in the Eyes” test, empathy, systemising, and autism-spectrum quotients in a general population sample
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Voracek, Martin and Dressler, Stefan G.
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AUTISM , *TESTOSTERONE , *DEVELOPMENTAL disabilities ,SEX differences (Biology) - Abstract
Abstract: The second-to-fourth digit ratio (2D:4D) is sexually differentiated and is a likely biomarker for the organisational (permanent) effects of prenatal testosterone on the human brain. Recent research has highlighted a possible role of prenatal testosterone levels in both the etiology of autism-spectrum disorders and in sex and individual differences in cognitive styles of the normal mind (Baron-Cohen’s Extreme Male Brain Theory of Autism and Empathising/Systemising Theory). Importantly, autistic children present lower (hypermasculinised) 2D:4D than healthy controls. Based on these accounts, we investigated the relation of 2D:4D with Baron-Cohen’s measures of empathising (“Reading the Mind in the Eyes” test, RMET; Empathy Quotient, EQ), systemising (Systemising Quotient, SQ), and autistic-like traits (Autism-Spectrum Quotient, AQ) in the general population (N =423 Austrian adults). Whereas sex differences into the expected direction and of expected size were obtained for all variables and internal scale consistencies tallied to retrievable reference values, 2D:4D was unrelated to RMET, EQ, SQ, and AQ scores. Candidate explanations for this lack of correlation might be possible developmental timing differences in the expression of 2D:4D and empathising/systemising, qualitative (as opposed to quantitative) functional differences between the normal and the autistic mind, or the suboptimal psychometric properties of the measures. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Complications after zygoma fracture fixation: Is there a difference between biodegradable materials and how do they compare with titanium osteosynthesis?
- Author
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Wittwer, Gert, Adeyemo, Wasiu Lanre, Yerit, Kaan, Voracek, Martin, Turhani, Dritan, Watzinger, Franz, and Enislidis, Georg
- Abstract
Objective: Biodegradable materials are particularly useful for the fixation of zygomatic fractures. Different systems are commercially available. The aim of this study was to compare the clinical outcome of zygomatic fracture fixation using 3 biodegradable systems and a titanium osteosynthesis system. Study design: Patients with displaced fractures of the zygomatic bone presenting at our department from October 2001 to May 2003 were randomly allocated to 1 of 3 treatment groups for fracture fixation (study group A: LactoSorb: n = 18; study group B: BioSorb: n = 18; study group C: Delta: n = 18). Treatment outcome and complication rates were compared with a historic patient group with zygomatic fractures fixed with titanium osteosynthesis (control group D: n = 15). Results: A total of 64 patients (study groups A + B + C: n = 49; control group D: n = 15) were followed for at least 24 months (range: 24 to 44 months). Forty-nine patients in the biodegradable study groups (group A: n = 15; group B: n = 17; group C: n = 17) who had their fractures fixed with biodegradable plates and screws alone or in combination with titanium plates and screws were reviewed postoperatively. Uneventful healing occurred during the entire follow-up period in 39 (80%) out of 49 patients in the biodegradable groups (A + B + C) and in 12 (80%) out of 15 patients in group D. Ten patients in groups A + B + C developed postoperative complications (infection: n = 3; soft tissue dehiscence: n = 2; implant-related tissue reactions: n = 5), compared with 3 patients in group D (soft tissue dehiscence: n = 1; unspecific pain: n = 2) (P = .97). Complications occurred in 4 patients in group A and 3 patients each in groups B and C. Smokers developed significantly more postoperative complications than nonsmokers in groups A + B + C (P = .01). Conclusion: There was no significant difference between biodegradable osteosynthesis materials or between biodegradable materials and titanium fixation with respect to fracture healing and postoperative complications. Postoperative complications were of a minor nature and resolved spontaneously or after local therapy. Smoking habits may play a significant role in the incidence of complications with biodegradable materials. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. 2nd to 4th digit ratio (2D:4D) and number of sex partners: Evidence for effects of prenatal testosterone in men
- Author
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Hönekopp, Johannes, Voracek, Martin, and Manning, John T.
- Subjects
- *
HUMAN sexuality , *TESTOSTERONE , *ANDROGENS , *HUMAN life cycle - Abstract
Summary: The number of sexual partners per individual (NSP) is an important component of sexual behaviour. Here, we report two studies concerning the relationship between a probable negative correlate of prenatal testosterone, the ratio of the length of 2nd and 4th digits (2D:4D), and NSP in men. The right hand 2D:4D ratio appears to be more strongly related to prenatal testosterone than does the left hand. Accordingly we found: (a) in a sample of 99 German heterosexual male undergraduates right hand 2D:4D (but not left hand 2D:4D) was significantly negatively associated with reported lifetime NSP. The relationship between NSP and 2D:4D was independent of free testosterone, but free testosterone also showed a weak positive association with NSP (b) in a sample of 79 heterosexual and 95 homosexual Austrian men we found a significant negative association between right hand 2D:4D (but not left hand 2D:4D) and reported NSP in past year for heterosexual but not for homosexual men. The association in heterosexuals was independent of age, years of education, occupation and relationship status. We conclude that male NSP is likely to be influenced by the long-term organisational effects of prenatal testosterone. The relationship between NSP and 2D:4D appears to be confined to heterosexual men. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. An evaluation of the clinical application of three different biodegradable osteosynthesis materials for the fixation of zygomatic fractures.
- Author
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Wittwer, Gert, Adeyemo, Wasiu Lanre, Voracek, Martin, Turhani, Dritan, Ewers, Rolf, Watzinger, Franz, and Enislidis, Georg
- Abstract
Objective: The aim of this prospective study was to compare the clinical handling of 3 different biodegradable osteosynthesis materials and to determine whether they can be used for the fixation of all types of zygomatic fractures. Study design: A total of 54 consecutive patients who presented with displaced fractures of the zygomatic bone between October 2001 and May 2003 were randomly allocated to 3 biodegradable material groups for the fixation of the fractures. A titanium fixation system was used as rescue osteosynthesis whenever biodegradable materials failed. Results: Seventy-one (75.5%) of 94 fracture sites were fixed with biodegradable osteosynthesis; 23 (24.5%) had to be fixed with titanium plates and screws. No statistically significant difference was found between the 3 biodegradable materials with regard to their suitability for zygomatic fracture fixation (P = .16). Nonstable fixation (n = 7) or the need to fix small fragments (n = 16) were the reasons for using the titanium fixation system as rescue osteosynthesis at these sites. Biodegradable materials were most frequently unfeasible for use at the infraorbital rim and in the zygomaticomaxillary/anterior sinus wall area. Conclusions: It was possible to stabilize 3 of 4 zygomatic fractures with 1.5- or 1.7-mm biodegradable osteosynthesis. Insufficient fracture stabilization, especially at the infraorbital rim and the zygomaticomaxillary crest/anterior sinus wall, was the main reason to switch to titanium osteosynthesis. The biodegradable screw design is possibly too bulky for these particular bony structures. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. National intelligence and suicide rate: an ecological study of 85 countries
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Voracek, Martin
- Subjects
- *
VIOLENT deaths , *CAUSES of death , *MORTALITY , *GROSS national product , *OLD age - Abstract
According to de Catanzaro’s (1981) evolutionary theory of human suicide, a threshold intelligence is necessary for suicidality. Intelligence and suicide mortality should thus be positively related. This prediction was tested and confirmed in an ecological study of 85 countries. National IQ was significantly positively related to the national male and female suicide rate. The relation was not attenuated when countries’ per capita Gross Domestic Product and the type of national IQ estimation were controlled. The relation was still positive, though not statistically reliable, when three further indicators (rates of the divorced, aged, and unemployed), salient for suicide rates and available for a subset of 36 countries, were additionally partialed out. Further evidence for a positive relation of intelligence and suicide mortality is provided by the observation of excess suicide prevalence in the Terman Genetic Study of Genius sample, relative to the general population. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Suicide and general elections in Austria: do preceding regional suicide rate differentials foreshadow subsequent voting behavior swings?
- Author
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Voracek, Martin, Formann, Anton K., Fülöp, Gerhard, Sonneck, Gernot, and Fülöp, Gerhard
- Subjects
- *
SUICIDE , *EPIDEMIOLOGY - Abstract
Background: Suicide-epidemiological research on short-term effects of elections on national/regional suicide and parasuicide incidence has yielded contradictory evidence. Reversing the cause–effect relationship of this line of research we investigated whether preceding regional suicide rates are related to subsequent election results. Methods: For Austria’s 121 districts, we regressed averaged standardized suicide rates for the preceding period (1988–1994) on political parties’ subsequent electoral gains/losses (1999-to-1995) while controlling for a set of 12 domain-relevant psychosocial/economic indices. Results: Stepwise weighted multiple regression led to a significant model. The 1999-to-1995 electoral gains/losses of two opposition parties, together with the population variation caused by migration balance and by births/deaths balance, accounted for a substantial part (30%) of the variability in preceding district-level suicide rates. Various other social indices failed to contribute further substantial increments to this model. Conclusions: This finding suggests that variations in preceding regional suicide incidence might be mirrored in subsequent changes in voting behavior. A speculative post hoc explanation for the finding is offered: on a community level, suicide’s aftermath might produce socially and politically alienated survivors of suicide who co-shape swings towards opposition parties in subsequent general elections. The finding calls for more research on suicide’s long-term aftermath. Limitations: Within-country replicability and cross-national generalizability await further investigation. At present, the factor/mechanism accounting for this finding is neither well-established nor has been directly tested. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. The effects of hand preference and sex on right-left asymmetry in dorsal digit lengths among adults and children.
- Author
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Kumar, Sanjay, Voracek, Martin, and Singh, Maharaj
- Subjects
- *
CEREBRAL dominance , *BAYESIAN analysis , *BONES - Abstract
Background: Right-hand preference is related to stronger right-directional asymmetry in the length of proximal upper-limb bones, although the relationships of hand preference with directional asymmetry in phalangeal bone lengths are not known. Furthermore, dorsal digit length is an easy-to-measure, faithful proxy of X-rayed phalangeal bone length (which is costly and difficult to measure).Aim: To study the effects of hand preference, sex, and age on right-left (R-L) asymmetry in dorsal digit lengths.Methods: We measured all dorsal digit lengths (except the thumb) in comparable numbers of left-handers and right-handers in samples of adults (N = 151, age: M = 22.6 years, SD = 3.3) and children (N = 65, age: M = 5.0 years, SD = 1.0).Results: Right-handers and adults had stronger right-directional asymmetry in digit lengths than left-handers and children. A Bayesian analysis yielded an 'extremely strong likelihood' of no sex differences in the R-L asymmetry of dorsal digit lengths 2 and 4.Conclusions: The effects of hand preference, sex, and age on R-L asymmetry appear to be similar for phalangeal bone length and other (proximal) upper-limb bone lengths. Two distinct biologic mechanisms (i.e., a general right-directional asymmetry mechanism and a handedness-related directional asymmetry mechanism) may contribute to observed R-L asymmetry in limbs. Fingertip fat and bone digit length do not seem to contribute to sex differences in the R-L asymmetry (Dr-l) of the widely studied second-to-fourth digit ratio (2D:4D). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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34. Sex and Side Differences in Relative Thumb Length.
- Author
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Voracek, Martin
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
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35. No effects of androgen receptor gene CAG and GGC repeat polymorphisms on digit ratio (2D:4D): a comprehensive meta-analysis and critical evaluation of research.
- Author
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Voracek, Martin
- Subjects
FINGERS ,ANDROGEN receptors ,GENETIC polymorphisms ,CITATION analysis ,MEDICAL literature ,META-analysis ,ANATOMY - Abstract
A series of meta-analyses assessed whether differentially efficacious variants (CAG and GGC repeat-length polymorphisms) of the human androgen receptor gene are associated with digit ratio (2D:4D), a widely investigated putative pointer to prenatal androgen action. Extensive literature search strategies identified a maximum of 18 samples (total N = 2909) vs. 5 samples (N = 1497) for the CAG-related vs. GGC-related meta-analyses, respectively. In contrast to a small-sample (N = 50) initial report, widely cited affirmatively in the literature, meta-analysis of the entire retrievable evidence base did not support any associations between CAG variants and right-hand, left-hand, or right-minus-left-hand 2D:4D. Effects of GGC variants on digit ratios likewise were almost exactly null. For the CAG literature, time trend analysis indicated shrinking effects among more recent studies. Both quantitative and qualitative citation analyses documented that citation bias exists in the research literature: CAG-related studies yielding larger effects were cited more frequently within the same time unit, and the initial, unreplicated report continued to be cited frequently and mostly solely as well as confirmatively, while non-replications were cited much less often. The meta-analytical null findings, along with several further strands of evidence consistent with these, undermine one validity claim for 2D:4D as a retrospective pointer to prenatal testosterone action. Discussed are alternative interpretations of the evidence and avenues for future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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- View/download PDF
36. Why digit ratio (2D:4D) is inappropriate for sex determination in medicolegal investigations
- Author
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Voracek, Martin
- Published
- 2009
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37. Leth of fingers and penis are related through fetal Hox gene expression
- Author
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Voracek, Martin and Manning, John T.
- Subjects
- *
ANTHROPOMETRY , *FINGERS , *GENES , *HUMAN reproduction , *MORPHOGENESIS , *PENIS , *TESTOSTERONE , *PRENATAL exposure delayed effects - Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Mixed-footedness is a more relevant predictor of schizotypy than mixed-handedness.
- Author
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Tran, Ulrich S., Stieger, Stefan, and Voracek, Martin
- Subjects
- *
SCHIZOTYPAL personality disorder , *HANDEDNESS , *PSYCHOSES , *SELF-evaluation , *SEX chromosomes , *LATENT class analysis (Statistics) - Abstract
Mixed-handedness was reported indicative of schizotypy, relevant to psychosis and schizophrenia. However, studies suffered from validity threats and did not systematically investigate associations with footedness. Moreover, there is a dearth of studies in the general population and it is currently untested whether widely used self-report scales measure schizotypy in a comparable way in student and community samples. The present study used two large and independent community and student samples (total N >2800) and utilized latent class analysis (LCA) for the classification of handedness and footedness. Psychometric properties and measurement equivalence of the Schizotypal Personality Questionnaire–Brief form (SPQ-B) in the two samples were also examined. We found that mixed-handedness (<6% prevalence), but also much more common mixed-footedness (25% prevalence), was specifically and similarly associated with higher schizotypy in both samples, Cohen d =0.15–0.18. Findings indicate that schizotypal traits in conjunction with mixed lateral preferences are thus more prevalent in the overall population than previously assumed, and that footedness may be the more relevant predictor of schizotypy than handedness. Findings are further consistent with evidence on neurodevelopmental instability, but also epigenetic mechanisms involving the sex chromosomes, regarding possible common causes of both mixed-handedness and psychosis-relevant traits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Evidence for general right-, mixed-, and left-sidedness in self-reported handedness, footedness, eyedness, and earedness, and a primacy of footedness in a large-sample latent variable analysis.
- Author
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Tran, Ulrich S., Stieger, Stefan, and Voracek, Martin
- Subjects
- *
SELF-evaluation , *HANDEDNESS , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *NERVOUS system development , *CEREBRAL dominance , *NEUROPHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
Lateral preferences are important for the study of cerebral lateralization and may be indicative of neurobehavioral disorders, neurodevelopmental instability, and deficits in lateralization. Previous studies showed that self-reported preferences are also concordantly interrelated, suggesting a common genetic or biological origin, sidedness. However, with regard to the assessment and classification of lateral preferences, there is a dearth of psychometric studies, but a need for psychometrically validated instruments that can be reliably used in applied research. Based on three independent large samples (total N >15,100), this study investigated the psychometric properties of widely-used lateral preference scales of handedness, footedness, eyedness, and earedness. Preferences were consistently and replicably categorical, consisting of right, mixed, and left preferences each, underlining that primarily qualitative, rather than quantitative, differences differentiate lateral preferences. Right-, mixed-, and left-sidedness underlay the individual preferences, but sidedness alone could not fully explain the observed inter-relations. Footedness was the single most important indicator of sidedness. Our data were further consistent with predictions of right shift theory and corroborated a ‘pull-to-concordance’ in hand–foot preferences. We recommend the use of psychometrically validated scales and of a trichotomous classification of lateral preferences in future research, but conclude that handedness may be a biased indicator of underlying sidedness. Footedness needs to be examined more closely with regard to cerebral lateralization, neurodevelopmental disorders, and neurodevelopmental instability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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- View/download PDF
40. Handedness and sex roles: Mixed-handers are less sex-congruent stereotyped.
- Author
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Tran, Ulrich S., Stieger, Stefan, and Voracek, Martin
- Subjects
- *
HANDEDNESS , *GENDER role , *STEREOTYPES , *PSYCHOLOGY of men , *MASCULINE identity - Abstract
Highlights: [•] Left-handed women are assumedly more masculine, left-handed men more feminine. [•] Previous research did not distinguish between mixed- and left-handedness. [•] Mixed-handers, but not left-handers, are less sex-congruent stereotyped. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Item-response theory modeling of IQ gains (the Flynn effect) on crystallized intelligence: Rodgers' hypothesis yes, Brand's hypothesis perhaps.
- Author
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Pietschnig, Jakob, Tran, Ulrich S., and Voracek, Martin
- Subjects
- *
FLYNN effect , *ITEM response theory , *INTELLIGENCE levels , *INTELLIGENCE tests , *PERFORMANCE evaluation , *COHORT analysis - Abstract
Abstract: Potential explanations for generational intelligence test score gains continue to be subject to intense debate and scrutiny in the scientific community. However, the explanatory value of some of the proposed causes remains difficult to determine, since only little empirical evidence is available. To clarify the role of two scarcely investigated theories accounting for the Flynn effect, this study set out to examine the role of changing test-taking behavior (Brand's hypothesis) and of a narrowing of the IQ ability distribution (Rodgers' hypothesis). Archival records of crystallized intelligence test performance over a time-span of 17years of a large number of psychiatric inpatients and outpatients in Austria were investigated (N =5445; 1978–94). This sample was particularly suitable to investigate our hypotheses since participants were under no pressure to perform which makes observed changes in test taking behavior attributable to personal style and ability rather than differential performance in pressure situations. Analytical approaches of both classical test theory and item response theory (IRT) yielded gains of 1.0 to 2.4 IQ points per decade. Test-taking behavior indicative of guessing and decreasing population IQ variability appeared to contribute both to IQ test score gains. IRT-based analyses showed that gains were largely preserved when controlling for highest educational qualification, while the test instrument showed measurement invariance between cohorts. However, IRT-based results also suggested that changes in test-taking behavior might not necessarily reflect increased guessing, but item drift instead. In all, this evidence emphasizes better performance of individuals of the lower tail of the IQ ability distribution in more recent years as one important contributing factor for generational IQ test score gains. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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42. Romantic jealousy and implicit and explicit self-esteem
- Author
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Stieger, Stefan, Preyss, Anna V., and Voracek, Martin
- Subjects
- *
JEALOUSY , *SELF-esteem , *PSYCHOLOGICAL research , *GENDER differences (Psychology) , *INDIVIDUAL differences , *PSYCHOLOGY of women , *PSYCHOLOGY of men - Abstract
Abstract: Research on romantic jealousy and self-esteem mostly relies on the measurement of explicit (i.e., conscious, deliberate) aspects, without taking recent developments of the measurement of implicit (i.e., automatic) aspects into account. In this study (N =154), we applied several measures of romantic jealousy and self-esteem (explicit, implicit), finding sex-specific as well as measurement-specific effects. Men (but not women) higher in jealousy had lower explicit self-esteem, whereas women (but not men) higher in jealousy had higher implicit self-esteem, but only when using the Implicit Association Test (whereas not the Initial Preference Task) for measuring implicit self-esteem. Individuals with damaged (i.e., low explicit and high implicit) self-esteem were more jealous than those with fragile (i.e., high explicit and low implicit) self-esteem. This differential effect was due to higher implicit self-esteem among women, whereas lower explicit self-esteem among men. These novel findings not only add to the expanding literature on romantic jealousy research, but also to research on self-esteem discrepancies. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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43. Experience with microvascular free flaps in preoperatively irradiated tissue of the oral cavity and oropharynx in 303 patients
- Author
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Klug, Clemens, Berzaczy, Dominik, Voracek, Martin, Enislidis, Georg, Rath, Thomas, Millesi, Werner, and Ewers, Rolf
- Subjects
- *
SURGICAL complications , *OPERATIVE surgery , *ORAL cancer , *PHARYNGEAL cancer , *MITOMYCIN C - Abstract
Summary: This study examined free flap reconstruction of surgical defects of the oral cavity and oropharynx after preoperative radiochemotherapy. Included in this analysis are 303 prospectively followed patients who underwent a multimodal treatment regime for advanced oral and oropharyngeal carcinoma. All patients received preoperative radiochemotherapy (Mitomycin C, 5-FU, 50Gy), ablative surgery, and primary free flap reconstruction. Patient characteristics, surgical parameters like duration of surgery and ischaemia, size of defect, type of transplant, and clinical outcome parameters like duration of intensive care and hospitalization, type of complications, necessity and type of revision surgery were statistically evaluated. Overall flap success rate was 93.1%. Sixty seven patients required revision and 21 flaps (6.9%) were lost. Overall complication rate was 22.1%. Mean duration of intensive care (DOIC) and duration of overall postoperative hospitalization (DOH) were 11.0±9.6days and 35.9±26.3days, respectively. Flap success and flap related complications after 50Gy focal radiation dosage were found in a comparable range as in published series of reconstructions in uncompromised tissue. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Effects of hand preference on digit lengths and digit ratios among children and adults.
- Author
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Kumar, Sanjay, Singh, Maharaj, and Voracek, Martin
- Subjects
- *
CEREBRAL dominance , *SEX hormones , *HANDEDNESS , *KINDERGARTEN children , *FINGER physiology , *FINGERS - Abstract
Background: Prenatal sex hormones may not exclusively determine effects of hand preference on digit ratios. Genetic determination is an alternative possibility.Aim: To study the likelihood of similar effects of hand preference on digit lengths and digit ratios.Methods: We selected similar numbers of left-handers and right-handers in samples of kindergarten children (N = 101, age range: 3.5-7 years) and adults (N = 189, age range: 17-28 years) and measured digit lengths (excluding the thumb) directly on the palmar hand.Results: Compared to right-handers, left-handers had longer digits and lower third-to-fourth (3D:4D) digit ratios among children, whereas an opposite pattern of handedness differences occurred among adults.Conclusions: Effects of hand preference on digit lengths and ratios might be genetically/ontogenetically determined. Also discussed are implications of this set of findings for digit ratio research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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- View/download PDF
45. Testing the incremental validity of dispositional mindfulness over and above the Big Five in accounting for mental health: A facet-level structural-equation modeling and predictor communality and dominance approach.
- Author
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Tran, Ulrich S., Wasserbauer, Juliane, and Voracek, Martin
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL health , *MINDFULNESS , *TEST validity , *PERSONALITY change , *SOCIAL dominance - Abstract
Dispositional mindfulness (i.e., its trait-like and universal component) and the Big Five personality dimensions empirically overlap on both the aggregate and facet levels. This overlap is strongest for neuroticism and conscientiousness, two major correlates of mental health. Associations of dispositional mindfulness with mental health could thus be due to underlying personality configurations. We investigated the latent structure and the incremental validity of dispositional mindfulness and the Big Five in accounting for mental health (perceived stress, anxiety, depression) in a community sample of N = 430 adults. Facets of dispositional mindfulness and the Big Five (using aggregate-level measures for openness, extraversion, and agreeableness) shared a common latent structure, which successfully recovered the Big Five. The incremental validity of mindfulness facets for mental health was small and negligible, only increasing in analyses of manifest (vs. latent) scores and when using aggregate (vs. facet-level) measures of neuroticism and conscientiousness. Predictor commonality and dominance analyses corroborated that the concurrent validity of dispositional mindfulness for mental health largely is qualified by personality dimensions. Emphasized are definitional overlaps of personality and dispositional mindfulness, and present-moment awareness as a possibly unique feature of dispositional mindfulness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. “I'll teach you differences”: Taxometric analysis of the Dark Triad, trait sadism, and the Dark Core of personality.
- Author
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Tran, Ulrich S., Bertl, Bianca, Kossmeier, Michael, Pietschnig, Jakob, Stieger, Stefan, and Voracek, Martin
- Subjects
- *
INDIVIDUAL differences , *SADISM , *PERSONALITY , *MACHIAVELLIANISM (Psychology) , *PSYCHOPATHY - Abstract
The Dark Triad of personality (Machiavellianism, narcissism, psychopathy) is widely considered conceptually important for individual differences research into personality and interpersonal behavior. Recent research suggests to add trait sadism to its defining constructs (i.e., to form a Dark Tetrad), and that a single common dimension (the Dark Core) underlies these dark personality traits. Taxometric studies suggest the Dark Triad traits are dimensional (i.e., quantitative), but investigations on the facet level are lacking and sex differences in dark personality traits have not been considered. Utilizing widely-used scales, this study investigated the Dark Triad traits, sadism, as well as the Dark Core of personality, with taxometric methods on both the aggregate and facet level and separately among men and women (total N = 2463, 56% women, mean age: 41.4 years). Dark personality traits mostly were dimensional, on both the aggregate and the facet level, and for both sexes. The Dark Core appeared to be taxonic among men, but dimensional among women. Taxon members were characterized by uniformly elevated dark personality traits and younger age. Future studies might profitably investigate the incremental predictive validity of this identified taxon and focus on further sex differences in dark personality traits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. More or less than the sum of its parts? Mapping the Dark Triad of personality onto a single Dark Core.
- Author
-
Bertl, Bianca, Pietschnig, Jakob, Tran, Ulrich S., Stieger, Stefan, and Voracek, Martin
- Subjects
- *
PERSONALITY , *NARCISSISM , *MACHIAVELLIANISM (Psychology) , *PSYCHOPATHY , *FACTOR structure - Abstract
The Dark Triad of personality has received considerable attention since its introduction to the literature. However, this personality configuration has been assumed to be merely based on observed positive intercorrelations between narcissism, Machiavellianism, and psychopathy, whereas the underlying factorial structure has not yet been thoroughly investigated. This study set out to test the factorial structure of the Dark Triad, and further examined one proposed conceptual extension, namely the Dark Tetrad, with trait sadism included. A large, community-based sample ( N = 2463, 56% women, mean age = 41.4 yr.) completed self-report measures of the adverse personality traits narcissism, Machiavellianism, psychopathy, and sadism. Structural equation modelling indicated a better fit for a single latent Dark Core, as compared with assuming the Dark Triad traits as independent constructs. Adding sadism did not improve the explanatory value of the construct. These findings suggest that aversive personalities may best be represented by a single Dark Core of personality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. More similar than different: Tattooed adults are only slightly more impulsive and willing to take risks than Non-tattooed adults.
- Author
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Swami, Viren, Tran, Ulrich S., Kuhlmann, Tim, Stieger, Stefan, Gaughan, Helen, and Voracek, Martin
- Subjects
- *
TATTOOED people , *IMPULSIVE personality , *RECREATION , *CITIZENSHIP , *BOREDOM , *MARITAL status - Abstract
Emerging evidence suggests that there are few differences in the personality profiles of tattooed and non-tattooed adults. To add to this literature, we compared tattooed and non-tattooed adults in terms of their willingness to take risks in multiple domains, as well as their impulsivity and boredom proneness. Adults from central Europe (N = 1006) completed measures of the afore-mentioned concepts and reported the number of tattoos they had. In total, 19.1% of respondents had at least one tattoo, with no significant differences as a function of sex, nationality, education, or marital status. We also found that tattooed adults had higher motor impulsivity and were more willing to take risks in recreational and health and safety domains. However, effect sizes of these differences were negligible to small. Among tattooed adults, there were no significant associations between the number of tattoos possessed and any of the measured variables. These results suggest that tattooed and non-tattooed adults nowadays are more similar than different. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Meta-analysis of associations between human brain volume and intelligence differences: How strong are they and what do they mean?
- Author
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Pietschnig, Jakob, Penke, Lars, Wicherts, Jelte M., Zeiler, Michael, and Voracek, Martin
- Subjects
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MAGNETIC resonance imaging of the brain , *COGNITIVE ability , *INTELLECT , *BIOLOGICAL evolution , *META-analysis , *STATISTICAL correlation - Abstract
Positive associations between human intelligence and brain size have been suspected for more than 150 years. Nowadays, modern non-invasive measures of in vivo brain volume (Magnetic Resonance Imaging) make it possible to reliably assess associations with IQ. By means of a systematic review of published studies and unpublished results obtained by personal communications with researchers, we identified 88 studies examining effect sizes of 148 healthy and clinical mixed-sex samples (>8000 individuals). Our results showed significant positive associations of brain volume and IQ ( r = .24, R 2 = .06) that generalize over age (children vs. adults), IQ domain (full-scale, performance, and verbal IQ), and sex. Application of a number of methods for detection of publication bias indicates that strong and positive correlation coefficients have been reported frequently in the literature whilst small and non-significant associations appear to have been often omitted from reports. We show that the strength of the positive association of brain volume and IQ has been overestimated in the literature, but remains robust even when accounting for different types of dissemination bias, although reported effects have been declining over time. While it is tempting to interpret this association in the context of human cognitive evolution and species differences in brain size and cognitive ability, we show that it is not warranted to interpret brain size as an isomorphic proxy of human intelligence differences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Genetic association studies between SNPs and suicidal behavior: A meta-analytical field synopsis.
- Author
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Schild, Anne H.E., Pietschnig, Jakob, Tran, Ulrich S., and Voracek, Martin
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SINGLE nucleotide polymorphisms , *SUICIDAL behavior , *META-analysis , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *MEDICAL statistics , *MEDICAL periodicals , *GENETICS - Abstract
Abstract: The large number of published meta-analyses on the associations between single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and suicidal behavior mirrors the enormous research interest in this topic. Although meta-analytic evidence is abundant and certain patterns are apparent, those have not been integrated into a general framework as of yet. In a systematic review, genetic association studies between SNPs and suicidal behavior were identified. Previously published meta-analyses for eight SNPs were updated and the results of the different meta-analyses were compared. Meta-analyses for 15 SNPs, which had not been subjected to meta-analysis before, were conducted. The present meta-analytical field synopsis showed five major similarities between new and published analyses: 1) Summary effect sizes were small and rarely statistically significant, 2) heterogeneity between studies was often substantial, 3) there were no time trends, 4) effects were easily swayed and were largely dependent on individual studies, and 5) publication bias does not play a role in this field of research. Meta-analytic data show once more that major contributions of single genes are unlikely. However, association studies and corresponding meta-analyses have been an important and necessary stepping stone in the development of modern and more complex approaches in the genetics of suicidal behavior. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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