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Ergebnisse 4 Einträge
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Intuitively, being aware of one's inner processes to move should be crucial for the control of voluntary movements. However, research findings suggest that we are not always aware of the processes leading to movement execution. The present study investigated induced first-person access to inner processes of movement initiation and the underlying brain activities which contribute to the emergence of voluntary movement. Moreover, we investigated differences in task performance between mindfulness meditators and non-meditators while assuming that meditators are more experienced in attending to their inner processes. Two Libet-type tasks were performed; one in which participants were asked to press a button at a moment of their own decision, and the other one in which participants' attention was directed towards their inner processes of decision making regarding the intended movement which lead them to press the button. Meditators revealed a consistent readiness potential (RP) between the two tasks with correlations between the subjective intention time to act and the slope of the early RP. However, non-meditators did not show this consistency. Instead, elicited introspection of inner processes of movement initiation changed early brain activity that is related to voluntary movement processes. Our findings suggest that compared to non-meditators, meditators are more able to access the emergence of negative deflections of slow cortical potentials (SCPs), which could have fundamental effects on initiating a voluntary movement with awareness.
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The perception of time is a fundamental part of human experience. Recent research suggests that the experience of time emerges from emotional and interoceptive (bodily) states as processed in the insular cortex. Whether there is an interaction between the conscious awareness of interoceptive states and time distortions induced by emotions has rarely been investigated so far. We aimed to address this question by the use of a retrospective time estimation task comparing two groups of participants. One group had a focus on interoceptive states and one had a focus on exteroceptive information while watching film clips depicting fear, amusement and neutral content. Main results were that attention to interoceptive processes significantly affected subjective time experience. Fear was accompanied with subjective time dilation that was more pronounced in the group with interoceptive focus, while amusement led to a quicker passage of time which was also increased by interoceptive focus. We conclude that retrospective temporal distortions are directly influenced by attention to bodily responses. These effects might crucially interact with arousal levels. Sympathetic nervous system activation affecting memory build-up might be the decisive factor influencing retrospective time judgments. Our data substantially extend former research findings underscoring the relevance of interoception for the effects of emotional states on subjective time experience.
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OBJECTIVES: The study aimed to clarify whether cognitive and psychomotor performance, which are important for occupational and traffic safety, are impaired by working permanent night shifts (NSs) compared with early-late two shifts (TSs) and whether age and chronobiological type influences the relationship between shift and performance. METHODS: The study included 44 male automobile workers, 20 working TSs and 24 working NSs. Chronobiological type was determined by questionnaire (D-MEQ). Each subject was tested at the beginning and end of the shift for alertness [by a visual analogue scale (VAS)]; feeling of well-being (Basler); concentration and accuracy (d2); reaction speed, orientation and reaction to stress (Vienna System). RESULTS: TS workers were more frequently morning types whereas the NS workers were more frequently evening types. In the performance tests, the TS and NS workers did not differ at shift start or shift end. Over the course of the shift, concentration and accuracy improved in both groups, as did reaction to stress. Chronobiological type alone or in combination with shift type had no effect on performance. CONCLUSIONS: The results of this study indicate that-if chosen voluntarily-working NSs has no immediate negative effects on cognitive and psychomotor performance when compared with working TSs. There was no indication of an increased risk of accidents after working NSs. The unequal distribution of the circadian types in the shift groups may indicate selection.
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On duration judgments lasting seconds to minutes, which are thought to be cognitively mediated, women typically perceive time intervals as longer than men do. On a perceptual level in the milliseconds range, few reports indicate higher acuity of temporal processing in men than in women. In this study, sex differences in the perception of temporal order of two acoustic stimuli were identified in neurologically healthy subjects, as well as in brain-injured patients with lesions in either the left or the right hemisphere. Women needed longer interstimulus intervals than men before they were able to indicate the correct temporal order of two clicks. Neurobiological evidence and findings on cognitive strategies are discussed to explain the apparent psychophysical sex differences.
Erkunden
Team
Eintragsart
Sprache
- Englisch (4)
Thema
- Attention/physiology
- Acoustic Stimulation (1)
- Adolescent (1)
- Adult (4)
- Aged (1)
- Aphasia/physiopathology/psychology (1)
- *Auditory Perception/physiology (1)
- Awareness/*physiology (2)
- Brain Injury, Chronic/physiopathology/*psychology (1)
- Brain/physiology (1)
- Cerebral Cortex/physiology (1)
- Cerebral Cortex/physiopathology (1)
- Cerebral Infarction/physiopathology/psychology (1)
- Circadian Rhythm/physiology (1)
- Cognition/*physiology (1)
- Contingent Negative Variation/*physiology (1)
- Dominance, Cerebral/physiology (1)
- Electroencephalography (1)
- Emotions/*physiology (1)
- Fatigue (1)
- Female (3)
- *Gender Identity (1)
- Humans (4)
- Industry (1)
- *Intention (1)
- Intention (1)
- Libet experiment (1)
- Male (4)
- Meditation (1)
- Middle Aged (3)
- Movement/physiology (1)
- Pain Measurement (1)
- Pattern Recognition, Physiological (1)
- Psychoacoustics (1)
- Psychomotor Performance/*physiology (1)
- Reaction Time/physiology (1)
- Readiness potential (1)
- Reference Values (1)
- Safety (1)
- Sympathetic Nervous System/physiology (1)
- Time Perception/*physiology (1)
- *Time Perception/physiology (1)
- Volition (1)
- Volition/physiology (1)
- Work Schedule Tolerance/*physiology/*psychology (1)