227 results on '"MILANESE N."'
Search Results
2. An hysteretic dc SQUID for Non Invasive Measurements of the flux states of an rf SQUID
- Author
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Cosmelli, Carlo, Castellano, M. G., Carelli, P., Chiarello, F., Intelisano, A., and Milanese, N.
- Published
- 2001
3. An hysteretic dc-SQUID for non invasive measurements of the flux states of an rf-SQUID
- Author
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Cosmelli, C., Castellano, M. G., Carelli, Pasquale, Chiarello, F., Intelisano, A., Milanese, N., Leoni, R., and Torrioli, G.
- Published
- 2001
4. Contextual determinants of the social-transfer-of-learning effect
- Author
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Milanese, N., Iani, C., Sebanz, N., Rubichi, S., Milanese, N., Iani, C., Sebanz, N., and Rubichi, S.
- Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext, A recent study (Milanese et al. in Cogn 116(1):15-22, 2010) showed that performing a spatial compatibility task with incompatible S-R links (i.e., the practice task) alongside a co-actor eliminates the Simon effect in a subsequent joint Simon task (i.e., the transfer task). In the present study, we conducted three experiments to individuate which elements of the practice task need to remain constant for this social-transfer-of-learning to occur. In Experiment 1, participants performed the practice task alongside a co-actor and the Simon task with a different co-actor; in Experiment 2, they performed the practice task alongside a co-actor and the Simon task with the same co-actor after exchanging their seats. Results showed a modulation of the joint Simon effect in Experiment 1 only. In Experiment 2, we found a regular joint Simon effect. These results indicate that, while co-actor identity is not crucial, other elements of the context, such as keeping the same position across tasks, are necessary for the social-transfer-of-learning to occur. On the whole, our data suggest that the social-transfer-of-learning effect is not tuned to a specific co-actor and depends on spatial parameters of the practice and transfer tasks.
- Published
- 2011
5. Sequential modulation of (bottom-up) response activation and inhibition in a response conflict task: a single-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation study.
- Author
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Treccani B, Cona G, Milanese N, and Umiltà C
- Subjects
- Adult, Choice Behavior, Female, Humans, Male, Repetition Priming, Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation, Young Adult, Conflict, Psychological, Evoked Potentials, Motor physiology, Inhibition, Psychological, Motor Cortex physiology, Psychomotor Performance physiology
- Abstract
Many cognitive tasks involve a response conflict between the response selected on the basis of the task-relevant attribute and that primed by an irrelevant attribute. Although response priming has been extensively investigated, we still have little evidence on whether it entails both excitatory and inhibitory processes and the way in which these processes are modulated by the prior occurrence of a conflict between-response alternatives. To shed light on these issues, we tested motor cortex excitability during a two-choice compatibility task (a Simon task) by delivering single pulses of transcranial magnetic stimulation and recording the resulting motor evoked potentials (MEPs). We obtained consistent behavioural and MEP results suggesting that the presentation of a left- or right-side stimulus causes the activation of the ipsilateral response, which-in turn-inhibits the alternative response. Both processes are modulated by the spatial compatibility of the preceding trial. In trials following compatible trials (i.e. after conditions wherein the primed response was the correct one), we found response efficiency advantages and disadvantages of compatible and incompatible trials, respectively, which were mirrored by an increase of the excitability of the motor cortex primed by stimulus position and by a parallel decrease of the contralateral cortex excitability. Both the facilitation and interference components of the behavioural effect and the excitatory and inhibitory effects of the stimulus position on motor excitability were smaller after neutral trials (i.e. when the stimulus of the previous trial was aligned with fixation, thus not priming any response) and absent after incompatible trials (i.e. after having experienced a conflict between the primed and correct responses). These results are consistent with the idea that location-based response priming is under control of a conflict monitoring mechanism that strengthens ipsilateral response activation and contralateral response inhibition after compatible trials and weakens both processes after incompatible trials.
- Published
- 2018
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6. ESCAPE FROM THE ZERO-VOLTAGE STATE IN HYSTERETIC DC-SQUIDS WITH DIFFERENT DIMENSIONLESS INDUCTANCE
- Author
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CASTELLANO, M. G., primary, INTELISANO, A., additional, LEONI, R., additional, MILANESE, N., additional, TORRIOLI, G., additional, COSMELLI, C., additional, CARELLI, P., additional, and CHIARELLO, F., additional
- Published
- 2000
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7. Spatial parameters at the basis of social transfer of learning.
- Author
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Lugli L, Iani C, Milanese N, Sebanz N, and Rubichi S
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Reaction Time, Task Performance and Analysis, Young Adult, Learning, Social Skills, Spatial Behavior, Transfer, Psychology
- Abstract
Recent research indicates that practicing on a joint spatial compatibility task with an incompatible stimulus-response mapping affects subsequent joint Simon task performance, eliminating the social Simon effect. It has been well established that in individual contexts, for transfer of learning to occur, participants need to practice an incompatible association between stimulus and response positions. The mechanisms underlying transfer of learning in joint task performance are, however, less well understood. The present study was aimed at assessing the relative contribution of 3 different spatial relations characterizing the joint practice context: stimulus-response, stimulus-participant, and participant-response relations. In 3 experiments, the authors manipulated the stimulus-response, stimulus-participant, and response-participant associations. We found that learning from the practice task did not transfer to the subsequent task when during practice stimulus-response associations were spatially incompatible and stimulus-participant associations were compatible (Experiment 1). However, a transfer of learning was evident when stimulus-participant associations were spatially incompatible. This occurred both when response-participant associations were incompatible (Experiment 2) and when they were compatible (Experiment 3). These results seem to support an agent corepresentation account of correspondence effects emerging in joint settings since they suggest that, in social contexts, critical to obtain transfer-of-learning effects is the spatial relation between stimulus and participant positions while the spatial relation between stimulus and response positions is irrelevant., ((c) 2015 APA, all rights reserved).)
- Published
- 2015
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8. The influence of prior practice and handedness on the orthogonal Simon effect.
- Author
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Iani C, Milanese N, and Rubichi S
- Abstract
When stimuli are arranged vertically and responses horizontally, right-handed participants respond faster with right responses to stimuli presented above fixation and with left responses to stimuli presented below fixation, even when stimulus position is task-irrelevant (orthogonal Simon effect). The aim of the present work was twofold. First, we assessed whether the orthogonal Simon effect evident in right-handed participants is present also for left-handed participants (Experiment 1). Second, we investigated whether for both groups of participants the orthogonal Simon effect is influenced by the stimulus-response (S-R) mapping used for an orthogonal spatial S-R compatibility task performed 5 min before (Experiment 2). Our results showed that the orthogonal Simon effect significantly differed in the two groups, with left-handers showing an advantage for the up-left/down-right mapping (Experiment 1). Interestingly, the orthogonal Simon effect was strongly influenced by prior practice regardless of the participants' handedness (Experiment 2). These results suggest that the short-term S-R associations acquired during practice can override the long-term, hardwired associations established on the basis of handedness.
- Published
- 2014
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9. Dishwasher with a control device for monitoring the rotation of the spray arms
- Author
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BOSCOLO, ANTONIO, MILANESE N., Boscolo, Antonio, and Milanese, N.
- Published
- 1982
10. Facilitation and interference components in the joint Simon task.
- Author
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Ferraro L, Iani C, Mariani M, Milanese N, and Rubichi S
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neuropsychological Tests, Orientation, Photic Stimulation, Reaction Time, Space Perception, Attention, Cooperative Behavior, Psychomotor Performance, Visual Perception
- Abstract
Two experiments were conducted to assess whether the joint Simon effect is composed of facilitation and interference and whether facilitation is increased by a joint spatially compatible practice performed before performing the joint Simon task. In both experiments, participants were required to perform a Simon task along another person. Trials could be corresponding, non-corresponding, and neutral. In Experiment 1, participants performed only the Simon task. In Experiment 2, participants first practiced on a joint spatial compatibility task with a compatible mapping and, after a 5-min delay, transferred to a joint Simon task. Results indicated that the joint Simon effect consisted primarily of interference, which was significantly increased by a spatially compatible practice performed jointly. These results allow us to better define in what ways the presence of the other influences performance, in showing that when participants perform a task along with another individual, they display a disadvantage (i.e., slower RTs) when they have to respond to stimuli appearing on the other agent's side.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Contextual determinants of the social-transfer-of-learning effect.
- Author
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Milanese N, Iani C, Sebanz N, and Rubichi S
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neuropsychological Tests, Orientation, Psychomotor Performance, Reaction Time, Social Behavior, Interpersonal Relations, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Practice, Psychological, Transfer, Psychology
- Abstract
A recent study (Milanese et al. in Cogn 116(1):15-22, 2010) showed that performing a spatial compatibility task with incompatible S-R links (i.e., the practice task) alongside a co-actor eliminates the Simon effect in a subsequent joint Simon task (i.e., the transfer task). In the present study, we conducted three experiments to individuate which elements of the practice task need to remain constant for this social-transfer-of-learning to occur. In Experiment 1, participants performed the practice task alongside a co-actor and the Simon task with a different co-actor; in Experiment 2, they performed the practice task alongside a co-actor and the Simon task with the same co-actor after exchanging their seats. Results showed a modulation of the joint Simon effect in Experiment 1 only. In Experiment 2, we found a regular joint Simon effect. These results indicate that, while co-actor identity is not crucial, other elements of the context, such as keeping the same position across tasks, are necessary for the social-transfer-of-learning to occur. On the whole, our data suggest that the social-transfer-of-learning effect is not tuned to a specific co-actor and depends on spatial parameters of the practice and transfer tasks.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Influence on Simon and SNARC effects of a nonspatial stimulus-response mapping: between-task logical recoding.
- Author
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Treccani B, Milanese N, and Umiltà C
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Reversal Learning, Young Adult, Association Learning, Attention, Conflict, Psychological, Discrimination Learning, Logic, Orientation, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Psychomotor Performance, Reaction Time
- Abstract
In 4 experiments, we intermixed trials in which the stimulus color was relevant with trials where participants had to judge the stimulus shape or parity and found that the logical-recoding rule (Hedge & Marsh, 1975) applied to the relevant dimension in a task can generalize to the irrelevant dimension of the other task. The mapping assigned to participants in color-relevant trials modulated the Simon and SNARC (spatial-numerical association of response codes) effects (Simon & Small, 1969; Dehaene, Bossini, & Giraux, 1993) observed in shape- and parity-relevant trials. Standard effects were obtained when color-relevant trials required participants to respond by pressing a key of the same color as the stimulus, whereas an alternate-color mapping caused either the disappearance or reversal of the effects. The present results demonstrate that for between-task transfer effects to occur the critical dimensions in the two alternative tasks do not have to share the same representation nor need the stimuli of the two tasks have any feature in common., ((PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved).)
- Published
- 2010
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13. Shared learning shapes human performance: Transfer effects in task sharing.
- Author
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Milanese N, Iani C, and Rubichi S
- Subjects
- Adult, Cognition physiology, Female, Humans, Male, Photic Stimulation, Practice, Psychological, Reaction Time physiology, Social Behavior, Young Adult, Learning physiology, Psychomotor Performance physiology, Social Environment
- Abstract
We investigated whether performing a task with a co-actor shapes the way a subsequent task is performed. In four experiments participants were administered a Simon task after practicing a spatial compatibility task with an incompatible S-R mapping. In Experiment 1 they performed both tasks alongside another person; in Experiment 2 they performed the spatial compatibility task alone, responding to only one stimulus position, and the Simon task with another person; in Experiment 3, they performed the spatial compatibility task with another person and the Simon task alone; finally, in Experiment 4, they performed the spatial compatibility task alone and the Simon task with another person. The incompatible practice eliminated the Simon effect in Experiments 1 and 4. These results indicate that when a task is distributed between two participants with each one performing a different part of it, they tend to represent the whole task rather than their own part of it. This experience can influence the way a subsequent task is performed, as long as this latter occurs in a social context., (2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2010
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14. Capsular type distribution and susceptibility to antibiotics of Streptococcus pneumoniae clinical strains isolated from Uruguayan children with systemic infections. Pneumococcus Study Group.
- Author
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Hortal M, Algorta G, Bianchi I, Borthagaray G, Cestau I, Camou T, Castro M, de los Santos M, Diez R, Dell'Acqua L, Galiana A, Giordano A, Giordano P, Lopez-Ghemi G, Milanese N, Mogdasy C, Palacio R, Pedreira W, Pisano A, and Pivel L
- Subjects
- Humans, Infant, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Pneumococcal Infections drug therapy, Pneumococcal Infections epidemiology, Population Surveillance, Serotyping, Streptococcus pneumoniae classification, Streptococcus pneumoniae isolation & purification, Uruguay epidemiology, Drug Resistance, Microbial, Pneumococcal Infections microbiology, Streptococcus pneumoniae drug effects
- Abstract
Children under 24 months of age are at high risk for serious infection with Streptococcus pneumoniae but they do not elicit effective immune responses to the currently available capsular polysaccharide vaccines. A polysaccharide protein conjugated vaccine involving the most frequent types has become an urgent need. To produce such a vaccine for Latin America, information on type distribution is required. Recently, Uruguay was 1 of the 6 countries in Latin America where surveillance for invasive pneumococcal infections in children under the age of 5 years was carried out. Seventy percent of the 182 invasive S. pneumoniae isolates were recovered from patients under 24 months of age, and 19% were recovered from infants under 6 months. The 7 most frequent types were 14, 5, 1, 6B, 3, 7F, and 19A; representing 80% of invasive isolates. Twenty-one types were identified, 16 in pneumonia and 14 in meningitis. Resistance to penicillin increased during the study period, from 29% in 1994, to 40% in 1995-1996, mainly because of the spread of type 14 strains resistant to penicillin and trimethoprim/sulphamethoxazol (89% of resistant isolates). The high proportion of systemic pneumococcal infections recorded in patients under 24 months of age and the increasing resistance of these agents to first-choice antibiotics point to an urgent need for a capsular polysaccharide protein conjugated vaccine.
- Published
- 1997
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15. Spatial Correspondence Parameters at the Basis of Transfer of Learning in Social Contexts
- Author
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Luisa Lugli, Iani, C., Milanese, N., Rubichi, S., M. Knauff, M. Pauen, N. Sebanz, I. Wachsmuth, Luisa Lugli, Cristina Iani, Nadia Milanese, and Sandro Rubichi
- Subjects
joint performance ,spatial compatibility ,social cognition ,Social and Behavioral Sciences ,social transfer-of-learning - Abstract
Recent works indicated that performing a joint spatial compatibility task with an incompatible stimulus-response mapping affects subsequent joint Simon task performance, eliminating the social Simon effect (social transfer of learning effect or SToL effect). Crucially, the SToL effect was not tuned to the specific identity of the co-actor, and depended on the overlap between the spatial relations of the practice and transfer tasks. Starting from these findings, this study aimed at investigating which spatial relations between stimulus (S), response (R) or participant (P) positions are relevant for the SToL effect to occur. Two experiments were run in which the participant-response associations were incompatible (participants were required to respond with crossed arms), whereas the stimulus-response and stimulus-participant associations were manipulated. We found that learning derived from the practice task did not transfer to the subsequent task when stimulus-response associations were spatially incompatible and stimulus-participant associations were compatible (Experiment 1). However, a SToL effect was evident when stimulus-participant associations were spatially incompatible and stimulus-response associations were compatible (Experiment 2), hence suggesting that the spatial relation between stimulus and participant positions is crucial for the SToL effect to occur.
16. The neutral condition in conflict tasks: On the violation of the midpoint assumption in reaction time trends.
- Author
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Smith, Parker and Ulrich, Rolf
- Subjects
CONTROL (Psychology) ,COGNITIVE ability ,STROOP effect ,PREDICTION models ,REACTION time - Abstract
Although the relation between congruent and incongruent conditions in conflict tasks has been the primary focus of cognitive control studies, the neutral condition is often set as a baseline directly between the two conditions. However, empirical evidence suggests that the average neutral reaction time (RT) is not placed evenly between the two opposing conditions. This article set out to establish two things: First, to reinforce the informative nature of the neutral condition and second, to highlight how it can be useful for modelling. We explored how RT in the neutral condition of conflict tasks (Stroop, Flanker, and Simon Tasks) deviated from the predictions of current diffusion models. Current diffusion models of conflict tasks predict a neutral RT that is the average of the congruent and incongruent RT, called the midpoint assumption. To investigate this, we first conducted a cursory limited search that recorded the average RT's of conflict tasks with neutral conditions. Upon finding evidence of a midpoint assumption violation which showed a larger disparity between average neutral and incongruent RT, we tested the previously mentioned conflict tasks with two different sets of stimuli to establish the robustness of the effect. The midpoint assumption violation is sometimes inconsistent with the prediction of diffusion models of conflict processing (e.g., the Diffusion Model of Conflict), suggesting possible elaborations of such models. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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17. Informal institutionalization in modern Ukraine.
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Haponenko, Vira, Rykhlik, Volodymyr, Shulga, Marina, Bulbeniuk, Svitlana, and Naumenko, Olha
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RUSSIA-Ukraine relations ,DEMOCRACY ,POLITICAL systems ,POLITICAL participation ,CAMPAIGN funds - Abstract
The relevance of the research lies in the observation that, while Ukraine has established formal democratic institutions since its independence, many democratization issues remain unresolved. These formal structures lack effectiveness and support, with informal, often non-democratic political processes and secret agreements continuing to prevail. The study aims to conclude a theoretical study, conceptualization, and generalization of the problems of the existence of informal institutions, as well as a comprehensive analysis of practical technologies of informal institutionalization in modern Ukraine. The authors used such general scientific methods as analysis and synthesis, induction and deduction, abstraction, the ascent from the abstract to the concrete. The authors considered such informal institutions that exist in the political reality of Ukraine, such as lobbying, corruption, populism, non-conventional forms of political participation of citizens, party agreements, clientelism, and political bargaining. The effective technologies for the informal institutionalization of modern Ukraine, including technologies for eliminating authoritarian practices, technologies of party structuring, technologies of political participation and technologies for the formation of democratic political consciousness have been proposed. These technologies are aimed at the political modernization of Ukraine, ensuring the institutional functioning of democracy at the proper level and minimizing the negative effects of informal institutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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18. Similarities of SNARC, cognitive Simon, and visuomotor Simon effects in terms of response time distributions, hand-stimulus proximity, and temporal dynamics.
- Author
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Yan, Lizhu, Ma, Yilin, Yang, Weibin, Xiang, Xinrui, and Nan, Weizhi
- Abstract
The spatial-numerical association of response codes (SNARC) and Simon effects are attributed to the same type of conflict according to dimensional overlap (DO) theory: the congruency of task-irrelevant spatial information and the selected response (e.g., left or right). However, previous studies have yielded inconsistent results regarding the relationship between the two effects, with some studies reporting an interaction while others did not. This discrepancy may be attributed to the use of different types of Simon effects (visuomotor and cognitive Simon effects) in these studies, as the spatial codes associated with these two types of Simon effects are distinct (exogenous and endogenous, respectively). The aim of this study was to address these inconsistencies and gain a better understanding of the similarities and differences in spatial representations generated by spatial location, semantic information, and numerical information. We attempted to classify the relationships among the SNARC and Simon effects. Specifically, the visuomotor Simon, cognitive Simon, and SNARC effects were compared from three perspectives: the response time (RT) distribution, hand-stimulus proximity, and temporal dynamics (with the drift diffusion model; DDM). Regarding RTs, the results showed that the visuomotor Simon effect decreased with increased values of RT bins, while the cognitive Simon and SNARC effects increased. Additionally, the visuomotor Simon effect was the only effect influenced by hand-stimulus proximity, with a stronger effect observed in the hand-proximal condition than in the hand-distal condition. Regarding the DDM results, only the visuomotor Simon effect exhibited a higher drift rate and longer non-decision time in the incompatible condition than in the compatible condition. Conversely, both the SNARC and cognitive Simon effects exhibited an inverse pattern regarding the drift rate and no significant difference in non-decision time between the two conditions. These findings suggest that the SNARC effect is more similar to the cognitive Simon effect than the visuomotor Simon effect, indicating that the endogenous spatial-numerical representation of the SNARC effect might share an underlying processing mechanism with the endogenous spatial–semantic representation of the cognitive Simon effect but not with the exogenous location representation of the visuomotor Simon effect. Our results further demonstrate that the origin of spatial information could impact the classification of conflicts and supplement DO theory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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19. Exploring behavioral adjustments of proportion congruency manipulations in an Eriksen flanker task with visual and auditory distractor modalities.
- Author
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Bräutigam, Linda C., Leuthold, Hartmut, Mackenzie, Ian G., and Mittelstädt, Victor
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGY of movement ,COGNITION ,LEARNING ,CONFLICT (Psychology) ,ATTENTION ,REACTION time ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation - Abstract
The present study investigated global behavioral adaptation effects to conflict arising from different distractor modalities. Three experiments were conducted using an Eriksen flanker paradigm with constant visual targets, but randomly varying auditory or visual distractors. In Experiment 1, the proportion of congruent to incongruent trials was varied for both distractor modalities, whereas in Experiments 2A and 2B, this proportion congruency (PC) manipulation was applied to trials with one distractor modality (inducer) to test potential behavioral transfer effects to trials with the other distractor modality (diagnostic). In all experiments, mean proportion congruency effects (PCEs) were present in trials with a PC manipulation, but there was no evidence of transfer to diagnostic trials in Experiments 2A and 2B. Distributional analyses (delta plots) provided further evidence for distractor modality-specific global behavioral adaptations by showing differences in the slope of delta plots with visual but not auditory distractors when increasing the ratio of congruent trials. Thus, it is suggested that distractor modalities constrain global behavioral adaptation effects due to the learning of modality-specific memory traces (e.g., distractor–target associations) and/or the modality-specific cognitive control processes (e.g., suppression of modality-specific distractor-based activation). Moreover, additional analyses revealed partial transfer of the congruency sequence effect across trials with different distractor modalities suggesting that distractor modality may differentially affect local and global behavioral adaptations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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20. EU Responses to the Democratic Deficit and the Rule of Law Crisis: Is It Time for a (New) European Exceptionalism?
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Mavrouli, Roila and Van Waeyenberge, Arnaud
- Subjects
RULE of law ,EUROPEAN integration ,NOBILITY (Social class) ,MESSIANISM ,TECHNOCRACY ,EUROPEAN Sovereign Debt Crisis, 2009-2018 ,CRISES - Abstract
The European 'messianic' project was not particularly concerned with democracy or human rights, but rather sought 'legitimacy' in the nobility of its cause. However, when failure struck during the Euro-crisis, many sources of legitimacy suddenly collapsed. Similarly, failure struck the rule of law principle, demonstrating its precariousness and weak source of legitimation. The strong waves of de-europeanisation and the rise of illiberal democracies not only bolster the existing preoccupations of problematic democratic procedures, but further bring into question the continuity of the EU as a supranational entity. Interestingly, the European Union's answer to these issues furnishes a solution that, on the one hand, focuses on the enhancement of democracy, while focusing the safeguarding of rule of law on the other. Such an enhancement of democracy could be the result of the Conference on the Future of Europe, whereas, the rule of law crisis is meant to be addressed through financial and techno-managerial mechanisms. However, if the first mechanism aims to palliate or even mitigate the democratic deficit, the second one risks further alienating Union citizens by seeing in it another instance of European Union 'technocracy'. The solution to be foreseen is to reconnect democracy with rule of law as they have always been the foreign implants of European integration. Filling in these empty gaps of political messianism through an outright pairing of democracy and rule of law will rejuvenate the social legitimacy of European exceptionalism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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21. Approach–avoidance behavior and motor‐specific modulation towards smoking‐related cues in smokers.
- Author
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Song, Yuyu, Pi, Yanling, Tan, Xiaoying, Xia, Xue, Liu, Yu, and Zhang, Jian
- Subjects
SMOKING prevention ,EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) ,ELECTRONIC cigarettes ,AVOIDANCE conditioning ,TRANSCRANIAL magnetic stimulation ,NON-smokers ,NICOTINE ,RESEARCH funding ,ELECTROMYOGRAPHY ,MOTOR ability ,PROMPTS (Psychology) - Abstract
Aims: By performing three transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) experiments, we measured the motor‐specific modulatory mechanisms in the primary motor cortex (M1) at both the intercortical and intracortical levels when smokers actively approach or avoid smoking‐related cues. Design, Setting and Participants: For all experiments, the design was group (smokers versus non‐smokers) × action (approach versus avoidance) × image type (neutral versus smoking‐related). The study was conducted at the Shanghai University of Sport, CHN, TMS Laboratory. For experiment 1, 30 non‐smokers and 30 smokers; for experiment 2, 16 non‐smokers and 16 smokers; for experiment 3, 16 non‐smokers and 16 smokers. Measurements: For all experiments, the reaction times were measured using the smoking stimulus–response compatibility task. While performing the task, single‐pulse TMS was applied to the M1 in experiment 1 to measure the excitability of the corticospinal pathways, and paired‐pulse TMS was applied to the M1 in experiments 2 and 3 to measure the activity of intracortical facilitation (ICF) and short‐interval intracortical inhibition (SICI) circuits, respectively. Findings Smokers had faster responses when approaching smoking‐related cues (F1,58 = 36.660, P < 0.001, ηp2 = 0.387), accompanied by higher excitability of the corticospinal pathways (F1,58 = 10.980, P = 0.002, ηp2 = 0.159) and ICF circuits (F1,30 = 22.187, P < 0.001, ηp2 = 0.425), while stronger SICI effects were observed when they avoided these cues (F1,30 = 10.672, P = 0.003, ηp2 = 0.262). Conclusions: Smokers appear to have shorter reaction times, higher motor‐evoked potentials and stronger intracortical facilitation effects when performing approach responses to smoking‐related cues and longer reaction times, a lower primary motor cortex descending pathway excitability and a stronger short‐interval intracortical inhibition effect when avoiding them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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22. Motor demands influence conflict processing in a mouse-tracking Simon task.
- Author
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Mittelstädt, Victor, Leuthold, Hartmut, and Mackenzie, Ian Grant
- Subjects
CONFLICT management ,SUPPLY & demand ,DECISION making ,COGNITIVE ability - Abstract
Previous studies have shown incorrect motor activation when making perceptual decisions under conflict, but the potential involvement of motor processes in conflict resolution is still unclear. The present study tested whether the effects of distracting information may be reduced when anticipated motor processing demands increase. Specifically, across two mouse-tracking Simon experiments, we manipulated blockwise motor demands (high vs. low) by requiring participants to move a mouse cursor to either large versus small (Experiment 1) or near versus far (Experiment 2) response boxes presented on the screen. We reasoned that participants would increase action control in blocks with high versus low motor demands and that this would reduce the distracting effect of location-based activation. The results support this hypothesis: Simon effects were reduced under high versus low motor demands and this modulation held even when controlling for time-varying fluctuations in distractor-based activation via distributional analyses (i.e., delta plots). Thus, the present findings indicate that anticipation of different motor costs can influence conflict processing. We propose that the competition between distractor-based and target-based activation is biased at premotor and/or motor stages in anticipation of motor demands, but also discuss alternative implementations of action control. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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23. Practice effects vs. transfer effects in the Simon task.
- Author
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D'Ascenzo S, Lugli L, Nicoletti R, and Umiltà C
- Subjects
- Behavioral Research, Humans, Photic Stimulation, Psychomotor Performance, Spatio-Temporal Analysis, Young Adult, Practice, Psychological, Reaction Time, Task Performance and Analysis, Transfer, Psychology
- Abstract
The Simon effect refers to the fact that, even though stimulus position is task-irrelevant, responses to a task-relevant stimulus dimension are faster and more accurate when the stimulus and response spatially correspond than when they do not. Although the Simon effect is a very robust phenomenon, it is modulated by practice or transfer from previous tasks. Practice refers to the modulation of the Simon effect as a function of number of trials. Transfer refers to the modulation of the Simon effect as a function of preceding tasks. The aim of the present study is to disentangle the role of practice and transfer in modulating the Simon effect and to investigate whether such modulation can be extended to a different response modality. Three experiments were conducted, which included three sessions: the Baseline session, the Inducer session and the Diagnostic session. The task performed in the Baseline and the Diagnostic sessions were comprised of location-irrelevant trials (i.e., they were Simon tasks). The task performed in the Inducer session required performing location-relevant trials (i.e., it was a spatial compatibility task with a compatible or an incompatible stimulus-response mapping). In the first and third experiments, participants were required to respond manually in all sessions. In the second experiment, the task performed in the Inducer session required manual response, while in the Baseline and Diagnostic sessions the tasks required ocular response. Results showed a reduced-Diagnostic Simon effect after both compatible and incompatible mapping in the Inducer session, regardless of whether response modality was the same or different. These results support the notion that the practice effect prevails over the transfer effect., (© 2020. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2021
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24. The role of the co-actor's response reachability in the joint Simon effect: remapping of working space by tool use.
- Author
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Iani C, Ciardo F, Panajoli S, Lugli L, and Rubichi S
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Personal Space, Choice Behavior, Discrimination, Psychological physiology, Psychomotor Performance physiology, Reaction Time physiology, Tool Use Behavior
- Abstract
The Simon effect, that is the advantage of the spatial correspondence between stimulus and response locations when stimulus location is task irrelevant, occurs even when the task is performed by two participants, each performing a go/no-go task. This effect, known as the joint Simon effect, does not emerge when participants sit outside each other's peripersonal space, thus suggesting that the presence of an active confederate in peripersonal space might provide a reference for response coding. The present study investigated whether this finding is due to the distance separating the participants and/or to the distance separating each participant and the other agent's response. In two experiments, pairs of participants performed a social detection task sitting outside each other's arm reach, with response keys located close to the participants or outside arm reach. When the response key was located outside the participant's arm reach, he/she could reach it by means of a tool. In Experiment 1, by means of a tool, participants could reach their response key only, while in Experiment 2, they could reach also their co-agent's response key. The joint Simon effect did not emerge when participants could not reach the co-actor's response, while it emerged when they could potentially reach the other participant's response using the tool, but only when turn taking was required. These results may be taken as evidence that the possibility to reach and act upon the co-actor's response key may be at the bases of compatibility effects observed in joint action contexts requiring complementary responses.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Lingue di pace – lingue per la pace. La provocazione dell’esperanto.
- Author
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Astori, Davide
- Subjects
NINETEENTH century ,TWENTIETH century ,PEACE ,CONSONANTS ,LANGUAGE & languages - Abstract
Esperanto, planned by Ludwik Lejzer (Łazarz) Markovich Zamenhof between the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, was born as a linguistic tool within a broader project of reflection on the value of intercultural and interreligious dialogue, immediately presenting itself as the “language of peace”. But all this did not protect it from being used for different, if not even opposite, purposes in the military and political spheres. After introducing the reader to the values of Esperantism, we will discuss two peculiar examples – consonant in their diversity of context – of “heterodox” use of this lingvo de paco, to reflect, in conclusion, briefly on the more general relationship between ‘language’ and ‘peace’. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
26. Fake news detection and social media trust: a cross-cultural perspective.
- Author
-
Dabbous, Amal, Aoun Barakat, Karine, and de Quero Navarro, Beatriz
- Subjects
STRUCTURAL equation modeling ,AUTHORITY ,SAMPLE size (Statistics) ,SOCIAL media ,SOCIAL learning theory ,ETHNOLOGY research ,SELF-efficacy ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,COMPARATIVE studies ,CRONBACH'S alpha ,ACCESS to information ,ATTENTION ,INFORMATION resources ,GOVERNMENT policy ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,HYPOTHESIS ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,DATA analysis software ,DECEPTION ,TRUST - Abstract
Social media is increasingly being used worldwide to produce and exchange information. However, the absence of adequate control mechanisms on this medium has led to concerns about the credibility of information in circulation. While this topic has gained researchers' attention, little is known about the factors which allow individuals to detect fake news and lead them to trust social media as a source of information, and whether this varies across cultures. This cross-cultural study conducted in Spain and Lebanon uses structural equation modelling to explore these factors and presents them within a behavioural model. Findings show that verification behaviour, information skills and education have a positive influence on fake news detection with a stronger impact in Lebanon. Trust is positively affected by virality with higher influence in Lebanon, while ability to detect is shown to decrease trust in Spain. Frequency of use impacts trust equally in both countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Abstract and concrete concepts in conversation.
- Author
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Villani, Caterina, Orsoni, Matteo, Lugli, Luisa, Benassi, Mariagrazia, and Borghi, Anna M.
- Subjects
CONCRETE ,INTEROCEPTION ,CONVERSATION ,INTROSPECTION ,EMOTIONS - Abstract
Concepts allow us to make sense of the world. Most evidence on their acquisition and representation comes from studies of single decontextualized words and focuses on the opposition between concrete and abstract concepts (e.g., "bottle" vs. "truth"). A significant step forward in research on concepts consists in investigating them in online interaction during their use. Our study examines linguistic exchanges analyzing the differences between sub-kinds of concepts. Participants were submitted to an online task in which they had to simulate a conversational exchange by responding to sentences involving sub-kinds of concrete (tools, animals, food) and abstract concepts (PS, philosophical-spiritual; EMSS, emotional-social, PSTQ, physical-spatio-temporal-quantitative). We found differences in content: foods evoked interoception; tools and animals elicited materials, spatial, auditive features, confirming their sensorimotor grounding. PS and EMSS yielded inner experiences (e.g., emotions, cognitive states, introspections) and opposed PSTQ, tied to visual properties and concrete agency. More crucially, the various concepts elicited different interactional dynamics: more abstract concepts generated higher uncertainty and more interactive exchanges than concrete ones. Investigating concepts in situated interactions opens new possibilities for studying conceptual knowledge and its pragmatic and social aspects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Reaction time asymmetries provide insight into mechanisms underlying dominant and non-dominant hand selection.
- Author
-
Dexheimer, Brooke, Przybyla, Andrzej, Murphy, Terrence E., Akpinar, Selcuk, and Sainburg, Robert
- Subjects
VIRTUAL reality ,HANDEDNESS ,ATTENTIONAL bias - Abstract
Handedness is often thought of as a hand "preference" for specific tasks or components of bimanual tasks. Nevertheless, hand selection decisions depend on many factors beyond hand dominance. While these decisions are likely influenced by which hand might show performance advantages for the particular task and conditions, there also appears to be a bias toward the dominant hand, regardless of performance advantage. This study examined the impact of hand selection decisions and workspace location on reaction time and movement quality. Twenty-six neurologically intact participants performed targeted reaching across the horizontal workspace in a 2D virtual reality environment, and we compared reaction time across two groups: those selecting which hand to use on a trial-by-trial basis (termed the choice group) and those performing the task with a preassigned hand (the no-choice group). Along with reaction time, we also compared reach performance for each group across two ipsilateral workspaces: medial and lateral. We observed a significant difference in reaction time between the hands in the choice group, regardless of workspace. In contrast, both hands showed shorter but similar reaction times and differences between the lateral and medial workspaces in the no-choice group. We conclude that the shorter reaction times of the dominant hand under choice conditions may be due to dominant hand bias in the selection process that is not dependent upon interlimb performance differences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Wearing the face mask affects our social attention over space.
- Author
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Villani, Caterina, D’Ascenzo, Stefania, Scerrati, Elisa, Ricciardelli, Paola, Nicoletti, Roberto, and Lugli, Luisa
- Subjects
MEDICAL masks ,MASKING (Psychology) ,SAFETY ,SELF-expression ,ATTENTION ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Recent studies suggest that covering the face inhibits the recognition of identity and emotional expressions. However, it might also make the eyes more salient, since they are a reliable index to orient our social and spatial attention. This study investigates (1) whether the pervasive interaction with people with face masks fostered by the COVID-19 pandemic modulates the processing of spatial information essential to shift attention according to other’s eye-gaze direction (i.e., gaze-cueing effect: GCE), and (2) whether this potential modulation interacts with motor responses (i.e., Simon effect). Participants were presented with face cues orienting their gaze to a congruent or incongruent target letter location (gaze-cueing paradigm) while wearing a surgical mask (Mask), a patch (Control), or nothing (No-Mask). The task required to discriminate the identity of the lateralized target letters by pressing one of two lateralized response keys, in a corresponding or a non-corresponding position with respect to the target. Results showed that GCE was not modulated by the presence of the Mask, but it occurred in the No-Mask condition, confirming previous studies. Crucially, the GCE interacted with Simon effect in the Mask and Control conditions, though in different ways. While in the Mask condition the GCE emerged only when target and response positions corresponded (i.e., Simoncorresponding trials), in the Control condition it emerged only when they did not correspond (i.e., Simon-non-corresponding trials). These results indicate that people with face masks induce us to jointly orient our visual attention in the direction of the seen gaze (GCE) in those conditions resembling (or associated with) a general approaching behavior (Simon-corresponding trials). This is likely promoted by the fact that we tend to perceive wearing the mask as a personal safety measure and, thus, someone wearing the face mask is perceived as a trustworthy person. In contrast, people with a patch on their face can be perceived as more threatening, therefore inducing a GCE in those conditions associated with a general avoidance behavior (Simon-noncorresponding trials). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Reaction time coupling in a joint stimulus-response task: A matter of functional actions or likable agents?
- Author
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Schielen, Zoe, Verhaegh, Julia, Dijkerman, Chris, and Naber, Marnix
- Subjects
REACTION time ,ACTIVE learning ,TASKS - Abstract
Shaping one owns actions by observing others' actions is driven by the deep-rooted mechanism of perception-action coupling. It typically occurs automatically, expressed as for example the unintentional synchronization of reaction times in interactive games. Theories on perception-action coupling highlight its benefits such as the joint coordination of actions to cooperatively perform tasks properly, the learning of novel actions from others, and the bonding with likable others. However, such functional aspects and how they shape perception-action coupling have never been compared quantitatively. Here we tested a total of hundred-fifteen participants that played a stimulus-response task while, in parallel, they observed videos of agents that played the exact same task several milliseconds in advance. We compared to what degree the reaction times of actions of agents, who varied their behavior in terms of functionality and likability in preceding prisoner dilemma games and quizzes, shape the reaction times of human test participants. To manipulate functionality and likability, we varied the predictability of cooperative behavior and correctness of actions of agents, respectively, resulting in likable (cooperative), dislikable (uncooperative), functional (correct actions), and dysfunctional (incorrect actions) agents. The results of three experiments showed that the participants' reaction times correlated most with the reaction times of agents that expressed functional behavior. However, the likability of agents had no effects on reaction time correlations. These findings suggest that, at least in the current computer task, participants are more likely to adopt the timing of actions from people that perform correct actions than from people that they like. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Discovery of the zeroth law of helicity spectrum in the pre-inertial range of wall turbulence.
- Author
-
Ali, Sk Zeeshan and Dey, Subhasish
- Subjects
DISCOVERY (Law) ,TURBULENCE ,WAVENUMBER - Abstract
We report an unprecedented existence of the zeroth law of helicity spectrum (i.e., the helicity spectrum becomes independent of the wavenumber) in the transition from production range to inertial range, herein termed the pre-inertial range, of wall turbulence. The zeroth law is explained by the superposition effect of the forward joint cascade of energy and helicity caused by twisting and stretching of wall-attached superstructures in an equilibrium layer. The phenomenological model perfectly predicts the zeroth law in the pre-inertial range. Experimental data support the existence of the zeroth law. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Two processing stages of the SNARC effect.
- Author
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Nan, Weizhi, Yan, Lizhu, Yang, Guochun, Liu, Xun, and Fu, Shimin
- Subjects
STROOP effect - Abstract
The spatial–numerical association of response codes (SNARC) effect showed that small/large numbers represented in the left/right space facilitated left/right responses, respectively. However, the processing stage (semantic representation or response selection) of the SNARC effect is still controversial. To investigate this issue, we adopted a modified magnitude comparison task in which the effects of SNARC, Stroop (semantic-representation stage), and Simon (response-selection stage) could be simultaneously induced. The processing stages of the SNARC effect were investigated by examining the interactions among these effects. According to the additive factor logic, if two effects are interactive, then they occur in the same stage; if two effects are additive, then they occur in different stages. Across two experiments, the SNARC effect interacted with the Stroop effect and with the Simon effect. These results suggested that the SNARC effect occurred in both the semantic-representation and response-selection stages and provided insight into that the SNARC effect might have two originating sources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Postilla a un'etimologia di Tartaros da *ter(H)- 'attraversare'.
- Author
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Ronzitti, Rosa
- Subjects
NOUNS ,VERBS ,PIES ,ARGUMENT - Abstract
In this paper, new arguments are used to resume and enlarge on Prof. Kölligan's recent proposal that the Greek noun Tartaros is a redoubled form of the root *ter(H)- 'to cross through'. In Greek, and perhaps in PIE, redoubled nouns may codify the iterative- intensive category generally expressed by the verb. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Effect of Second Language Proficiency on Inhibitory Control in the Simon Task: An fMRI Study.
- Author
-
Jia, Fanlu
- Subjects
BILINGUALISM ,RESPONSE inhibition ,LANGUAGE ability ,TEMPORAL lobe ,FUNCTIONAL magnetic resonance imaging ,SECOND language acquisition - Abstract
How learning a second language (L2) changes our brain has been an important question in neuroscience. Previous neuroimaging studies with different ages and language pairs spoken by bilinguals have consistently shown plastic changes in brain systems supporting executive control. One hypothesis posits that L2 experience-induced neural changes supporting cognitive control, which is responsible for the selection of a target language and minimization of interference from a non-target language. However, it remains poorly understood as to whether such cognitive advantage is reflected as stronger controlled processing or increased automatic inhibition processing. In this study, using functional MRI we scanned 27 Chinese-English late bilinguals while they performed a Simon task. Results showed that bilinguals with higher L2 vocabulary proficiency performed better in the Simon task, and more importantly, higher L2 vocabulary proficiency was associated with weaker activation of brain regions that support more general cognitive control, including the right anterior cingulate cortex, left insula and left superior temporal gyrus. These results suggest that L2 experience may lead to a more automatic and efficient processing in the inhibitory control task. Our finding provides an insight into neural activity changes associated with inhibitory control as a function of L2 proficiency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. A Joint Simon effect in children diagnosed with ASD is expressed differently from neurotypical children and adults.
- Author
-
Dudarev, Veronica, Iarocci, Grace, and Enns, James T.
- Subjects
CHILDREN with autism spectrum disorders ,NEURODIVERSITY ,SOCIAL norms ,SOCIAL processes ,RESPONSE inhibition - Abstract
When two participants perform a go/no go task, sharing the same display but responding to different targets, their responses show a spatial compatibility effect. A shape on the side of a participant is responded to faster than that on the neighbour's side. This is called the Joint Simon effect (JSE), and it vanishes when participants perform the same task alone. JSE has been taken as evidence that humans automatically monitor the actions of others. Here we compare the JSE in adults, typically developing (TD) children, and children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Contrary to our expectations, we found a robust JSE in children with ASD. Ex-Gaussian analyses of the distributions of correct responses revealed that the JSE is later-acting in children with ASD. This implies more deliberate social processing, consistent with social camouflaging, which is a behavioural modulation undertaken by people with ASD in an attempt to conform to social norms. These findings support a social interpretation of the JSE while also revealing the unique nature of social processing in children with ASD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Characterization of LiBH4–MgH2 Reactive Hydride Composite System with Scattering and Imaging Methods Using Neutron and Synchrotron Radiation.
- Author
-
Karimi, Fahim, Börries, Stefan, Pranzas, P. Klaus, Metz, Oliver, Hoell, Armin, Gizer, Gökhan, Puszkiel, Julián A., Riglos, Maria V. C., Pistidda, Claudio, Dornheim, Martin, Klassen, Thomas, and Schreyer, Andreas
- Subjects
HYDRIDES ,HYDROGEN content of metals ,IMAGING systems ,HYDROGEN storage ,NEUTRONS ,SYNCHROTRON radiation - Abstract
Reversible solid‐state hydrogen storage in metal hydrides is a key technology for pollution‐free energy conversion systems. Herein, the LiBH2–MgH2 composite system with and without ScCl3 additive is investigated using synchrotron‐ and neutron‐radiation‐based probing methods that can be applied to characterize such lightweight metal–hydrogen systems from nanoscopic levels up to macroscopic scale. Combining the results of neutron‐ and photon‐based methods allows a complementary insight into reaction paths and mechanisms, complex interactions between the hydride matrix and additive, hydrogen distribution, material transport, structural changes, and phase separation in the hydride matrix. The gained knowledge is of great importance for development and optimization of such novel metal‐hydride‐based hydrogen storage systems with respect to future applications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Spatial–numerical associations in the presence of an avatar.
- Author
-
Böffel, C., Herbst, C., Lindemann, O., and Müsseler, J.
- Subjects
AVATARS (Virtual reality) ,PERSPECTIVE taking ,VISUAL memory ,MENTAL arithmetic - Abstract
When we interact with other people or avatars, they often provide an alternative spatial frame of reference compared to our own. Previous studies introduced avatars into stimulus–response compatibility tasks and demonstrated compatibility effects as if the participant was viewing the task from the avatar's point of view. However, the origin of this effect of perspective taking remained unclear. To distinguish changes in stimulus coding from changes in response coding, caused by the avatar, two experiments were conducted that combined a SNARC task and a spontaneous visual perspective taking task to specify the role of response coding. We observed compatibility effects that were based on the avatar's perspective rather than the participants' own. Because number magnitude was independent of the avatar's perspective, the observed changes in compatibility caused by different perspectives indicate changes in response coding. These changes in response coding are only significant when they are accompanied by visual action effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. A comprehensive study on lithium-based reactive hydride composite (Li-RHC) as a reversible solid-state hydrogen storage system toward potential mobile applications.
- Author
-
Karimi, Fahim, Pranzas, Philipp Klaus, Puszkiel, Julián Atillio, Castro Riglos, María Victoria, Milanese, Chiara, Vainio, Ulla, Pistidda, Claudio, Gizer, Gökhan, Klassen, Thomas, Schreyer, Andreas, and Dornheim, Martin
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Oxime‐Derived Iminyl Radicals in Selective Processes of Hydrogen Atom Transfer and Addition to Carbon‐Carbon π‐Bonds.
- Author
-
Krylov, Igor B., Segida, Oleg O., Budnikov, Alexander S., and Terent'ev, Alexander O.
- Subjects
ABSTRACTION reactions ,VISIBLE spectra ,IMINYL radicals ,ADDITION reactions - Abstract
Oximes represent one of the fundamental organic compound classes with a wide range of synthetic applications. In the last decade O‐substituted oximes were recognized as the synthetically available and versatile precursors of iminyl radicals via one‐electron oxidation or one‐electron reduction employing visible light photoredox catalysts, salts of abundant metals (such as Cu or Fe), or other convenient reagents. Iminyl radicals are powerful synthons for various processes of cyclization, ring‐opening, CH‐functionalization, and coupling. The present review is focused on the synthetic methods based on oxime‐derived iminyl radicals developed in the last few years excluding ring opening reactions of cyclic iminyl radicals that were summarized in recent publications. The review consists of two main parts: (1) reactions of iminyl radicals involving 1,n‐hydrogen atom transfer (n=5 in most cases) and (2) reactions involving the addition of iminyl radical to the carbon‐carbon π‐bond. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Imitation or Polarity Correspondence? Behavioural and Neurophysiological Evidence for the Confounding Influence of Orthogonal Spatial Compatibility on Measures of Automatic Imitation.
- Author
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Czekóová, Kristína, Shaw, Daniel Joel, Lamoš, Martin, Špiláková, Beáta, Salazar, Miguel, and Brázdil, Milan
- Subjects
IMITATIVE behavior ,PSYCHOLOGICAL research ,STIMULUS & response (Psychology) ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,SOCIAL interaction - Abstract
During social interactions, humans tend to imitate one another involuntarily. To investigate the neurocognitive mechanisms driving this tendency, researchers often employ stimulus-response compatibility (SRC) tasks to assess the influence that action observation has on action execution. This is referred to as automatic imitation (AI). The stimuli used frequently in SRC procedures to elicit AI often confound action-related with other nonsocial influences on behaviour; however, in response to the rotated hand-action stimuli employed increasingly, AI partly reflects unspecific up-right/down-left biases in stimulus-response mapping. Despite an emerging awareness of this confounding orthogonal spatial-compatibility effect, psychological and neuroscientific research into social behaviour continues to employ these stimuli to investigate AI. To increase recognition of this methodological issue, the present study measured the systematic influence of orthogonal spatial effects on behavioural and neurophysiological measures of AI acquired with rotated hand-action stimuli in SRC tasks. In Experiment 1, behavioural data from a large sample revealed that complex orthogonal spatial effects exert an influence on AI over and above any topographical similarity between observed and executed actions. Experiment 2 reproduced this finding in a more systematic, within-subject design, and high-density electroencephalography revealed that electrocortical expressions of AI elicited also are modulated by orthogonal spatial compatibility. Finally, source localisations identified a collection of cortical areas sensitive to this spatial confound, including nodes of the multiple-demand and semantic-control networks. These results indicate that AI measured on SRC procedures with the rotated hand stimuli used commonly might reflect neurocognitive mechanisms associated with spatial associations rather than imitative tendencies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Coseriu in chiave metalinguistica.
- Author
-
ORIOLES, Vincenzo
- Subjects
METALANGUAGE ,SCIENTIFIC community ,LINGUISTS ,ROMANIANS ,LINGUISTICS - Abstract
The present study aims to deal with several questions related to the frame of metalanguage, a construct that plays a crucial role in contemporary linguistic research, especially since Roman Jakobson gave to the term an amplified value compared to the original status assigned to it by the logicians. First of all, the author presents Eugenio Coseriu‘s original contribution to the characterization of the concept, distancing himself from Jakobson‘s position; emphasizing – according to its peculiar modus operandi – the reference to the tradition of past studies; proposing an articulated typology of metalinguistic utterances. Then an in-depth study of the metalinguistically relevant notions in Coseriu‘s work is given: in particular the Romanian linguist shows a preference for patterns founded on terminological three-way distribution. The conclusion focuses on the extent to which Coseriu‘s reflection on metalanguage and its devices have become part of his legacy to the scientific community. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
42. The neurocognitive underpinnings of the Simon effect: An integrative review of current research.
- Author
-
Cespón, Jesús, Hommel, Bernhard, Korsch, Margarethe, and Galashan, Daniela
- Subjects
FUNCTIONAL magnetic resonance imaging ,EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) ,TRANSCRANIAL magnetic stimulation ,COGNITIVE interference - Abstract
For as long as half a century the Simon task – in which participants respond to a nonspatial stimulus feature while ignoring its position – has represented a very popular tool to study a variety of cognitive functions, such as attention, cognitive control, and response preparation processes. In particular, the task generates two theoretically interesting effects: the Simon effect proper and the sequential modulations of this effect. In the present study, we review the main theoretical explanations of both kinds of effects and the available neuroscientific studies that investigated the neural underpinnings of the cognitive processes underlying the Simon effect proper and its sequential modulation using electroencephalogram (EEG) and event-related brain potentials (ERP), transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Then, we relate the neurophysiological findings to the main theoretical accounts and evaluate their validity and empirical plausibility, including general implications related to processing interference and cognitive control. Overall, neurophysiological research supports claims that stimulus location triggers the creation of a spatial code, which activates a spatially compatible response that, in incompatible conditions, interferes with the response based on the task instructions. Integration of stimulus-response features plays a major role in the occurrence of the Simon effect (which is manifested in the selection of the response) and its modulation by sequential congruency effects. Additional neural mechanisms are involved in supporting the correct and inhibiting the incorrect response. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Consul tertium o consul tertio? Dubbi metalinguistici, sincretismo e variazione nelle formule di iterazione delle cariche pubbliche.
- Author
-
Rovai, Francesco
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Transnational partisan networks and constituent power in the EU.
- Author
-
Wolkenstein, Fabio
- Subjects
CONSTITUENT power ,POLITICAL participation ,EUROPEAN integration ,PARTISANSHIP ,POLITICAL science ,SOCIAL forces ,POLITICAL debates - Abstract
The constitutional politics of the EU have been intensely debated in recent times. At work here seems to be the contestable Schmittian assumption that the allocation of constituent power is an either-or question, such that any exercise of constituent power beyond the state is bound to nullify constituent power at the state level (see Cohen, [8], Chapter 2). The suggestion is to conceive of constituent power in the EU as I pouvoir constituant mixte i , understood as a supra-state constituent power in which individuals participate in their dual capacity as members of the member states' demoi, on the one hand, and EU citizens, on the other. So far, it seems clear that it can satisfy desideratum (1), which emphasizes that the supra-state constituent power in Europe ought to be a mixed form of constituent power, whose participants act both in their capacity as members of states and as members of a (present or future) supranational polity. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. The Potentials and Difficulties of Transnational Populism: The Case of the Democracy in Europe Movement 2025 (DiEM25).
- Author
-
De Cleen, Benjamin, Moffitt, Benjamin, Panayotu, Panos, and Stavrakakis, Yannis
- Subjects
POPULISM ,DEMOCRACY ,NATIONALISM ,TRANSNATIONALISM ,POLITICAL elites ,POLITICAL movements - Abstract
The Democracy in Europe Movement 2025 (DiEM25), launched by former Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis, seeks to construct a transnational left political project to 'democratise Europe'. Its construction of a European 'people' against an international elite raises questions about the potentials of populism beyond the nation-state. Building on a discourse-theoretical distinction between populism and nationalism, the article asks whether DiEM25 is a truly transnational populist movement. Through an analysis of the movement's manifestoes, speeches, press releases and published interviews with DiEM25 leaders, the article shows how DiEM25 constructs a 'European people' in opposition to an international 'elite', how DiEM25 oscillates between speaking for national 'peoples' and a transnational 'people', and how it negotiates its populism, nationalism and transnationalism. The article contributes to the theorisation of populism beyond the usually assumed nation-state level and shines a light on the potentials and limitations of transnational populism as an as-yet understudied political development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. GRASSMANN’S LAW IN GREEK AND ITS DIFFUSION IN WAVES.
- Author
-
Pozza, Marianna and Gasbarra, Valentina
- Subjects
CHRONOLOGY ,RELICS ,POSSIBILITY ,HYPOTHESIS - Abstract
Copyright of Phaos is the property of Universidade Estadual de Campinas - Portal de Periodicos Eletronicos Cientificos and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2020
47. Photonic glasses for IR and mid-IR spectral range.
- Author
-
Lousteau, J., Boetti, N. G., Negro, D., Mura, E., Scarpignato, G. C., Perrone, G., Milanese, D., and Abrate, S.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The unimanual handle-to-hand correspondence effect: evidence for a location coding account.
- Author
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Pellicano, Antonello, Lugli, Luisa, Binkofski, Ferdinand, Rubichi, Sandro, Iani, Cristina, and Nicoletti, Roberto
- Subjects
LETTERS ,ACCOUNTS ,EVIDENCE ,RESPONSE inhibition ,MODAL logic ,TASKS - Abstract
The handle-to-hand correspondence effect refers to faster and more accurate responses when the responding hand is aligned with the graspable part of an object tool, compared to when they lay on opposite sides. We performed four behavioral experiments to investigate whether this effect depends on the activation of grasping affordances (affordance activation account) or is to be traced back to a Simon effect, resulting from the spatial coding of stimuli and responses and from their dimensional overlap (location coding account). We manipulated the availability of a response alternative by requiring participants to perform either a unimanual go/no-go task (absence of a response alternative) or a joint go/no-go task (available response alternative) and the type of response required (button-press or grasping response). We found no handle-to-hand correspondence effect in the individual go/no-go task either when a button-press (Experiment 1A) or a grasping (Experiment 2A) response was required, whereas a significant effect emerged in the joint go/no-go task, irrespective of response modality (Experiments1B and 2B). These results do not support the idea that complex motor affordances are activated for meaningful objects, but are rather consistent with the more parsimonious location coding account. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. A dual borohydride (Li and Na borohydride) catalyst/additive together with intermetallic FeTi for the optimization of the hydrogen sorption characteristics of Mg(NH2)2/2LiH.
- Author
-
Shukla, Vivek, Bhatnagar, Ashish, Singh, Sweta, Soni, Pawan K., Verma, Satish K., Yadav, T. P., Shaz, M. A., and Srivastava, O. N.
- Subjects
MAGNESIUM hydride ,BOROHYDRIDE ,SORPTION ,HYDROGEN ,CATALYSTS ,HYDROGEN storage - Abstract
The present study deals with the material tailoring of Mg(NH
2 )2 –2LiH through dual borohydrides: the reactive LiBH4 and the non-reactive NaBH4 . Furthermore, a pulverizer, as well as a catalyst FeTi, has been added in order to facilitate hydrogen sorption. Addition of LiBH4 to LiNH2 in a 1 : 3 molar ratio leads to the formation of Li4 (BH4 )(NH2 )3 which also acts as a catalyst. However, the addition of NaBH4 doesn't lead to any compound formation but shows a catalytic effect. The onset dehydrogenation temperature of thermally treated Mg(NH2 )2 –2LiH/(Li4 (BH4 )(NH2 )3 –NaBH4 ) is 142 °C as against 196 °C for the basic material Mg(NH2 )2 –2LiH. However, with the FeTi catalyzed Mg(NH2 )2 –2LiH/(Li4 (BH4 )(NH2 )3 –NaBH4 , it has been reduced to 120 °C. This is better than other similar amide/hydride composites where it is 149 °C (when the basic material is catalyzed with LiBH4 ). The FeTi catalyzed Mg(NH2 )2 –2LiH/(Li4 (BH4 )(NH2 )3 –NaBH4 sample shows better de/re-hydrogenation kinetics as it desorbs 3.9 ± 0.04 wt% and absorbs nearly 4.1 ± 0.04 wt% both within 30 min at 170 °C (with the H2 pressure being 0.1 MPa for desorption and 7 MPa for absorption). The eventual hydrogen storage capacity of Mg(NH2 )2 –2LiH/(Li4 (BH4 )(NH2 )3 –NaBH4 together with FeTi has been found to be ∼5.0 wt%. To make the effect of catalysts intelligible, we have put forward in a schematic way the role of Li and Na borohydrides with FeTi for improving the hydrogen sorption properties of Mg(NH2 )2 –2LiH. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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50. Lexical subordination and compounding Pāṇini's focusing on the non-head.
- Author
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CANDOTTI, MARIA PIERA and PONTILLO, TIZIANA
- Published
- 2019
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