Psychological Science
May
2007 (Volume 18, Issue 5 Page 369-468) View
Issue
Short Report
Research Reports
Personality Change Influences Mortality in Older Men
Daniel K. Mroczek and Avron Spiro, III(View
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Abstract)
Previous studies have indicated that high neuroticism
is associated with early mortality. However, recent work suggests that people's
level of neuroticism changes over long periods of time. We hypothesized that
such changes in trait neuroticism affect mortality risk. Growth-curve parameters
(levels and slopes) that quantified the trajectories of neuroticism change
over 12 years were used to predict 18-year risk of mortality among 1,663 aging
men. Proportional hazards models were used to estimate mortality risk from
level and slope parameters, controlling for objective and subjective health,
depression, and age. Although a parallel analysis of extraversion showed no
significant effects, level and slope of neuroticism interacted in their effect
on mortality. Men who had both a high average level of neuroticism and an
increasing level of neuroticism over time had much lower survival than men
without that combination. These findings suggest that it is not just the level
of personality traits, but their direction of change, that is related to mortality.
High
Perceptual Load Makes Everybody Equal: Eliminating Individual Differences
in Distractibility With Load
Sophie Forster and Nilli Lavie (View
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Perceptual load has been found to be a powerful
determinant of distractibility in laboratory tasks. The present study assessed
how the effects of perceptual load on distractibility in the laboratory relate
to individual differences in the likelihood of distractibility in daily life.
Sixty-one subjects performed a response-competition task in which perceptual
load was varied. As expected, individuals reporting high levels of distractibility
(on the Cognitive Failures Questionnaire, an established measure of distractibility
in daily life) experienced greater distractor interference than did individuals
reporting low levels. The critical finding, however, was that this relationship
was confined to task conditions of low perceptual load: High perceptual load
reduced distractor interference for all subjects, eliminating any individual
differences. These findings suggest that the level of perceptual load in a
task can predict whether individual differences in distractibility will be
found and that high-load modifications of daily tasks may prove useful in
preventing unwanted consequences of high distractibility.
The
Curse of Knowledge in Reasoning About False Beliefs
Susan A.J. Birch and Paul Bloom (View
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Abstract)
Assessing what other people know and believe
is critical for accurately understanding human action. Young children find
it difficult to reason about false beliefs (i.e., beliefs that conflict with
reality). The source of this difficulty is a matter of considerable debate.
Here we show that if sensitive-enough measures are used, adults show deficits
in a false-belief task similar to one used with young children. In particular,
we show a curse-of-knowledge bias in false-belief reasoning. That is, adults'
own knowledge of an event's outcome can compromise their ability to reason
about another person's beliefs about that event. We also found that adults'
perception of the plausibility of an event mediates the extent of this bias.
These findings shed light on the factors involved in false-belief reasoning
and are discussed in light of their implications for both adults' and children's
social cognition.
Infant
Rule Learning Facilitated by Speech
Gary F. Marcus, Keith J. Fernandes, and Scott P. Johnson
(View
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Sequences of speech sounds play a central role
in human cognitive life, and the principles that govern such sequences are
crucial in determining the syntax and semantics of natural languages. Infants
are capable of extracting both simple transitional probabilities and simple
algebraic rules from sequences of speech, as demonstrated by studies using
ABB grammars (la ta ta, gai mu mu, etc.). Here, we report a striking finding:
Infants are better able to extract rules from sequences of nonspeech—such
as sequences of musical tones, animal sounds, or varying timbres—if
they first hear those rules instantiated in sequences of speech.
Lip-Read
Me Now, Hear Me Better Later: Cross-Modal Transfer of Talker-Familiarity Effects
Lawrence D. Rosenblum, Rachel M. Miller, and Kauyumari
Sanchez (View
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There is evidence that for both auditory and
visual speech perception, familiarity with the talker facilitates speech recognition.
Explanations of these effects have concentrated on the retention of talker
information specific to each of these modalities. It could be, however, that
some amodal, talker-specific articulatory-style information facilitates speech
perception in both modalities. If this is true, then experience with a talker
in one modality should facilitate perception of speech from that talker in
the other modality. In a test of this prediction, subjects were given about
1 hr of experience lipreading a talker and were then asked to recover speech
in noise from either this same talker or a different talker. Results revealed
that subjects who lip-read and heard speech from the same talker performed
better on the speech-in-noise task than did subjects who lip-read from one
talker and then heard speech from a different talker.
Conceptual
Combination During Sentence Comprehension: Evidence for Compositional Processes
David Swinney, Tracy Love, Matthew Walenski, and Edward
E. Smith (View
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Abstract)
The mechanism underlying reported analgesic effects of odors in humans
is unclear, although odor hedonics has been implicated. We tested whether
odors that are sweet smelling through prior association with tasted sweetness
might influence pain by activating the same analgesic mechanisms as sweet
tastes. Inhalation of a sweet-smelling odor during a cold-pressor test increased
tolerance for pain compared with inhalation of pleasant and unpleasant low-sweetness
odors and no odor. There were no significant differences in pain ratings
among the odor conditions. These results suggest that smelled sweetness
can produce a naturally occurring conditioned increase in pain tolerance.
The
Neural Consequences of Semantic Richness: When More Comes to Mind, Less Activation
Is Observed
Penny M. Pexman, Ian S. Hargreaves, Jodi D. Edwards,
Luke C. Henry, and Bradley G. Goodyear (View
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Abstract)
Some concepts have richer semantic representations
than others. That is, when considering the meaning of concepts, subjects generate
more information (more features, more associates) for some concepts than for
others. This variability in semantic richness influences responses in speeded
tasks that involve semantic processing, such as lexical decision and semantic
categorization tasks. It has been suggested that concepts with richer semantic
representations build stronger attractors in semantic space, allowing faster
settling of activation patterns and thus faster responding. Using event-related
functional magnetic resonance imaging, we examined the neural activation associated
with semantic richness by contrasting activation for words with high and low
numbers of associates in a semantic categorization task. Results were consistent
with faster semantic settling for words with richer representations: Words
with a low number of semantic associates produced more activation than words
with a high number of semantic associates in a number of regions, including
left inferior frontal and inferior temporal gyri.
Research Articles
The
Art of Conversation Is Coordination: Common Ground and the Coupling of Eye
Movements During Dialogue
Daniel C. Richardson, Rick Dale, and Natasha Z. Kirkham
(View
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Abstract)
When two people discuss something they can see
in front of them, what is the relationship between their eye movements? We
recorded the gaze of pairs of subjects engaged in live, spontaneous dialogue.
Cross-recurrence analysis revealed a coupling between the eye movements of
the two conversants. In the first study, we found their eye movements were
coupled across several seconds. In the second, we found that this coupling
increased if they both heard the same background information prior to their
conversation. These results provide a direct quantification of joint attention
during unscripted conversation and show that it is influenced by knowledge
in the common ground.
Rapid
Word Learning Under Uncertainty via Cross-Situational Statistics
Chen Yu and Linda B. Smith (View
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Abstract)
There are an infinite number of possible word-to-word
pairings in naturalistic learning environments. Previous proposals to solve
this mapping problem have focused on linguistic, social, representational,
and attentional constraints at a single moment. This article discusses a cross-situational
learning strategy based on computing distributional statistics across words,
across referents, and, most important, across the co-occurrences of words
and referents at multiple moments. We briefly exposed adults to a set of trials
that each contained multiple spoken words and multiple pictures of individual
objects; no information about word-picture correspondences was given within
a trial. Nonetheless, over trials, subjects learned the word-picture mappings
through cross-trial statistical relations. Different learning conditions varied
the degree of within-trial reference uncertainty, the number of trials, and
the length of trials. Overall, the remarkable performance of learners in various
learning conditions suggests that they calculate cross-trial statistics with
sufficient fidelity and by doing so rapidly learn word-referent pairs even
in highly ambiguous learning contexts.
Putting
Feelings Into Words: Affect Labeling Disrupts Amygdala Activity in Response
to Affective Stimuli
Matthew D. Lieberman, Naomi I. Eisenberger, Molly J.
Crockett, Sabrina M. Tom, Jennifer H. Pfeifer, and Baldwin M. Way (View
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Abstract)
Putting feelings into words (affect labeling)
has long been thought to help manage negative emotional experiences; however,
the mechanisms by which affect labeling produces this benefit remain largely
unknown. Recent neuroimaging studies suggest a possible neurocognitive pathway
for this process, but methodological limitations of previous studies have
prevented strong inferences from being drawn. A functional magnetic resonance
imaging study of affect labeling was conducted to remedy these limitations.
The results indicated that affect labeling, relative to other forms of encoding,
diminished the response of the amygdala and other limbic regions to negative
emotional images. Additionally, affect labeling produced increased activity
in a single brain region, right ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (RVLPFC).
Finally, RVLPFC and amygdala activity during affect labeling were inversely
correlated, a relationship that was mediated by activity in medial prefrontal
cortex (MPFC). These results suggest that affect labeling may diminish emotional
reactivity along a pathway from RVLPFC to MPFC to the amygdala.
The
Constructive, Destructive, and Reconstructive Power of Social Norms
P. Wesley Schultz, Jessica M. Nolan, Robert B. Cialdini,
Noah J. Goldstein, and Vladas Griskevicius (View
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Abstract)
Despite a long tradition of effectiveness in
laboratory tests, normative messages have had mixed success in changing behavior
in field contexts, with some studies showing boomerang effects. To test a
theoretical account of this inconsistency, we conducted a field experiment
in which normative messages were used to promote household energy conservation.
As predicted, a descriptive normative message detailing average neighborhood
usage produced either desirable energy savings or the undesirable boomerang
effect, depending on whether households were already consuming at a low or
high rate. Also as predicted, adding an injunctive message (conveying social
approval or disapproval) eliminated the boomerang effect. The results offer
an explanation for the mixed success of persuasive appeals based on social
norms and suggest how such appeals should be properly crafted.
The
Scars of Memory: A Prospective, Longitudinal Investigation of the Consistency
of Traumatic and Positive Emotional Memories in Adulthood
Stephen Porter and Kristine A. Peace (View
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Abstract)
We conducted a prospective study with individuals
who first described their memories of both a recent traumatic and a highly
positive emotional experience in 2001–2002. Of the 49 subjects interviewed
after 3 months, 29 were re-interviewed after 3.45 to 5.0 years. Subjects answered
questions from a 12-item consistency questionnaire (maximum possible score
of 36), rated the qualities of their memories, and completed questionnaires
concerning the impact of the trauma. Results indicated that traumatic memories
(including memories for violence) were highly consistent (M = 28.04) over
time relative to positive memories (M = 17.75). Ratings of vividness, overall
quality, and sensory components declined markedly for positive memories but
remained virtually unchanged for traumatic memories. The severity of traumatic
symptoms diminished over time and was unrelated to memory consistency. These
findings contribute to understanding of the impact of trauma on memory over
long periods.
Explaining
Developmental Reversals in False Memory
C.J. Brainerd and V.F. Reyna (View
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We report the first demonstration that a simple,
theory-driven manipulation produces opposite developmental trends in false
memory for the same information. When 6-, 10-, and 14-year-olds studied lists
containing exemplars of familiar taxonomic categories, false memory for the
same unpresented items (category exemplars and labels) increased with age
if list items were semantically related but decreased with age if semantic
relations could not be formed among list items. A control experiment ruled
out the hypothesis that these results were due to young children having generic
deficits in forming relations among list items.
Human
Brain Activity Time-Locked to Narrative Event Boundaries
Nicole K. Speer, Jeffrey M. Zacks, and Jeremy R. Reynolds
(View
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Abstract)
Readers structure narrative text into a series
of events in order to understand and remember the text. In this study, subjects
read brief narratives describing everyday activities while brain activity
was recorded with functional magnetic resonance imaging. Subjects later read
the stories again to divide them into large and small events. During the initial
reading, points later identified as boundaries between events were associated
with transient increases in activity in a number of brain regions whose activity
was mediated by changes in the narrated situation, such as changes in characters'
goals. These results indicate that the segmentation of narrated activities
into events is a spontaneous part of reading, and that this process of segmentation
is likely dependent on neural responses to changes in the narrated situation.
Central
Slowing During the Night
Daniel Bratzke, Bettina Rolke, Rolf Ulrich, and Maren
Peters (View
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Abstract)
The present study determined whether central
information processing is subject to a circadian rhythm and, therefore, contributes
to the well-known time-of-day effect on reaction time (RT). To assess the
duration of central processing chronometrically, we employed the psychological
refractory period (PRP) paradigm. In this task, subjects make fast responses
to two successive stimuli. RT to the second stimulus is usually prolonged
as the interval between the two stimuli decreases. This PRP effect is commonly
attributed to a central-processing bottleneck. Subjects performed the PRP
task every 2 hr during 28 hr of constant wakefulness under controlled conditions.
The PRP effect was most pronounced in the early morning. We conclude that
central processing is subject to a circadian rhythm, exhibiting a slowing
during the night and a nadir in the early morning.
Great
Apes' Understanding of Other Individuals' Line of Sight
Sanae Okamoto-Barth, Josep Call, and Michael Tomasello
(View
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Previous research has shown that many social
animals follow the gaze of other individuals. However, knowledge about how
this skill differs between species and whether it shows a relationship with
genetic distance from humans is still fragmentary. In the present study of
gaze following in great apes, we manipulated the nature of a visual obstruction
and the presence/absence of a target. We found that bonobos, chimpanzees,
and gorillas followed gaze significantly more often when the obstruction had
a window than when it did not, just as human infants do. Additionally, bonobos
and chimpanzees looked at the experimenter's side of a windowless obstruction
more often than the other species. Moreover, bonobos produced more double
looks when the barrier was opaque than when it had a window, indicating an
understanding of what other individuals see. The most distant human relatives
studied, orangutans, showed few signs of understanding what another individual
saw. Instead, they were attracted to the target's location by the target's
presence, but not by the experimenter's gaze. Great apes' perspective-taking
skills seem to have increased in the evolutionary lineage leading to bonobos,
chimpanzees, and humans.