Benkley, Dylan Willroth, Emily C Ayduk, Ozlem John, Oliver P Mauss, Iris B
Temporal distancing (TD) is a promising yet understudied emotion regulation strategy that involves reflecting on how one will feel much later in the future. Although limited, the available evidence suggests that TD is a beneficial way to appraise negative events. Experimental studies have demonstrated causality: Situational use of TD (e.g., when th...
Merenstein, Jenna L Corrada, María M Kawas, Claudia H Bennett, Ilana J
The ability to learn associations between events is critical for everyday functioning (e.g., decision making, social interactions) and has been attributed to structural differences in white matter tracts connecting cortical regions to the hippocampus (e.g., fornix) and striatum (e.g., internal capsule) in younger-old adults (ages 65-85 years). Howe...
Chan, Michelle L Meyer, Oanh L Farias, Sarah T Whitmer, Rachel A Rajan, Kumar Olichney, John Johnson, David Mungas, Dan
ObjectiveThis study evaluated: (1) apolipoprotein E (APOE) ϵ4 prevalence among Black, Latino, and White older adults, (2) associations of APOE ϵ4 status with baseline level and change over time of cognitive outcomes across groups, and (3) combined impact of APOE ϵ4 prevalence and magnitude of effect on cognitive decline within each racial/ethnic gr...
Bangen, Katherine J Calcetas, Amanda T Thomas, Kelsey R Wierenga, Christina Smith, Christine N Bordyug, Maria Brenner, Einat K Wing, David Chen, Conan Liu, Thomas T
...
ObjectivesPhysical activity (PA) may help maintain brain structure and function in aging. Since the intensity of PA needed to effect cognition and cerebrovascular health remains unknown, we examined associations between PA and cognition, regional white matter hyperintensities (WMH), and regional cerebral blood flow (CBF) in older adults.MethodForty...
Oey, Lauren A Schachner, Adena Vul, Edward
How do people detect lies from the content of messages, and design lies that go undetected? Lying requires strategic reasoning about how others think and respond. We propose a unified framework underlying lie design and detection, formalized as recursive social reasoning. Senders design lies by inferring the likelihood the receiver detects potentia...
Agrawal, Tanushree Rottman, Joshua Schachner, Adena
A growing literature shows that music increases prosocial behavior. Why does this occur? We propose a novel hypothesis, informed by moral psychology: evidence of others’ musicality may promote prosociality by leading us to judge musical individuals as having enhanced moral standing. This effect may be largely indirect, by increasing perceptions of ...
Kang, W
Previous studies have looked at the associations between personality traits and illegal drug use in people across various age groups and in various countries. However, much less is known about how personality traits relate to illegal drug use in young people aged between 16 and 21 in the context of the United Kingdom, who are in a unique developmen...
Pahor, Anja Mester, Randy E Carrillo, Audrey A Ghil, Eunice Reimer, Jason F Jaeggi, Susanne M Seitz, Aaron R
Measuring selective attention in a speeded task can provide valuable insight into the concentration ability of an individual, and can inform neuropsychological assessment of attention in aging, traumatic brain injury, and in various psychiatric disorders. There are only a few tools to measure selective attention that are freely available, psychomet...
Motlaghian, Sara M Belger, Aysenil Bustillo, Juan R Ford, Judith M Iraji, Armin Lim, Kelvin Mathalon, Daniel H Mueller, Bryon A O'Leary, Daniel Pearlson, Godfrey
...
In this work, we focus on explicitly nonlinear relationships in functional networks. We introduce a technique using normalized mutual information (NMI) that calculates the nonlinear relationship between different brain regions. We demonstrate our proposed approach using simulated data and then apply it to a dataset previously studied by Damaraju et...
Stelter, Marleen Simon, Deja Calanchini, Jimmy Christ, Oliver Degner, Juliane
People are better at recognizing faces from their own racial or ethnic group compared with faces from other racial or ethnic groups, known as the other-'race' effect (ORE). Several theories of the ORE assume that memory for other-race faces is impaired because people have less contact with members of other racial or ethnic groups, resulting in lowe...