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    20 September 2017, Volume 40 Issue 5 Previous Issue    Next Issue

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    Positive Reinforcement and Negative Reinforcement: Concepts, Controversies and Neural Mechanisms
    2017, 40(5): 1091-1097. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (579KB) ( )  
    Terminological distinctions may be quite functional during the development of a field. “Reward” and “punishment” were firstly replaced by “positive” and “negative reinforcement” by B. F. Skinner, in The Behavior of Organisms, which is published in 1938. However, the concepts of “positive reinforcement” and “negative reinforcement” have received their current meaning to indicate increase of probability of behavioral response to reproduce, named positive, or terminate, named negative, a stimulus, respectively, since 1953. The title “Positive and Negative Reinforcement, a Distinction That Is No Longer Necessary; or a Better Way to Talk about Bad Things”, given by Michael(1975), might be regarded as a watershed in behavior-analytic discussions of positive and negative reinforcement. He concluded that distinctions in these terms are confusing and ambiguous. Whether the distinction between positive and negative reinforcement should be preserved was widely discussed by a number of distinguished behavior analysts in more than 40 years. Their comments to this issue published on The Behavior Analyst in 2006. Nevertheless, they didn’t propose a solution that allowed reliable distinction between positive and negative reinforcement. With rapid development of technology and theory in neuroscience in recent years, there was sufficient evidence that indicates involvement of distinctly different neural processes between positive and negative reinforcement. There are two distinct classes, termed the “direct” and the “indirect” pathway projection, neurons at striatum. Plenty of data supported the hypothesis that activity of direct and indirect pathway striatal neurons exerts opposing control over reinforcement and punishment. Activation of direct pathway striatal neurons was reinforcing, whereas activation of indirect pathway was punishing. Of course, positive and negative reinforcement were not only mediated by different pathway projection neurons, but also associated with different synaptic plasticity. Positive reinforcement may be associated with plasticity that enhances synaptic efficacy onto direct pathway neurons, but negative reinforcement may be associated with plasticity that depresses synaptic efficacy onto indirect pathway neurons. Different neural processes between positive and negative reinforcement may be critical to distinguish the concept of positive and negative reinforcement. So, in accordance with the concept of “homeostasis” in physiology, “psychological homeostasis”, which represents the normal basal psychological state, could be used to clarify distinction between positive and negative reinforcement. Marked disturbance in internal or external environment will stimulate the organism and induce bias from psychological homeostasis. In positive bias, the stimulus results in rewarding or enhanced satisfactory salience and therefore positively reinforces the organism to seek for repetition or maintenance of the stimulus, the positive reinforcer. Positive reinforcement can be defined from increase of the probability of behavioral responses seeking for a stimulus inducing positive bias from psychological homeostasis. In negative bias, the stimulus results in punishment or enhanced aversive salience and therefore negatively reinforces the organism to seek for termination of the stimulus, the negative reinforcer. Negative reinforcement can be then defined from increase of the probability of behavioral responses seeking for termination of a stimulus inducing negative bias from psychological homeostasis. Of course, the positive and negative biases from psychological homeostasis can be measured objectively by using behavioral tests, hormone level assays, and so on. This framework may provide insights into understanding the distinction between positive and negative reinforcement, as well as application of those theoretical concepts of positive and negative reinforcement to behavioral interventions in fields like education and therapy.
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    Similarities between Chinese 2R- and 2C-Words in the Processing of Positional Information of the Words’ Components
    2017, 40(5): 1075-1083. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (631KB) ( )  
    Although Chinese two-character words (2C-words) are composed of two characters, many one-character words (2R-words) consist of two radicals, with one on the left and the other on the right. This study investigates whether skilled readers process the radicals’ positional information in a 2R-word similarly to how they process the characters’ positional information in a 2C-word. In a priming task of semantic categorization, a group of college students’ reaction times to the one-character targets (e.g., 肝 [gan1] liver) were primed similarly by the semantic primes (e.g., 肺 [fei4] lung), the transposed non-words of the semantic primes [reversed(S) primes] (e.g., ), and the transposed non-words of the targets (reversed primes) (e.g., ). Their reaction times to the two-character targets (e.g., 电话 [dian4hua4] telephone) were also similarly primed by the semantic (e.g., 手机 [shou3ji1] phone), the reversed(S) (e.g., 机手), and the reversed primes (e.g., 话电). It was concluded that, similar to the case of the characters’ relative positions in a 2C-word, the radicals’ relative positions in a 2R-word do not influence the word’s early stage of semantic processing for skilled readers of Chinese. However, further studies are needed to investigate the relationships between a 2R-word, its radicals, and its radicals’ positional information
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    Neglected Clues in Research of Emotional Recognition: Characteristics, Neural Bases and Mechanism of Bodily Expression Processing
    2017, 40(5): 1084-1090. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (292KB) ( )  
    Body and face are important clues for individual’s emotional expression and recognition. Researchers have generally named emotional information expressed through the body, coordinated motions as well as meaningful behaviors as emotional body language (EBL). The role of EBL in emotional recognition and the relationship between EBL and facial expressions is regarded as the central concerns of the study. Among its research focuses, “what distinguishes EBL from facial expression processing”, “whether neural bases of facial expression processing and EBL are overlapped with each other or keep separated from one another”, “Whether, compared with facial expression processing, bodily expression processing will select categorized areas in light of specific targets”, and “whether there are any specific psychological processing mechanisms in EBL” constitute key elements which has determined the most important contrast between EBL and facial expression. Exploration on those issues will not only help to complete relevant theories of bodily expression processing, but also prove to offer greater realistic importance and application value to “cognition-emotion-behavior” research. EBL plays both guiding and compensatory roles in complex emotion recognition. EBL is prominent distinguished from facial expressions by perceived motion and behavioral information, and the generation of adaptive behavior. Human brain remains highly sensitive to body-expressed emotions and behavior information, which might be gradually formed and consolidated in the process of human evolution. Responding to individual’s survival needs, it has grown along with human evolution and adaptation to social environments. As researches on EBL neural imaging indicate, the neural bases of facial expression and EBL might adjoin each other or partially overlap. Those bases also serve as the biological foundation for the coordinative effect of the two in the process of emotional recognition. However, their neural bases also remain separate from each other and bodily expression processing involves an even wider neural network. Cerebral regions like extrastriate body area(EBA), fusiform body area(FBA), superior parietal lobule(SPL) and inferior parietal lobe(IPL)are where human brain undertakes high-level information processing which includes selecting categorized areas in light of specific targets of bodily information processing as well as getting engaged in body behaviors and emotional expression. At present, there are two existing theoretical models which have interpreted EBL psychological processing mechanism: one model tends to stress bottom-up processing; the other is a bi-directional model that combines both bottom-up and top-down processes. Those two models on EBL psychological processing mechanism fundamentally differ from the existing models on psychological processing mechanism of facial expression. As double activation at both stages of behavior observation and implementation has been proven to be the typical feature of mirror neuron systems, the neural network involved partially overlaps with bodily expressions. Therefore, further explorations should be combined with mirror neuron systems and made on the impact of behavior and emotions on EBL processing. Future research needs to analyze the possibility of integrating the neural mechanisms underlying facial, body vocal cues of emotion. In addition, cross-cultural differences in body emotion processing constitute a promising area of inquiry. Besides, processing traits of bodily expression of emotional-handicapped patients should also be surveyed.
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    The Timing and Magnitude of Stroop Effect in Unbalanced Bilinguals
    Chunyan Mai xianyou He
    2017, 40(5): 1040-1046. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (667KB) ( )  
    Researchers believe that learning a second language can promote the bilingual cognitive control skills, which may also reduce the ability of bilingual lexical access. But there is a contradiction in many previous literatures and whether or not there exists an bilingual cognitive control advantage is no sure. In this study, we choose the SOA paradigm Stroop task to investigate the timing and magnitude of Stroop interference and facilitation in bilinguals to compare the differences between cognitive control abilities and lexical access. Our hypothesis is that if bilinguals had not cognitive control advantages, on larger values of SOA the reaction time of interference effect would longer in second language, that is , there was a lexical access disadvantage, bilinguals’ interference effect in first language would have a longer reaction time comparing to the second language. Sixty-one college students participated in the experiment, whose average age was 21.62 years old. Experiments used 3 (whether color word meaning is consistent with the color block’s color or not: consistent, inconsistent, control) ×5 (SOAs: -400ms, -300ms, -200ms, -100ms, 0ms) two-factor within the design. Participants completed Chinese and English language experiment. We used “红 绿 蓝”and “red green blue” as word stimuli. Colored rectangles were red, green or blue. In negative SOAs, the word stimulus appeared on the screen alone first for either 400ms, 300ms, 200ms, or 100ms, followed by the colored rectangle. In the 0ms SOA, the word stimulus and the colored rectangle appeared simultaneously. Both stimuli remained on the screen until participants made a response, if no response was made in 2000ms, the stimuli disappeared and the next trial began. We used E-prime software programming and SPSS16.0 analyzing data. The results show that in L1 Chinese participants’ peak interference effect in the Stroop task occurred at -200ms SOA, which is inconsistent with the result of -200ms SOA(Coderre,et.al.,2013) and it may because of the different language environment. In L2 English conditions, the experiment measured largest Stroop interference effect and it was caused by the -300ms SOA, which means that the time appeared negative transform in interference effect. It’s inconsistent with 0ms SOA (Glaser et.al., 1982) but has the same change trend with -200ms SOA(Coderre,et.al.,2013),which may because of different response ways. In L2 English conditions, -400ms SOA triggered the largest facilitation effect while under the L1 Chinese conditions the largest facilitation effect occurred in -300ms SOA, which prove there is a bilingual lexical access delay. Moreover, there is not significant difference in interference effect between Chinese and English language environment, and marginal significant in facilitation effect between the two language. The data shows that Chinese and English has different language script that may influence the performance of facilitation effect. And Chinese words have spatial properties so that participants may spend more time to recognize the words comparing to English words. In this study, the bilingual cognitive advantage was not observed in the experiment, and bilinguals were affected by lexical access abilities, which support the bilingual lexical disadvantage hypothesis. And second language learning may reduce the lexical access of the bilinguals’ mother tongue.
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    Important or Cumbersome?: the Modulation of Conceptual Representation to the “Weight-Importance” Embodiment Effect
    Han-Lin WANG
    2017, 40(5): 1054-1060. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (990KB) ( )  
    With respect to the embodied theory, cognition is body-based such that cognitive activity, the human body, and the outside environment interact with each other, which then induces specific cognitive outcomes. Body state, especially the sensorimotor state, plays a key role in human cognition. Recently, a substantial body of research has been conducted on theories of embodied cognition. Among these embodiment effects, the “weight-importance” effect revealed that low-level body experiences of weight influence high-level cognitive judgments of importance, and thus, this effect is regarded as classic evidence to support the theory of embodiment. The current research investigate the modulation of conceptual representation to the “weight-importance” embodiment effect. In “weight-importance” and “weight-flexibility” situations, participants respectively evaluated the weight, flexibility and value of the heavy (141g) and light (69g) mouses. Then, they held both of the mouses to conduct a monetary categorization task. In the “congruent” condition, they were instructed to quickly press the heavy mouse’s button when they saw the euro and dollar (with higher exchange rate), and press the light mouse’s button when they saw the won and yen (with lower exchange rate). In the “incongruent” condition, the response model about the association between the weight’s experience and the value of the currencies was instructed contrarily. The results showed that in the “weight-importance” situation, participants considered that the value of the heavy mouse was significantly higher than the value of the light mouse. Furthermore, participants tend to associate the heavy mouse to the currencies with higher exchange rate as well as associate the light mouse to the currencies with lower exchange rate, the reaction time in the “coherent” response model was significantly faster than the reaction time in the “conflict” response model. The results reflected the significant “weight-importance” embodiment effect. However, in the “weight-flexibility” situation, participants considered that the heavy mouse was significantly cheaper than the light mouse. Furthermore, there was no significant difference between the reaction times in the “coherent” response model and the “conflict” response model. Findings of the current research present a significant challenge to the embodiment theory in that it was previously proposed that this theory could explain the influence of sensorimotor actions on cognitive processes. Psychological researchers who promote the embodied theory have suggested that body state, cognition and the outside environment interact with each other, an interaction that involves the complicated human cognition system. However, the current research suggested that the same experience of weight was represented differently in varied situations. Therefore, the representation of weight’s experience could modulate the “weight-importance” embodiment effect. The body state, including perception and motion, cannot interact immediately with cognition, as these two aspects first need to prime the experiences that were previously built during specific situations. These experiences then influence the cognitive activities. The performance of embodied effects could not only depend on the body-experience itself, but also depend on how we represent this experience.
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    Effects of Graphical Displays on Risk Seeking
    xiangxing zeng Dao-Qun DING
    2017, 40(5): 1061-1067. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (708KB) ( )  
    The communication styles of risk information influence on decision-making behavior is an important topic, one of the most important aspect is decision-making behavior of individuals depended largely on the external representation ways to communicate risk information on risk communication, recently mainly focused on comparing the numerical displays with graphical displays. On the effects of numerical and graphical displays on negative risk information, results found graphical formats are more effective for increasing risk avoidance behavior, verified the existence of the graphical effects. The graphical effects are based on the situation of negative or loss events, but in the real life, many of our decisions require to take risks in order to achieve their goals, show risk seeking preferences. Based on which, the purpose of this research was to determine whether graphical formats were more effective for increasing risk-seeking behavior under the gain information of risk communication. There were two investment items, which had different risks and benefits, used numerical and graphical to display respectively, and to examine how individuals shown risk seeking in two different types of information representation. In this study, employed between participants experiment design, participants were randomly assigned to one of the numerical and graphical displays groups, participants were required to choose one of the two investment items to exploring the information display formats influence on risk-seeking behavior, four cognitive assessment tasks need participants to make a favored degree evaluation, ranging from favored (1) to very favored (7), which were applied to determine the mechanisms underlying the graphical effect. The software package E-prime 1.0 was used for materials presentation and data collection, data analysis using SPSS 13.0. Data results showed participants’ risk seeking behavior preference, in the numerical displays group and graphical displays group accounted for 52.94% and 68.78% of the total number respectively, and there were significant difference between them (?2=4.50, p<.05 ) , that is relative to numerical displays more participants in the graphical displays group chose the item that benefits are big and risk is big, which means the graphical displays cause more participants to increasing the preference of risk seeking. Then, through data conversion, merged the preference degree of two items into a new variable, risk reeking preference index, as a criterion variable, and the four aspects of cognitive evaluation tasks as prediction variables, to make multiple regression analysis, the results show that in numerical formats, individuals decision-making behavior were influenced by the magnitude of the risk between alternatives, (Multiple correlation coefficient was 0.475, multiple coefficient of determination was 0.225), for graphical formats, individuals decision-making behavior not only under the influence of the magnitude of the risk between alternatives (Multiple correlation coefficient was 0.432 and multiple coefficient of determination was 0.187), but also more under the size of profit between alternatives (Multiple correlation coefficient was 0.623 and multiple coefficient of determination was 0.388). The results showed the graphical representation can cause more risk seeking preference under the benefit condition, extend previous research, the results verified the graphical effects were universality, contributes to in risk communication, based on the characteristics of information, using different information representation ways to extract information from this representation and reach communication effectiveness, improving decision-making level and avoiding decision traps.
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    The Unconscious Influence of Weight on Metacognitive Monitoring and Control
    2017, 40(5): 1026-1032. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (792KB) ( )  
    Abstract Previous evidence has shown that perceptual cues, such as weight, can affect metacognitive monitoring and control, providing evidence for the embodied nature of metacognition. Moreover, some researchers believe that the influence of perceptual information on metacognition is automatic and unconscious. However,there is no direct evidence to support this hypothesis. According to Reder’ s view, metacognitive monitoring and control can occur without conscious awareness. For example, if people are unaware of what causes them to select one strategy rather than another, then the strategy select is an unconscious metacognitive control. Therefore, it is critical to reveal people’s basis of the metacognitive monitoring and control establishing whether the influence of weight on metacognition is unconscious. For this purpose, we adopted the method of structural knowledge attribution. This method requires participants to report their basis of judgment or decision in each trial using one of a set of fixed options: guess, intuition, memory, and rules.“Guess” indicated that the judgment or decision was based on nothing at all; ‘‘Intuition” indicated that the judgment or decision was based on a hunch or feeling that could not be articulated; ‘‘Memory” indicated that the judgment or decision was based on a recollection; ‘‘Rules” indicated that the judgment or decision was based on a rule (or a belief, or a theory) that could be stated if asked. The “guess” and “intuition” responses were taken to indicate that the basis of the judgments or decisions were unconscious because people had no idea why they made such a judgment or decision. The “memory” and “rules” responses were taken to indicate that the basis of the judgments or decisions were conscious because people know why they made such a judgment or decision. Therefore, the metacognitive process is unconscious when monitoring or control was based on guessing or intuition. And conversely,the metacognitive process is conscious when monitoring or control was based on memory or rules. Following this logic, if the influence of weight on metacognitive monitoring and control is unconscious, the effect of weight on monitoring and control would occur when monitoring and control were based on guessing or intuition. In two experiments, participants studied word pairs affixed to heavy or light pillow boxes, made judgments of learning (experiment 1) or selections for items (experiment 2), as well as reported the basis of each decision. Results showed: 1) the effect of weight on judgments of learning only occurred when the judgments were made based on guessing, JOLs were higher for items affixed to the heavy boxes than those affixed to the light boxes; 2)the effect of weight on selections of items only occurred when the selections were made based on guessing, participants preferred to first select word pairs affixed to heavy paper-boxes, compared with those to light paper-boxes. These results indicate that the influence of weight on metacognitive monitoring and control is unconscious.
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    Spontaneous and Deliberate Mind Wandering: Their Relationship to Metacognition
    2017, 40(5): 1047-1053. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (511KB) ( )  
    Recent research has demonstrated that mind wandering can be subdivided into spontaneous and deliberate types. The former involves spontaneous, involuntary and uncontrollable process, and the latter is often characterized as a deliberate, intentional and controllable process. According to the standard view of interaction between mind wandering and metacognition, metacognition serves to correct the wandering mind, suppressing spontaneous thoughts and bringing attention back to more “worthwhile”’ tasks. This view is based on the state level. However, to date, no attempts have been made to evaluate the relationship between metacognition and these subtypes of mind wandering at trait level. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of metacognition on spontaneous and deliberate mind wandering. A survey was conducted online by a total sample of 197 college students. They completed two questionnaires. One is the Mind Wandering Scale, which consist of a Deliberate Mind Wandering Scale (MW-D) and a Spontaneous Mind Wandering Scale (MW-S) (Carriere, Seli, & Smilek, 2013). The other scale is the Metacognition Questionnaire-30 (MCQ-30), which was based on the longer original version of the same instrument (Cartwright-Hatton & Wells, 1997).The MCQ-30 measures beliefs about thinking and thinking processes on five subscales(positive beliefs, uncontrollability and danger, cognitive confidence, need to control thoughts, and cognitive self-consciousness). A confirmatory factor analysis was calculated to test the common method variance. Results indicated that the single-factor model was not suitable, making sure the study is accurate enough in terms of common method variance. The results showed that: (1) the confirmatory factor analysis yielded a two-component solution, indicated that two factors of mind wandering( c2/df=1.98,RMSEA=0.073,TLI=0.97,CFI=0.98) were best captured by a distinction between spontaneous mind wandering and deliberate, willful mind wandering. (2) Metacognition was positively correlate with MW-D,and MW-S. Two factor of metacognition( cognitive confidence,uncontrollability and danger) were both correlate with MW-D and MW-S. (3)A stepwise multiple regression analysis was conduct to evaluate the unique contributions of each metacognition factor to the subtypes of mind wandering. A dissociation between mind-wander spontaneously and deliberately was found. Uncontrollability and danger can both predict spontaneous mind wandering and deliberate mind wandering positively, while cognitive confidence was uniquely positively associated with spontaneous mind wandering, and cognitive self-consciousness was uniquely positively associated with deliberate mind wandering. The findings of our study imply that deliberate and spontaneous mind wandering are influenced differently by various dimensions of metacognition, and conflating deliberate and spontaneous mind wandering can result in a misunderstanding of how mind wandering is related to other traits. Extant theories have largely neglected the distinction between spontaneous and deliberate mind wandering, and must be amended to include the important role of intentionality. And people should pay attention to this point in the future of mind wandering research. Besides imploring the association between metacognition and subtypes of mind wandering, researchers should find some effective means to make the best use of our mental wandering and help our wandering mind find its way.
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    Emotion as Additional Clues of Event-based Prospective Memory:Opposite-valence Enhancement Effect
    2017, 40(5): 1068-1074. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (514KB) ( )  
    The existing research on relationship between emotion and prospective memory often focused on a single aspect, which were the ongoing task materials or the emotional valence of target cues to explore effects of prospective memory processing mechanism. The emotion of one variable could affect prospective memory through the other variable, so controlled the emotional valence under a single condition had some obvious defects. In addition to the difference of the task materials and prospective memory property, it was difficult to grasp the relationship between emotional valences and mechanism of prospective memory generally. In the current study, we used the dual-task paradigms and materials on emotional images and emotional words to explore the effect of consistency on the process of event-based prospective memory about emotional valences of ongoing tasks and target cues, and emotional valences of prospective ingredient and retrospective ingredient from the prospective memory at the same time. Experiment 1 selected 64 college students as subjects, adopted 2(emotional valences of ongoing tasks: positive valence/negative valence)*2(emotional valences of targets cues: positive valence/negative valence) mixed experimental design, among which the emotional valences of ongoing tasks is within-subject variable, the dependent variables were the reaction times and accuracy of current tasks and prospective tasks. Experiment 2 selected 64 college students as subjects, adopted 2(emotional valences of prospective ingredient: positive valence/negative valence)*2(emotional valences of retrospective ingredient: positive valence/negative valence) mixed experimental design, among which the emotional valences of prospective ingredient is within-subject variable, the dependent variables were the reaction times and accuracy of current tasks and prospective tasks, and the accuracy of prospective ingredient and retrospective ingredient. The result of Experiment 1 revealed that the accuracy of prospective memory about positive valence was higher than negative one, and the accuracy of prospective memory was higher when emotional valences of ongoing tasks is opposite of the emotional valences of prospective tasks. On the contrary, it was lower. The result of Experiment 2 revealed that the main effect and the interaction of emotional valences of prospective ingredient and retrospective ingredient were not significant, but the accuracy of prospective ingredient was affected by both emotional valences, it was higher when both emotional valences were inconsistent. The above results come to two conclusions: 1) the performance of prospective tasks and prospective ingredient were better when emotional valences of both tasks and both ingredients were inconsistent, because target cues and prospective ingredient were more prominent in this case, which could be called Opposite-valence Enhancement Effect. 2) In event-based prospective memory, emotion affected the prospective memory processing as a kind of additional clues.
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    The Mechanism underlying the Associations between Emotional Valence and Horizontal Space
    2017, 40(5): 1033-1039. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (418KB) ( )  
    It was obvious that there was an association of emotional valence with horizontal physical space. According to the body?specificity hypothesis, this association is related to the handedness. People associate positive entities with the side of space surrounding the dominant hand and negative entities with the space surrounding the non?dominant hand. So the Right?handers have the pattern of right-good/left-bad. However, according to the polarity correspondence principle, participants in binary classification tasks code more salient stimuli as “+” polarity, while another is marked as “-” polarity. Positive words are salient because of more common and will be the default for the “+” polarity and negative stimuli as “?” polarity. Also, the dominant hand are more likely to be regarded as salient response to be coded as “+” polarity, while another is coded as “-” polarity. And it assumes that stimulus and response alternatives with the same coding are associated together and this interaction was driven by the salient stimulus. This theory can better explain why only appear significant connection between right and good in some studies while did not appear significant connection between left and bad. The dispute between the two theories is that whether there is the association of negative valence with the space surrounding the non-dominant hand. So the aim of present study was to investigate the association between emotional valence and physical space under different response modes,and try to illustrate the generation mechanism underlying this association. Three Experiments were conducted in this present study. In experiment 1, a valence judgment task of emotional words was adopted under normal hand placements conditions. Under the normal hand placement conditions where hand and side carry the congruent information; Experiment 2 was similar to Experiment 1 except that participants needed to keep their hands crossed; Experiment 3 had the same task with experiment 1 and 2 but the response hands was removed, the way to respond was oral report, which needed participants to say left/right to the valence of the stimulus by the Serial response Box. The result of Experiment 1 indicated that for the positive words, the RTs of right hand were markedly faster than left hand, whereas for the negative words, the RTs between them were not. Experiment 2 indicated that when the participants keep their hands crossed, and only the association of positive valence with the right hand was significant. In Experiment 3, although without response hands, there still existed the associations between valence and horizontal space. Right?handers connected the right physical space with positive valence. There was still no significant association between negative valence and left space. In conclusion, the association between emotional valence and horizontal physical space was also happened in the valence judgment task with Chinese valence words. In particular, the compatibility effect emerged between positive valence and “right”. This connection depends on the polarity of the stimulus and response code. These results above fit well with the polarity correspondence coding principle.
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    Text-diagram Integration in Multimedia Learning: The Effects of Synchronized Cues and Learners’ Prior Knowledge
    2017, 40(5): 1104-1110. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (554KB) ( )  
    Cueing and prior knowledge affect learners’ bottom-up and top-down processing in multimedia learning respectively. Researchers of previous studies paid much more attention to some questions, namely “whether”, “what kind of” or “where” cues should be presented, and a strong cueing effect was confirmed as expected (for a review, see De Koning, Tabbers, Rikers, & Paas, 2009). However, when to present cues, that is, the temporal synchronization between the presentation of cues and words, which might significantly affect the integration of texts and diagrams (Scheiter & Eitel, 2015; Twyford & Craig, 2013), was neglected by previous researchers. In this study, an animation related to the process of chemical synaptic transmission (Ozcelik, Karakus, Kursun, & Cagiltay, 2009) were used as multimedia learning materials in which the words were presented in an audio format, rather than a visual format, to adhere to the modality principle (see Mayer, 2009). One hundred and twenty-five high (HPK) or low prior knowledge (LPK) college students (96 women) aged between 17 and 27 were recruited as participants and randomly assigned to three cueing conditions, namely advanced cues, synchronized cues, and delayed cues. A total of 13 keywords of commentaries (e.g. action potential) and corresponding cues in the picture were reasonably selected in each condition. Cues were respectively presented 2.6s before or after the corresponding commentaries in the condition of advanced or delayed cues, and each cue lasted for 1.4s. SMI RED 250 Eye tracker was used to record eye movement data. The aim of present study was to explore the effects of synchronized or unsynchronized cues as well as learners’ prior knowledge on the efficiency of multimedia learning and their online distribution of attention. The results showed that learners in the condition of synchronized cues got higher scores and lower perceived difficulty of the material in all of the three tests (retention, transfer, and matching tests) than that of unsynchronized ones (advanced and delayed cues). During 3 seconds after the keywords of commentaries were presented, especially compared with delayed cues, both of the fixation time and first fixation duration of AOIs (areas of interest) in the condition of synchronized cues were longer. Besides, more glance count and fixation count of them were found when cues and words were synchronized. In comparison to LPK learners, HPK learners performed better and perceived lower difficulty in all of the tests, thus showing a great superiority. However, there was almost no significant difference between them on fixation processing. Furthermore, the cueing by prior knowledge interaction effect was not significant either on learning outcomes or on eye movement indicators. In conclusion, the synchronization of cueing and audio commentary affects participants’ learning outcomes and fixation processing as expected. Synchronized cues contribute to text-diagram integration and help building connections between word-based and image-based representations, then reduce the perceived subjective difficulty, promote fixation processing and thus enhance learners’ performance. Besides, learners’ prior knowledge influences the effectiveness of multimedia learning. HPK learners show a significant superiority effect. However, learners’ prior knowledge is not served as a moderator between cues and performance in this study.
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    Different Style of Worked Example and Explanation: The Efficiency to Statistics Problem Solving in Middle School
    2017, 40(5): 1117-1122. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (409KB) ( )  
    Researchers should consider not only student’s cognition load but their active cognitive processing when designing example in example learning. Researches on fading example and correct - incorrect paired example showed that both of them can improve student’s learning in near transfer but can’t let every student involving in active processing. Because of those shortcomings, some researchers pointed out that in order to initiating student’s active processing in example learning, explanations should be given to student with example at the same time. But contradictory conclusions were gotten with comparative studies on example learning between with and without teaching explanation, those between with and without self-explanation, those between with teaching explanation and self-explanation. Because contradictory conclusions were gotten from researches on different explanation in example learning, because fading example is chosen in most of example learning studies, and it increases student’s more cognition load, in our research, we chose correct - incorrect paired example in order to compare the efficiency of correct example and correct-incorrect paired example, compare the efficiency of self-explanation, instruction explanation, no explanation. We chose probability problems in mathematics in Grade 9 and designed learning materials of experiment 1 and experiment 2, instant post-test and delayed post-test. In experiment 1, between subject experiment is designed to compare the influence of correct example and correct - incorrect paired example to probability problem solving. 90 students were assigned randomly to correct example group, correct-incorrect example group and control group. The results show that students’ test performance in correct - incorrect paired example group are significantly higher than students’ in correct example and control group. There are no significant difference of students’ performance in correct example group and control group. In experiment 2, between subject experiment is designed to compare the influence of different explanation (instruction explanation, self-explanation, no explanation) to probability problem solving in correct - incorrect example learning. 90 students were assigned randomly to self-explanation group, instruction explanation group and no explanation group. The results show that students performance in self-explanation group and instruction explanation group are significantly higher than students in no explanation group in instant post-test and there are no significant difference of students’ performance between instruction explanation group and self-explanation group. But students’ performance in self-explanation group are significantly higher than students in instruction explanation group and no explanation group in delayed post-test, and there are no significant difference of students’ performance between instruction explanation group and no explanation group in delayed post-test. The conclusions are (1) correct-incorrect paired example is significantly more effective than correct example in statistics problem solving; (2) correct - incorrect paired example with explanation is significantly more effective than correct - incorrect paired example without explanation; (3) correct - incorrect paired example with self-explanation is significant better and lasted more time than correct - incorrect paired example with instruction explanation.
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    Developmental Trajectories of Positive Adjustment Among Middle School Students: Latent Growth Curve Analysis
    2017, 40(5): 1098-1103. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (874KB) ( )  
    Social adjustment has been the core issue of developmental psychology. Positive adjustment is typically defined as the behavior that is consistent with social norms and benefits the individual’s survival and development across multiple domains that are self adjustment (self-affirmation), interpersonal adjustment (pro-social tendency), behavioral adjustment (acting efficiency) and environmental adjustment (active coping) respectively. Positive psychology indicates that positive adjustment is independent of negative adjustment, and the focus on positive function of social adjustment can facilitate social stability as well as the harmony between individual and environment. However, most previous research has focused on the negative function of social adjustment, such as problem behavior, negative emotion and so on. Much less is known about the developmental trajectories of positive adjustment and the contributing factors and mechanisms that underlie the development, particularly in life stage with an accumulation of changes and challenges. The transition to adolescence has been characterized as a critical period with the dramatic change resulted from school transition and sharp physical and psychological development. Thus, the development of positive adjustment plays an important role in adolescents’ healthy growth. Accordingly, a three-year longitudinal study was conducted to examine the change trajectories of positive adjustment, and how external factor (school transition) and internal factor (perceived pressure) shape the development for middle school students. A total of 369 seventh-grade adolescents were recruited from two middle schools and participated in the study. Among them, 290 adolescents (140 females and 150 males, mean age is 12.32 years, SD = 0.52) participated in all three consecutive years, in which 181 adolescents made the transition from primary school to different middle school and 108 continued in the same school (1 adolescent didn’t respond to the item). The study adopted Adolescents’ Social Adjustment Assessment Scale and Perceived Pressure Questionnaire for Middle School Students to assess four positive adjustment indices (self-affirmation, pro-social tendency, acting efficiency and active coping) and perceived pressure for four time points in November of 2012, May of 2013, December of 2013, and December of 2014 respectively. Latent growth modeling was used to examine: (1) initial levels and changes of positive adjustment in different domains over time; and (2) the prediction of both initial levels and growths in positive adjustment from school transition (time-invariant covariate) and perceived pressure (time-varying covariate). Results shows that, from grade 7 to grade 9, adolescents’ self-affirmation and acting efficiency increased in non-linear trajectory, and the rates of change decreased; pro-social tendency increased in linear trajectory; active coping decreased in linear trajectory. Meanwhile, there was little negative effect of the school transition on the change of positive adjustment. Finally, perceived pressure at given testing point reduce adolescents’ positive adjustment at that time. Our findings suggest that there are different developmental trajectories of positive adjustment in different domains. And all these trajectories are influenced by perceived pressure at different developmental stages. A better understanding of the causes and consequences of change in positive adjustment across the critical age period of adolescence can help to ameliorate intervention programs designed to assist maladaptive adolescents.
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    Developmental Cascades: Children’s Cognitive Functioning and Social Adjustment
    2017, 40(5): 1142-1147. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (290KB) ( )  
    Developmental cascades have been used in developmental psychology to describe processes by which function at one level or in one domain of behavior affects function at higher levels or the organization of competency in later developing domains of general adaptation. The effects refer to the cumulative consequences for development of the many interactions and transactions occurring in developing systems. The accumulative process of developmental cascades is extremely complex and the factors are comprehensive. So researchers explain the cumulative paths of developmental cascades from a variety of viewpoints. Some researchers suppose that developmental cascades of adaptive behavior are formed in particular developmental environment;but other researchers identify the cumulative effects through the interaction between genes and environment over time or through multiple dynamic model. In addition, some researchers propose generation to generation cascades from the perspective of intergenerational transmission. However researchers interpret the model, it always requires longitudinal data to test cascade model which are often difficult and time consuming. In previous longitudinal studies, the evidence that adaptive and maladaptive behaviors will promote or undermine development with ages appears to be one of the most widely corroborated patterns in the literature on developmental cascades. Theoretically, cognitive functioning and social adjustment in early childhood will exhibit the developmental cascading effects on academic achievement and problem behaviors eventually. In developmental direction, the cumulative effects may develop within one field or across several fields. These effects may be direct or indirect through various pathways as their ways of expression. So researchers attempted to test the relationship between cognitive function and academic achievement. Whereas, other researchers found that social competence can predict the behavior problems. As for across-field cascades, researchers have proposed several models of cascading effects. The adjustment erosion hypothesis posits that initial externalizing or internalizing symptoms were negatively related to later academic competence and showed increasing risks for vulnerability to symptoms of other domains in the future. The second hypothesis suggests that initial failures in academic functioning instigate the development of externalizing or internalizing symptoms, or exacerbate current symptoms of problem behaviors. Cascading effects may also be a product of “third variable” that individuals are on a path which underlies adjustment in multiple domains of functioning. In the longitudinal studies of developmental cascades, the researcher proposed the hypothesis named “theory of the intervention” that the intervention will change the mediating process which in turn, will change the developmental outcomes of the individual in critical adaptive domains. A series of research challenges for the developmental cascades have been listed. Even with powerful statistical model which testing the cascade effects in longitudinal designs, there are still alternative explanations for what is found in cascade effects. In addition, research which has tested cascades across developmental levels, linking context to behavior or behavior to neural or biologic function requires interdisciplinary team. Finally, how to use the theory of “intervention” to promote children's development could be a challenge. These should be the most important issue that we will explore in the future.
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    4-5 years old Children Show Negativity Memory Bias for Social Actions
    2017, 40(5): 1136-1141. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (4439KB) ( )  
    Compared with positive and neutral stimulus, negative stimulus can arouse faster and more obvious reactions, this phenomenon is called negativity bias. Many studies showed that negativity bias was also existed in memory. According to evolutionary psychology, negativity bias served as an adaptive function for human beings to avoid dangerous situations. If this was true, young children should be more sensitive to negative information. After all, young children are physically vulnerable and short of knowledge of safety about their living environment. Negativity bias would help young children to aware and monitor potential dangers around them quickly and would increase their opportunities of survival. However, so far, only a few studies on negativity bias were done from a perspective of development and the results were inconsistent due to different methods and different range of ages. Researches on negativity bias of young children were even rare. In the present study, we conducted three experiments to investigate whether the negativity bias existed in four and five years old children’ memory for social actions. In experiment 1, we examined whether there were an advantageous memory for threatening social actions comparing to non-threatening or neutral social actions. Brief stories were presented to children with pictures. After learning about individuals who committed helping, threatening or neutral social actions, participants were asked to choose one from the three given behaviors for the protagonist. The result showed that participants had better memories for threatening actions than they did for helping or neutral actions. In experiment 2, we examined whether negativity bias existed for non-threatening events. Participants were told brief stories with pictures about individuals who were in a sad, happy or neutral emotional state. Again, a memory advantage for negative events was found in young children. In experiment 3, we examined whether negativity bias existed in prospective memory. Previous studies only investigated negativity bias refer to retrospective memory. However, in daily life, prospective memory is very important for children because adults always remind them to get away from dangerous people and events. If young children showed negativity bias in prospective memory, warning from adults was effective. Materials were the same with experiment 1. The prospective memory task was an ongoing task. Participants showed again negativity bias on threatening social actions relatively to helping and neutral social actions. These findings consistently suggested that as young as four and five years old children showed heightened memory for negative social actions over positive or neutral social actions. This is good for young children to predict and avoid harmful situations. No age difference was found in negativity bias between four years old children and five years old children. And this result suggests that even young children could have negativity bias, future study should extend to children under age four. The present study is the first one to explore whether young children show an advantageous memory for non-threatening social information and also is the first one to explore whether young children show an advantageous memory for threatening social information in prospective memory. Future study should investigate whether negativity bias for non-threatening social information exists in prospective memory.
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    The Impact of Learning Method on Unfamiliar Visual Form Learning
    2017, 40(5): 1111-1116. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (410KB) ( )  
    Learning is one of the most important higher cognitive functions of human beings. So it is of vital importance to explore the learning methods. The visual form is the carrier of the written language. In cognitive psychology, the visual form processing is the initial stage of reading, and the efficiency of the processing of visual form will directly affect the understanding of the word. In this sense, it is the critical important task to improve the learning efficiency of the visual form. Existing evidence indicated that repeated learning can enhance memory, compared to massed learning condition, materials under spaced learning condition have better memory performance, this phenomenon is called spacing effect. Many studies have examined the effects of learning methods on native language or second language vocabulary learning, however, the impact of spacing effect on learning visual form is still unknown. As we know, vocabulary is a combination of the form, phonology and semantic. In the learning process, the verbal components such as form, phonology, semantic and so on are activated and influenced each other. Therefore, it is difficult to separate the influence of the learning method on the form learning. The use of a new word system can avoid the use of verbal strategies to learn and memory, to eliminate the interference of phonology and semantic, and to reveal the mechanism of the effect of learning methods. Using the study-test paradigm, the present study investigated the impact of learning method on unfamiliar visual form (i.e. Korean characters) learning. During the study phase, each character was presented successively in massed condition, while separated by 11 other characters in spaced condition. In both conditions, each character was presented for six times. Recognition memory tests were administered at half an hour (T1), one day (T2) and one week (T3) after learning. Results showed that subjects performed better in spaced learning in all three recognition memory tests, although the performance at T2 and T3 decreased significantly as a result of forgetting. These results suggest that spaced learning is better than massed learning, even in novel visual forms. Our finding is in line with previous studies that examined the spacing effect. The results of the present study extend the discovery of the advantages of spacing effect in previous studies from vocabulary learning to visual form learning, and showed that after eliminating the influence of semantic, spaced learning can promote the new visual form learning, this effect is not caused by the primacy effect and recency effect. The advantages of spaced learning in the present study may be explained by the two factors model and also have important potential implications for foreign language learning and teaching.
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    Research on the Development of Adolescents' Creativity and the Brain Mechanism
    2017, 40(5): 1148-1153. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (303KB) ( )  
    Adolescence is a critical stage in the development of creativity and brain maturation. Therefore, investigating the characteristics of creativity development in adolescent is meaningful for the cultivation of individual creative potential. Here, we summarized the progress of creativity development in adolescent, including the developmental trajectories, the influencing factors and the underlying brain mechanism. Previous researches showed that adolescent creative thinking abilities may undergo two development summits, which separately locate on the age group of 11-13 and 15-16; and different components of creative thinking (e.g., verbal creativity and visual creativity) exhibited different developmental trajectories. The development of creative thinking in different cultures is generally similar. But it is different in some specific components, which may be affected by different educational traditions. The influence factors of this development can be ascribed to both the external and internal environment. In terms of the external environment, the current researches focus on the impact of school environment and parenting pattern on the creativity development of adolescents. And with regards to the internal environment, the current researches focus on exploring how the factors such as cognitive ability, personality traits, emotional states, intrinsic motivations and the self-managements affect the creativity development during adolescence. In the aspect of brain mechanism, although there is a general believe that creativity is rely on functional interaction and integration of multiple brain regions, the prefrontal cortex may significantly affect the development of adolescent creativity by regulating cognitive control and modulating the function of primary brain regions. Furthermore, the prefrontal cortex is closely related to insight generation and divergent thinking in creative thinking process. Researchers initially explored the neural mechanism of creative thinking by using different creative tasks. With the rapid development of multimodal brain imaging technology, researchers began to explore the structural and functional characteristics of the brain associated with creativity from the perspective of individual differences. And through cross-sectional and longitudinal study, we can collect and establish a multimodal database of adolescent creativity (8-22 years old), including creative behaviors, related psychological assessments and multimodal neuroimaging data (structural data, resting-state functional data and diffusion tensor imaging data). This data set could provide important supports for future studies. We can better understand the neural mechanism of adolescent creativity development, investigate the critical period of creativity development and its related brain development by using this database. In addition, many researches already indicated that individuals’ creativity ability can be improved by various training methods such as brainstorming, meditation, sleep, positive emotion, walking (physical training), drawing curve and shifting perspectives. By using cognitive training and educational cultivation, including the Cognitive Stimulation Method, we hope to reveal the pathway and its related mechanism of brain plasticity, which can be used to effectively improve creative thinking abilities in adolescents. Therefore, training studies in how to improve adolescent’s creativity ability may become more and more important in the future.
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    Relations between Selective Trust, Theory of Mind, and Executive Function in Preschoolers: Evidence from Longitudinal Study
    2017, 40(5): 1129-1135. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (662KB) ( )  
    Not all learnings come from direct observation or personal experience, sometimes people have to learn knowledge from second-handed materials. Given information could be from multiple informants, how to distinguish and select reliable informant becomes very important. Early childhood is one of the best period for learning and selective trust appears to be a hot spot in the developmental psychology field. Studies in this filed would help researchers to understand the developmental trends of cognition and knowledge learning in early childhood. It would benefit the early education as well. Previous research indicated that preschoolers would select the informant to trust by epistemic information and social information. However, the relations between selective trust, theory of mind, and executive function remained unclear to date. Some researchers argued that selective trust was associated with theory of mind because both of them appear at age four. Other researchers thought that preschooler’s selective trust was based on executive function. The previous inconsistent results might due to the limited measurement of theory of mind and executive function, or uncontrolled language ability. In addition, lack of longitudinal data might confuse the predictive direction of these variables.
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    The Brain Mechanism on Working Memory Level of Internet Addicts:From the Evidence of ERP
    2017, 40(5): 1208-1214. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (646KB) ( )  
    Internet Addiction Disorder (IAD) is a kind of pathological internet using. It features in overusing or uncontrolled using internet and thus has a negative effect on mentality, society and working. The number of people who has IAD is increasing rapidly. There is a growing concern on IAD because of its dangerous. Relevant researches on IAD are urgently required. The scholars did a lot of researches on the neural mechanism of IAD in recent years and found out that IAD had different kinds of brain dysfunction. The abnormality in working memory is one of those dysfunctions. Based on event-related potentials (ERP), the paper discusses the effects of working memory on executive control for IAD and compares the differences between the IAD group and control group on working memory level. The various patterns of ERP time course under increasing memory loads are studied. Employing the technology of ERP, setting N-back model as research task, using letters as material, dividing the tasks into three load levels: 0, 1, 2. The whole experiment was divided into practice and formal experiments. To assure subject understand the experiment, practice experiments include three load levels that required subjects complete. After that, subjects accomplished the formal experiment. Formal experiment contained 8 blocks. Each block contained three load levels, and each memory load had 20 trials. Before the start of each memory load, it will appear a empty screen for 2000ms (n = 0, n = 1, n = 2), and then subjects should response to the letter presented as quickly as possible. Participants had 2 minutes to rest after completing every block. The experiment will last about half an hour. 20 subjects with IAD were selected as the IAD group and another 23 normal college students as control group by using Young’s Internet Addiction Scale to measure their network addition level. We used SPSS 17.0 to process the data.We used the method of 2×3 repeated measure analysis of variances to analyze the behavioral data, and use 2×3×9 repeated measure analysis of variances to analyze the ERP data. The analyzed ERP components mainly include P2, N2. The study purpose is to find out the brain mechanism on the working memory of internet addicts by comparing the ERP components between two groups. Based on the analyses and discussions of the above-mentioned studies, following conclusions were drawn: (1) With the increase of memory load, the accuracy rate declined and the reaction time become longer both IAD and control groups. Compared with IAD group, the college students in control group have processing advantages on the working memory task. Their accuracy rate is higher and their reaction time is shorter than those in IAD group. However, the differences do not reach significance. (2) There are significant differences in P2 and N2 components between the IAD group and the control group. Compared with the control group, the average amplitude of P2 is larger while the average amplitude of N2 is smaller in the IAD group. This reflects that the IAD group need more cognitive resources for working memory processing to get the same achievements than the control group. In the mean time, it also demonstrates that the executive control ability of IAD group is lower than control group. The latency of N2 in the IAD group is longer than control group, which indicates the refresh and time needed for short-term storage in the IAD group are higher than the control group.
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    The Effect of Social Distance on Sexual Attribution Bias of Success or Failure
    2017, 40(5): 1222-1227. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (372KB) ( )  
    Previous studies have found Sexual Attribution Bias(SAB),young adults attributed the success of same-sex attractive stimulus persons in a more derogative way (more luck, less ability)than the success of less attractive same-sex persons, whereas this pattern is reversed for members of the opposite sex. Researchers believed the SAB accused for mating motivation. The SAB of previous studies was resulted from strangers object, but was it appears among close relationship? In fact, people often make mate choice in close people. In this study, experiment was conducted to examine the SAB of successful or failure behaviors of different social distance people. With the self-made attribution of success or failure questionnaire as a tool, a random sample of 295 undergraduates participated in the experiment. All participators were divided into four groups. Two groups were asked to make attribution (ability, luck) for the successful and failure behaviors of their best friend. One group attributed for their same-sex friend, another one attributed for their opposite sex friend. Another two groups were asked to make attribution for the successful and failure behaviors of the stranger. One attributed for the same-sex stranger, anther one attributed for the opposite sex stranger. The result showed that: (1) Social distance and sex difference had an interaction effect on the glorifying attributions of the successful behaviors. Participants attributed the successful behaviors of the opposed sex stranger in a more glorifying way (more ability, less luck) than the same-sex stranger. The glorifying way in which participants attributed the successful behaviors of their same-sex and opposed sex friend were not different significantly. (2) Social distance and sex difference had an interaction effect on the glorifying attributions of the failure behaviors. The glorifying way in which participants attributed the failure behaviors of the same-sex and opposed sex stranger was not different significantly. Participants attributed the failure behaviors of the opposed sex friend in a more glorifying way(less ability, more luck) than the same-sex friend. These results suggest that the SAB appears in the successful scenes of far social distance others, whereas disappears in failure scenes of far social distance others; the SAB appears in failure scenes of near social distance others, whereas disappears in successful scenes of near social distance others. These results support the theory of social evolution
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    Predictive Factors of Emotional Creativity and the Relationship between emotional creativity and Coping Styles
    2017, 40(5): 1168-1174. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (713KB) ( )  
    Previous studies have confirmed that family factors and personality could influence the emotional creativity, however, few studies explore the composite effect of parenting styles and personality on emotional creativity. Previous studies have revealed the close relationship between emotional creativity and coping styles, however, the mechanism behind the relationship is still open. Thus, the present study aimed to examine the combined effect of parenting styles and personality on emotional creativity (study 1), as well as the mediating role of achievement motivation between emotional creativity and coping style (study 2). In study 1, a composite questionnaire, which included Emotional Creativity Inventory, Perceptions of Parents Scales, and NEO Personality Inventory, was administrated for 150 high school students to investigate whether parenting style and personality can effectively predict emotional creativity. Correlation analysis results showed that extroversion, openness, conscientiousness were positively correlated with emotional creativity, mother involvement were positively correlated with emotional creativity. Regression analysis results showed that openness is a positive predictive index of preparedness, mother involvement and father autonomy support are negative predictive indexes of preparedness; openness and neuroticism are positive predictive indexes of novelty, mother involvement is a negative predictive index of novelty; openness, extroversion, conscientiousness are positive predictive indexes of effectiveness. In general, big-five personality traits are beneficial to emotional creativity. In study 2, a composite questionnaire, which included Emotional Creativity Inventory, Achievement Motivation Scale, Coping Styles Questionnaire was administrated for 152 high school students to investigate the relationship of emotional creativity, achievement motivation and coping styles. Correlation analysis results showed preparedness was positively correlated with success-approaching motivation, problem-focused coping and emotion-focused coping; novelty and effectiveness were positively correlated with success-approaching motivation and problem-focused coping; success-approaching motivation was positively correlated with problem-focused coping, failure-avoidance motivation was positively correlated with emotion-focused coping. And then Structural Equation Modeling showed achievement motivations play mediator roles between emotional creativity and coping style, to be detailed, the preparedness of emotional creativity would induce emotion-focused coping through the mediating effect of failure-avoidance motivation, the effectiveness of emotional creativity would induce problem-focused coping through the mediating effect of success-approaching motivation. In general, both parenting style (mother involvement and father autonomy support) and personality variables (extroversion, openness, neuroticism and conscientiousness) can effectively predict emotional creativity; achievement motivations play mediator roles between emotional creativity and coping style. The research contributed to the field of emotional creativity by revealing the personality and parental predictors of emotional creativity, as well as how emotional creativity influences coping styles. Otherwise, the findings also show significance for the psychology education among middle school students.
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    The Influence of Time Perspective Trait on Food Choice Preference: the Moderating Role of Construal Level on Implicit Preference
    2017, 40(5): 1161-1167. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (862KB) ( )  
    Time plays an important role on decision-making and actions in people’s daily life, and different people have different perception of time. Time perspective reflects personality difference on time dimension, which can be mainly divided into present time perspective and future time perspective, and they represent the mental representation towards present and future respectively. Previous studies have showed that there was a relationship between time perspective and choice preference. Food choice behavior is a typical behavior in daily behavior. This goal of this is to examine the difference of food choice preference between present time perspective and future time perspective people from the explicit and implicit view. And we also aim to explore the role of construal level in the relationship between time perspective and food choice preference. In the study, we conducted two experiments: In experiment 1, we used ‘Zimbardo Time Perspective Inventory’ to pick out college students with Present-Hedonistic perspective or future time perspective (30 Present-Hedonistic perspective vs. 30 future time perspective people) to participate in the Food Choice Task. All participants made a choice between healthy food and unhealthy food. The results showed the subjects with Present-Hedonistic perspective have a higher unhealthy food rate than those with future time perspective. In the experiment 2, we use SC-IAT (Single Category Implicit Association Test) and employ a 2 (Present-Hedonistic perspective vs. future time perspective) × 3(high construal level vs. low construal level vs. control construal level) between-subjects design. Time perspective is one independent variable as the between-subjects factor measured by Zimbardo Time Perspective Inventory, and construal level is another independent variable as between-subjects factor, which is operated by Thinking Reasoning Start Task. And 90 participants received different operations. The dependent variable is an indicator called D value that computed by response time which suggest people’s implicit preference on palatable but unhealthy food products. The results showed that the subjects with Present-Hedonistic perspective have a higher D value than those with future time perspective; the people with low construal level have a higher D value than control group, and the control group are significantly higher than high construal level; time perspective and construal level have an interaction on food choice preference. For people with Present-Hedonistic perspective, the difference of construal level has a significant impact on unhealthy food choice preference And for people with future time perspective, the difference of construal level has no significant impact on unhealthy food choice preference. From what have discussed above, we can draw the conclusion that: firstly, the individuals with different time perspective have different food choice preference. The people with present perspective have unhealthy food choice preference, and its performance on food choice task and implicit preference from the explicit and implicit view. And for people with Present-Hedonistic perspective, the construal level significantly affects unhealthy food choice preference, namely high construal level people have less unhealthy food choice preference. But for people with Present-Hedonistic perspective, the effect of construal level is not significant.
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    Decision Model for Procrastination
    2017, 40(5): 1242-1247. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (350KB) ( )  
    Procrastinate is to voluntarily delay an intended course of action despite expecting to be worse off for the delay. Despite progress in delineating characteristics and correlates of individual differences in procrastination tendencies, relatively neglected questions concern the decision of procrastination. As any attempt to procrastinate things inevitably involves the decision between doing it now or doing it later, this kind of decision can be considered as a key component of predicting procrastination. Thus approaches about predicting procrastination can be further simplified as a decision making process of determining doing things now or doing things later. In order to disclose the cognitive mechanism of deciding “do it now or later”, we proposed a decision model for procrastination in current manuscript. In this model we argued that: (1) Motivational competition between procrastination and timely engagement is the rooted process for determining to prolong a task or not. Specifically, humans’ s tendency to procrastinate should mainly stem from the task averseness when engaging the specific task. On the other hand, a motivation to timely undertake a task usually stems from the related rewards the task can bring or associated punishments which ones are trying to avoid through completing this task. (2) Therefore, this motivational combat can be simplified as comparison between averseness of engaging in task and rewards (or punishments) from the task. In fact, the things we procrastinated usually consist of a aversive process of engaging in them and meaningful results which bring us rewards related to task completion or enable us to avoid punishments associated with task failure. Both pursuing reward and avoiding punishments (Utility of Outcome) impel humans to complete tasks as soon as possible. On the contrary, the aversive process of engaging (Utility of Engaging) hinders humans from undertaking tasks timely. Therefore, to procrastinate or not can be predicted by the comparison between Utility of Outcome and Utility of Engaging from tasks. (3) last but not least, putting off an annoy task to have it’s utility discounted is the reason for procrastination. It is humans’ propensity to overvalue instant rewards and discount the outcomes of distant future. Traditional perspectives suggested extremely discounting outcomes (reward or punishment) of a task in the far future lead to procrastinating this task. However, this view is incomplete because delay discounting not only works for far outcomes, but also has effects on Utility of Engaging when putting off a task. The discounting of far outcome of a task is an unchangeable feature rooted in task itself. However, voluntarily putting things off or not makes it quite controllable whether to have task averseness stemming from timely engaging discounted or not. Finally, in order to make our points more clear, examples and application of decision model for procrastination were discussed. Generally speaking decision model for procrastination is able to further the understanding of procrastination and be helpful to untangle the cognitive mechanism of procrastination and modulations of influence factors respectively. Implications of decision model for procrastination should be extensive, we speculated a comprehensive framework of procrastination and it’s influence factor can not be far.
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    The Relationship between Neuroticism and Internet Fiction Addiction of College Students: the Mediating Effects of Narrative Transportation and Flow Experience
    2017, 40(5): 1154-1160. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (686KB) ( )  
    It is evident that the Internet has grown exponentially over the past decades. It has become a medium we use habitually in our daily lives to acquire information, optimize our work and escape from reality through a new digital society. Due to the convenient and popularity of mobile phones, e-book, tablets and other mobile terminals, more and more college students enjoy reading Internet fictions. College students are unable to extricate themselves in the virtual network world or emotion experience created by the plot of the fiction. The Internet fiction addiction, as a subclass of Internet addiction or mobile phone addiction, should have caught much research attention. However, compare with the studies of Internet game, entertainment and relationship addictions, the studies of Internet fiction addiction and its mechanism were rare. Thus, more research should be conducted to explore Internet fiction. Research revealed that personality trait, especially the neuroticism, was closely related to Internet addiction. It was generally considered as an important risk factor of addiction. Existing research also has indicated that narrative transportation has a significant effect on people’s action during reading fictions, and narrative transportation together with flow experience might play important roles in the relationship between neuroticism personality and Internet fiction addiction. Thus, the purposes of the present study were to examine the relationship between neuroticism personality and college students’ Internet fiction addiction, as well as the mediating effect of narrative transportation and flow experience in this relationship. . A total of 502 college students took part in the current study. Big Five Personality Inventory-Neuroticism Subscales, Internet Fiction Addiction Scale, Narrative Transportation Scale and Flow Experience Scale were used. Data were collected and analyzed with SPSS 17.0, and the bias-corrected percentile bootstrap method was used to analyze the chain mediating roles of narrative transportation and flow experience between neuroticism personality and students’ Internet fiction addiction. The results were: (1) the relationships between each pair of neuroticism personality, narrative transportation, flow experience and Internet fiction addiction were all significantly positive. (2) Neuroticism personality has a direct effect on Internet fiction addiction; Neuroticism personality can also indirectly affected fiction addiction through two ways: through flow experience; and through the chain mediating effect of narrative transportation and flow experience; The total meditational effect size was 52%, and the effect size through chain mediating effect of narrative transportation and flow experience (36%) was the strongest among the three mediation paths. . In conclusion, Internet fiction addiction may be influenced not only by the individual factors (neuroticism personality), but also by the fiction characters (narrative transportation, flow experience). The results suggested: the higher students' neuroticism personality, the higher the level of narrative transportation and the deeper flow experience would be, which would result in severer Internet fiction addiction. These ?ndings highlight the complex nature of the relationships among college students’ neuroticism personality, narrative transportation, flow experience, and Internet fiction addiction.
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    The Relation between Restorative Experience and Place Attachment: The Role of Environment Preference and Length of Residence
    Lijuan Cui
    2017, 40(5): 1215-1221. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (664KB) ( )  
    As the link of people and particular places, place attachment has been one of the vital issues in the literatures of ethnology, human geography, tourism studies and environmental psychology since 1970s. Antecedents and consequences of place attachment have been widely studied, however, there is little attention paid to the contribution of restorative environment to people’s place attachment. According to Person–process–place organizing framework defining place attachment, we assumed that restorative experience, deriving from the contact between people and restorative environment, played an important role in the “process” dimension of place attachment. Therefore, this study was designed to combine the two perspectives: restorative environment with place attachment. In the present study, the relation between restorative experience and place attachment has been analyzed. Then, we examined the psychological mechanisms underlying this relation by investigating the mediating role of environment preference as well as the moderating role of length of residence in a context of Chinese neighborhood. In this study, a questionnaire survey has been conducted in four urban neighborhoods in Shanghai, China. The measured variables are restorative experience (PRS_5) occurring in the current neighborhood, environment preference and place attachment (i.e. place dependence and place identity) towards the neighborhood, and the length of residence. Finally, a sample consisting of 410 participants’ data (262 females) has been used. The average age is 29.26 years (SD = 11.35), and the average length of residence is 16.79 years (SD = 14.91).The Cronbach’s alpha coefficients for the above measures are from .76 to .93. In order to test the mediating effects of environment preference on the relation between restorative experience and individuals’ place attachment as well as the moderating role of length of residence, structural equation modeling and moderated mediation analysis have been introduced respectively. The findings show supporting evidence for the hypotheses. Firstly, in the lives of residents in the urban neighborhood, restorative experience exerts positive effects on place attachment significantly. Secondly, environment preference fully mediates the effect of restorative experience on place attachment. Meanwhile, in line with the prior researches, place dependence plays a basic role in the construct of place attachment, which predicts place identity positively. Thirdly, length of residence moderates the effect of environment preference on place attachment (place identity in particular), specifically, environment preference has more impact on people’s place identity, when they have reside long (vs. short) time in current neighborhood. The present study seeks to extend the literature integrating restorative environment and place attachment in a synergic perspective. The results demonstrate that restorative features of neighborhood environment, which trigger restorative experience, will promote the development of individuals’ place attachment. Based on place theory, we suggest that whether people prefer the neighborhood would explain the process from restorative experience to place attachment. Second, we develop a moderated mediation model to account for how the interaction between environment preference and length of residence exerts influence on people’s place identity. Specifically, people who live in a neighborhood for a long (vs. short) time would be more likely to establish place identity from environment preference.
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    Compensation or Punishment? ——The Effect of Social Distance on Third-party Intervention
    2017, 40(5): 1175-1181. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (800KB) ( )  
    The third-party intervention is the best representation to the altruistic behavior of the human beings. Fairness perception and emotional experience are two important processes in the third-party punishment. Previous studies have shown that individual fairness perception was modulated by social distance. However, how social distance influences third-party intervention is still unknown. In order to address this issue, two experiments were conducted. In experiemt1, we use two versions of scenario to describe an unfair behavior committed by participant’s friend or a stranger. Then participants were asked to make the intervention to the unfair behavior. In experiemt2, laboratory Dictator Game (DG) was adopted to probe the impact of social distance on the third-party intervention. Participants were told that they will play a social game with two others (his/her friend and a stranger, or two strangers) in the adjacent separate cubicles. All participants were assigned to the observer (“Person C”) by a pseudo-random allocation of computer, and his/her friend (or a stranger) was assigned to the dictator (“Person A”), and the others pretended by experiment assistants were the powerless (“Person B”). In each trial, the dictator will split 100 chips between himself/herself and the powerless. After informed the allocation between dictator and powerless, participants as an observer were asked to evaluate the fairness of the allocation (1=not at all, 9=very much), and make a decision to punish the dictator or compensate the powerless. For each chip used to punish or compensate, dictator would suffer 3 chips losses or “Person B” would get 3 chips gains. Participants were told that the chips they kept eventually were associated with their extra participant payment. Finally, the participants were told to evaluate the feeling of the allocation, such as anger, disappointment, hate and guilty (1=not at all, 9=very much). The results of two experiments indicated that: (1) Social distance influences the third-party punishment. For unfair allocations, the third-party punishment to friend is significantly lighter than the stranger. However, the third-party compensation has no significant difference between friend and stranger situation. (2) Social distance influences the fairness perception process of third-party intervention. Friend’s unfair allocations were perceived more fair than stranger’s. However, social distance has on significant influence on emotional experience by unfair allocations. In conclusion, the third-party is unwilling to punish the dictator who is close to him/her than a stranger. This altering in behavior maybe the result of that their fairness perception process is influenced by social distance. The results of this study have important theoretical significance in revealing how social distance influence third-party intervention.
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    The Effect of Fate Control on Problem Lottery Playing: The Mediation of Expectancy and Intension
    2017, 40(5): 1228-1234. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (696KB) ( )  
    Problem lottery players have become a serious public health concern. Problem lottery playing is lottery playing behavior that creates negative consequences for the player, others in his or her social network, or for the community. There is growing evidence that problem lottery playing hampers people’s physical, psychological, social wellbeing, and healthy development of lottery. According to the expectancy theory, players’ lottery playing behavior can be explained by his or her expectations for specific outcomes from that behavior though activating informative templates in memory forming from personal experiences. The theory of planned behavior, on the other hand, stipulates that lottery playing behavior is predicted by attitude, social norms, perceived behavioral control, and intention. Among them, intention is the single best predictor of lottery playing behavior, which is influenced by the other three factors. However, in expectancy theory and theory of planned behavior, expectations for specific outcomes and attitude are lottery-specific beliefs. General beliefs, which can guide social behavior, are little studied in lottery playing behavior. Fate control is a general belief that there are impersonal, external forces such as fate, destiny, and luck that determine life events. The purposes of this study were: (1) To explore the effect of fate control on problem lottery playing, and (2) To examine whether lottery playing intention and expectancy mediate the relationship between the fate control and problem lottery playing in lottery players. A total sample of 2538 Chinese lottery players was collected, with 1181 males and 839 females, the average age was 38.68-year-old. They were gathered in the lottery shops and finished the questionnaires with a little gift. A confirmatory factor analysis was calculated to test the common method variance. Results indicated that six-factor model (χ2/df = 4.56, p <.01) was better than single-factor model (χ2/df= 19.97, p < .01), making sure the study is accurate enough in terms of common method variance. The result showed that: (1) the relationships between fate control, expectancy, intension and problem lottery playing were significantly positive. Fate control had direct effect on problem lottery playing, as well as expectancy and intension. Expectancy had no direct effect on problem lottery playing, but significantly predicted intension. Intension significantly predicted problem lottery playing. (2) Fate control affected problem lottery playing through two indirect paths: through the mediating role of intension, through the chain mediating role of both expectancy and intension. It was concluded that the fate control had directly influence on problem lottery playing, and expectancy and intension had intermediary effects on problem lottery playing. These findings suggest general beliefs can also influence problem lottery playing. Promoting lottery-specific beliefs and general beliefs simultaneously in intervention programs could be developed to improve the mental health for problem lottery players
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    The Right/Wrong Judgment from the View of Public Morality-The Moderator of the Positive and Negative Incentive Effects in Public Service Communication
    2017, 40(5): 1202-1207. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (320KB) ( )  
    Public Service Communication is the activity aimed to promote the public interest actions based on the interests of the whole society. In the field of organizational behaviors, incentive strategies includes positive incentives and negative incentives. It was found that positive incentives could strengthen the correct behaviors, while the negative incentives was worked in avoiding the wrong behaviors. This paper aimed to explore whether such positive/negative incentives can work in the domain of public service communication. The prerequisite of the above proposal is the judgement about wasting. It was argued that it would be judged as wrong if the wasted resource was free, but it would be judged as no wrong if the wasted was paid. An university offered perfect conditions of conducting field experiments to test the proposal as its students use water for free but need pay for the electricity in their dormitories. The paper first designed two field experiments to test the above assumptions. Experiment 1 was about water saving. The water is free in the university. It included 3 groups. In the positive incentive group the slogan of “saving water is great” was posted in the bathroom of every dormitories, while in the negative incentive group, the posted slogan was “wasting water is not gentle!”. In the control group, no slogan was posted. The results showed, compared with the control group, the positive incentive slogan did not significantly decrease the amount of water usage (p = .239), but the negative incentive slogan did decrease the amount of water usage significantly (p = .048). Experiment 2 was about electricity saving. Students need pay for the usage of electricity in the university. The experiment design and procedure is similar to experiment 1. The positive (negative) incentive slogans were posted under the electricity meter outside of the dormitory. No slogan was posted in the control group. The data of electricity consumption was recorded during the past 6 months. There was significant difference (p = .038) between the control group and the positive incentive group but no significant difference (p = .902) between the control group and negative incentive group. The experiment 1 and 2 suggested people reacted to the positive and negative insensitive slogan differently depending on the wasted resource was free or charged. The post check revealed wasting free offered goods was indeed recognized as severer “wrong” behavior than wasting the goods charged. To test the hypothesis in one domain, the paper designed a 3 (Slogans: control vs. positive incentive slogan vs. negative incentive slogan) × 2 (payment: free vs. charge) between subjects experiment. In the free condition, the participants were asked to imagine the self-service lunch was for free as it was the university anniversary; but in the charge condition, it described the self-service lunch need payment. Each condition was embedded with positive (vs. negative vs. none) slogans depending on the different slogan group. The participants then evaluated the food saving intension. The results showed, if the lunch was free, the negative slogan was more effective than no slogan (p < .001) and positive slogan (p < .001). On contrast, if the lunch was charged, the postive slogan was more effective than no slogan (p < .001) and negative slogan (p < .001). The three experiments imply that in the public service communication, when the public think “I am not wrong”, we should adopt a positive incentive strategy to persuade the public to take the right actions,otherwise, a negative incentive strategy should be adopted.
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    Effects of Need for Cognitive Closure and Anticipated Regret on Individuals’ Processing of Career Decision-making
    2017, 40(5): 1182-1188. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (740KB) ( )  
    Recently, there has been a growing attention to the cognitive process of decisions. A small amount of research have examined the role of emotion on decision process, but they usually divided emotion into positive and negative, rarely examined the role of one certain emotion. Anticipated regret (abbr. AR) is an aversive emotion that people try to avoid, it is a function of predicted decision. Amount of research has examined the effects of AR on options decision makers choose. However past research has largely neglected to address the effects of AR on decision process. Although need for cognitive closure (abbr. NFCC) has been explored in variety decision domains and perceived had effects on decision process, its application to career decisions has yet to be examined. In this study, the mechanism of NFCC and AR on career decision process was discussed. According to the ways of AR priming, we conducted 2 separate experiments (experiment 1 with question priming, experiment 2 with results feedback priming) to examine the effects of NFCC and AR on career decision process. Methods combined measurement and experimental, a total of 411 junior students (experiment 1 with 205, experiment 2 with 206) were investigated. First, we measured the students’ NFCC level by using NFCC scale. Second, we selected subjects scored the top 27% as high NFCC group, scored the lowest 27% as low NFCC group. At last, after an interval of 4 weeks, both high and low NFCC groups completed career decision tasks by using Information Display Board (IDB ) technology on computer. Take 2 (high NFC, low NFCC) × 2 (no AR priming, AR priming) of two-factors of between-subjects design, we examined the effects of NFCC and AR on college students' career decision process. The results and conclusions are as follows:(1) There are significant differences between high and low NFCC students on career decision process. High (compared with low) NFCC students’ decision time was shorter, career information search number was less, search depth was lower and search patterns was less alternative-based. High NFCC individuals significantly made less cognitive efforts than low ones.(2) AR had significantly effects on career decision process. Students under AR (compared with no AR) priming condition their decision time was longer, career information search number was more, search depth was higher. AR caused individuals to be more cautious during decision process.(3) There were interaction effects between NFCC and AR on decision progress. High NFCC students under the condition of AR priming (compared with condition of no AR priming) their decision time was longer, career information search number was more, search depth was higher. No significant differences were found between students with low NFCC groups. AR could effectively buffer the cognitive closure process of high NFCC individuals.
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    Can We Judge a Person by His Appearance?——A Literature Review of Facial width-to-height Ratio
    2017, 40(5): 1235-1241. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (309KB) ( )  
    It is of great significance to study the relationship between facial cues and psychological traits in order to adapt to the environment more easily and actively. Recently alien studies have found that visual cues, such as male’s facial width-to-height, are associated with behavior tendency, motivation and so on, while domestic scholars are not familiar with this field. Therefore, this paper is to sort out the research and discuss the future research direction. Firstly, this paper introduces the concepts of the facial width-to-height ratio (fWHR) that is the ratio of the distance between the left and right zygion to the distance between the brow and upper lip. Then, we provide an overview of the research in this field and account for its theoretical basis. The fWHR is assumed as a sexually dimorphic trait. Male's fWHR is an explicit reliably index of testosterone and has significant correlation not only with unethical behavior such as aggression, exploitation, cheating, and deception, but also with the positive social behavior such as the upward mobility, the spirit of self-sacrifice and so on. For example, studies found that men with greater fWHR are less cooperative negotiators compared to men with smaller facial ratios. The lack of cooperation allows men with greater fWHR to claim more value when negotiating with other men, but inhibits their ability to create agreements that benefit all negotiating parties. Also, researchers found that men who had wider faces showed more self-sacrificing cooperation to help their group members under circumstances of competition with another group. Moreover, research showed that the fWHR of CEOs is related to the performance of their companies. Thirdly, we provide theoretical explanation that testosterone is assumed as the covariate behind both the facial width-to-height ratio and social behavior. Testosterone affects the development of the skull, which is positively correlated with the fWHR. On the other hand, testosterone is associated with aggression and dominance. Also, some studies points out that the effective prediction of fWHR is only limited to the male with low social status, and there is no significant correlation between the fWHR and the aggressive behavior in the male group with higher social status. And other research shows that the direct evidence of the relationship between male’s facial width-to-height ratios and levels of testosterone is still weak. Finally, this paper concludes that whether the relationship between the fWHR and testosterone is steady and cross-cultural valid is to be tested. In addition, the testosterone concentration was decreased with the increase of age, while the early influence of testosterone on the skull is irreversible and permanent, so, it is necessary to consider whether the age will become the moderator between fWHR and social behavior. The future study should investigate the relationship between the fWHR of different ages and social behavior. And even if the male's fWHR is related with testosterone levels, the relationship between the fWHR and explicit behavior is still affected by social economic cultural factors and so on. Therefore, whether foreign research results are applicable to China situation is necessary to be studied systematically and cross cultural comparison on fWHR should be an important direction for future research.
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    Negative Immersed Self-Reflection in Individuals with High Borderline Personality Disorder Trait
    2017, 40(5): 1195-1201. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (626KB) ( )  
    Self-distanced perspective is referred to as more adaptive self-reflection (Kross & Ayduk, 2008). Self reference task was introduced to investigate futures of self-refection in individuals with high borderline personality disorder (BPD) trait. Two experiments included in the current work. In Experiment 1, the McLean Screening Instrument for Borderline Personality Disorder (MSI-BPD) was used to pick out the high BPD trait (MSI-BPD≥6) and low BPD trait (MSI-BPD≤2) participants. Twenty-eight high BPD trait members and 26 low BPD trait participants were required to judge personality trait adjectives under both self reference and name reference condition at first, and then, tested the recognition performance. In Experiment 2, another 42 individuals with high BPD trait were randomly assigned to mindful-focus self-reflection training group and control group. After that, all participants were required to judge personality trait adjectives under both self reference and name condition, and tested the recognition performance as in Experiment 1. SPSS22.0 processed all data. The correct Remember rate (R) was counted as recognition performance. Differences of negative and positive valence of the personality trait adjectives were also considered. 2 (group: high BPD trait vs. low BPD trait) × 2 (valence: negative adjective vs. positive adjective) ×2 (reference condition: self reference vs. name reference) repetitive measure analysis of variance (ANOVA) reveals that: In Experiment 1, among individuals with low BPD trait, the recognition performance of both negative and positive adjective judgment under name reference condition was better than that of self reference condition (ps<.05). While among individuals with high BPD trait, the recognition performance on positive adjectives judgment under self reference has no difference with name reference condition (p>.05), however, the recognition performance of negative adjective judgment under self reference condition was better than that under name reference condition (p<.05), indicating the negative immersed self-reflection. In Experiment 2, the recognition performance of negative adjective judgment under self reference condition was better than that of name reference condition among control group (p<.05), while the recognition performance of negative adjective judgment under self reference condition has no difference with the recognition performance under name reference condition (p>.05), indicating the advantage of self reference judgment vanished in the training group. Further, the recognition performance of training group on both negative and positive personality adjective judgment under self reference was worse than that of control group(ps<.05), while the recognition performance of training group on negative adjective judgment under name reference was better than that of control group(p<.05). The results in Experiment 1 taken together indicated that individuals with high BPD trait were prone to use self immersed perspective facing negative self relevant information. This defect may arise from the impaired function of psychological distancing. While the results in the Experiment 2 together showed that the mindful-focus self-reflection training could release the negative immersed, and increased the use of self-distanced perspective, which might work through increasing the psychological distancing ability and decreasing the invalidation. In summary, these findings provided empirical evidences for psychological distance and biosocial model, and supported the intervention among self-reflection under dialectical behavior therapy (DBT).
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    Do medical terms and colloquial affect one’s disease risk perception?
    2017, 40(5): 1260-1265. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (510KB) ( )  
    Disease Risk perception is the subjective judgment or estimate that people make about the characteristics and severity of disease risk. Accurate disease risk perception is an important predictor for medical decision and health behavior. It is harmful for preventing diseases or recovering health that people overestimate or underestimate it. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to explore factors affecting the disease risk perception including anchor, frame and familiarity degrees, by estimating the seriousness and prevalence rate of diseases, in order to provide advice and help to people to form accurate disease risk perception, and promote better and effective risk communication between doctors and patients. Mixed factor design was used in this experiment to explore the disease name frame (medical term and colloquial), anchor value (high and low) and familiarity degree (high and low) to disease risk perception by estimating the seriousness and prevalence rate of certain diseases in medical terms or in colloquial. 64 Subjects were random selected from university students in psychology, education and Management Science majors, age between 22-28 years old,average age 24.9. The results found that the anchoring effect was significant. The anchor value influenced significantly the disease risk perception. The estimates of the seriousness and prevalence rate of diseases in high-anchor condition were higher than those in low-anchor condition. The framing effect was significant. Diseases in medical terms condition were estimated severer than in colloquial condition. The estimates of the disease prevalence rate in medical terms condition were lower than those in colloquial condition. The familiarity degree influenced the disease risk perception. The estimates of the seriousness of diseases in low familiarity degree condition were higher than those in high familiarity degree condition; but the estimates of the prevalence rate of the diseases in low familiarity degree condition were lower than those in high familiarity degree condition. The familiarity degree and the name frame existed interaction. In high familiarity degree condition, the estimates of the seriousness of diseases in colloquial condition were lower than those in medical term condition. The estimates of the prevalence rate of the disease in high familiarity degree condition were higher than that in low familiarity degree condition. But in the low familiarity degree condition, there were no significant difference between the term and colloquial conditions in the estimates of the seriousness and prevalence rate of diseases. Further analysis with bootstrap method found that name frame could direct influence the severity estimates, or indirect influence it by the estimate of the prevalence rate of diseases. Medical terms usually led to overestimate the seriousness of the disease. But if through the estimates of the prevalence rate to revalue the seriousness of the disease, as colloquial usually led to overestimate the prevalence rate of the disease, therefore, it further led to overestimate the seriousness of the disease. The study suggested that accurate communication between doctors and patients were important in disease risk perception.
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    Non-literal meaning comprehension defect in High-functioning Autism Spectrum Disorder: An ERP study based on metaphor perspective
    2017, 40(5): 1253-1259. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (1158KB) ( )  
    Previous research indicated that there exist severe disabilities in non-literal meaning comprehension among people who are diagnosed with Autistic Spectrum Disorder (ASD). These defects were explained from various dimensions including social cognition and language information processing. Social cognition defects and disability of early language information processing maybe originated from the same neural basis because brain development defects have been found among the people with ASD. These development defects cause their disability of social cognition and language information processing and further affect their non-literal meaning comprehension. In view of the experience of past research, metaphor is an appropriate perspective to explore the defects of non-literal meaning comprehension. For instance, a low efficiency of ASD metaphor semantic integration may be caused by right hemisphere dysfunction or underconnectivity between the hemispheres or brain regions which are the results of cerebral white matter or other brain structures development dysfunction. All above defect of brain structure or brain function impair different kinds of metaphors or other non-literal meaning comprehension. Recent studies explored the brain defects on metaphorical semantic comprehension from neural physiological level and mainly among the patients with Asperger's syndrome (AS). However, inconsistent conclusions have been made among the people diagnosed on High Functioning Autism (HFA). Furthermore,the research participants have been limited to children and little is known on metaphor semantic integration of adults with HFA. In order to examine the neural physiological features of metaphor semantic comprehension among adults with HFA and to make proposals to other research of non-literal meaning comprehension, the present study recruited 20 adults with HFA (mean ages = 19.95 years) and their 20 typically developing peers(mean ages=19.40 years) who were matched on IQ. Event Related Potential (ERP) was used to investigate the metaphorical semantic processing of four types of sentences including novel-metaphor sentences, conventional-metaphor sentences, literal sentences, and error sentences. All participants were asked to perform a semantic judgment task that required them to decide whether the sentences showed on the computer screen conveyed a meaningful expression or not as quickly and accurately as possible. The results showed that: HFA adults can comprehend metaphor semantic ultimately with a long response time and a normal accuracy. In the typically developing group, the largest N400 amplitude of error sentences and a right hemisphere advantage effect were found. Novel metaphor sentences had smaller N400 amplitude comparing to error sentences but N400 of the former was still larger than the conventional metaphor sentences and literal sentences. This result suggests that the error sentences semantic integration is most difficult among the typically developing group. A different pattern was observed in the HFA group, novel metaphor elicited the largest N400 amplitude, which was followed by error sentences, conventional metaphor sentences, and literal sentences. No lateralization effect was found on novel metaphor sentences. The present study suggests that the semantic integration ability in metaphor comprehension among HFA adults is relatively intact, but a different processing pattern was found comparing to typically developing peers. This special processing pattern may attribute to right hemisphere dysfunction or poor connectivity among different brain areas or structures. Key words Adults with high Functioning Autism; non-literal meaning; metaphor; ERP; N400
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    The influence mechanism of categories and concepts on fear generalization
    2017, 40(5): 1266-1273. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (509KB) ( )  
    The acquisition of fear is of vital importance to the survival of humans and animals, which can help individuals realize danger and then defend rapidly. Since acquired fear stimuli can take many forms, it is necessary to generalize conditioned reflexes to other potentially dangerous stimuli. For instance, after being bitten by a snake, the individual will avoid other snakes or situations where snakes may appear. Although the appropriate generalization of fear is conducive to adapting to the changing environment, excessive generalization, such as "once bitten, twice shy", will seriously affect our daily life. And it even lead to post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), phobia (Phobia), obsessive-compulsive disorder (obsessive-compulsive disorder, OCD),or other anxiety disorders. Thus, fear acquisition and generalization is crucial in the field of psychology. Pavlovian conditioning is a classical paradigm to study the topic of fear generalization. In classical fear conditioning, a neutral stimulus that pairs with the aversive event acquires aversive properties. Furthermore, other similar stimulus can also elicit fear response. For the past century, Pavlovian conditioning, as an experimental model for understanding the animal’s fear acquisition, plays a major role in understanding the behavioral and neurophysiological mechanisms of fear acquisition, expression, inhibition, and generalization. It’s worth noting that human beings, unlike animals, have the ability to integrate the previous knowledge and experience, and use the concepts of classification to learn fear. The generalization fear of human, divided into several parts (perception, classification, and concept), is introduced in this paper. Different parts have different experimental procedures. Variants that closely resemble the CS+ (neutral stimulus that pairs with the aversive event) evoke more fear than variants that have less in common with the CS+. What’s more, discrimination thresholds can be changed by aversive learning. On the other hand, the similarity of concepts and the typicality of classified members can promote the gradient and intensity of fear generalization. However, perceptual generalization research scarcely speaks to the role of conceptual meaning while conceptual generalization research rarely addresses the importance of physical form. In real life, these two factors are often at the same time work together to promote the generalization of fear. It is helpful for us to understand the essence of anxiety disorders by integrating the two kinds of research. It is a remarkable fact that, if high-order of learning, reasoning, and conceptual system are involved in fear generalization, then we need to expand the neural circuit of fear learning. Conditional reflex system, cognitive system (categorizing process、 conceptual representation and inductive reasoning system) can be linked together to generalize the fear we have learned to the unknown stimuli. Lissek (2012) proposed a perceptual generalization model of fear. That is, if a generalization stimulus is sufficient similar to the CS+, the hippocampus initiates a pattern completion process to trigger a conditioned response. Insufficient similar, on the other hand, initiates pattern separation processes in the hippocampus, which leads to activation of the vmPFC that inhibits the expression of fear. Hence, fear generalization is determined by pattern completion versus pattern separation processes. With respect to generalization of higher order fear learning, the hippocampus and surrounding regions are important for SPC. Hippocampal-amygdala coupling may play a critical role in generalization based category to make the individual generalizes preferentially toward typical category members. It’s worth noting that amygdale-lateral FFG connectivity was selectively enhanced when conditioned to animals. Intrinsic cortical connectivity with the amygdala may be better for survive which makes evolutionary sense. These theoretical and empirical studies can provide the following three aspects of the clinical implication. (1) Category-based inductive reasoning suggests that typical things are more representative than atypical things. Therefore, using the typical stimuli in extinction may be a better choice. (2) In clinical treatment, combining the similar and the opposite of concept may be critical to the treatment of clinical anxiety disorders. (3) Exposure to a series of stimuli associated with the original aversive stimulus (classification related) may also be an ideal treatment during exposure therapy.
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    User Cognition Expression Based on Concept Extension
    2017, 40(5): 1248-1252. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (793KB) ( )  
    In the psychological assessment, product design, product testing and evaluation, personnel training, human-computer interaction, artificial intelligence and other fields, user’s thinking, user expectations and other brain activities of user are desired to know, these brain activities are summarized as user cognition in this paper. As a complex subject, user cognition is difficult to encode and measure because of its subjectivity, ambiguity and evolvability, system or expert will not be able to make decision if user cognition could not be understood, therefore, there are obstacles to human-computer interaction, product design and evaluation, user psychological assessment, etc. Scholars from philosophy, linguistics, psychology, education, library science, management science and computational science and other fields tried to perceive and visualize user cognition. There are flaws: over-reliance on experts which lead to a strong subjectivity; unable to express user cognition mathematically but descript it; no analysis of the membership. In order to solve the problems mentioned above, fuzzy expression and concept extension were applied to express user cognition. The concept of cognition derived from cognitive psychology, it is the mental action or process of acquiring knowledge and understanding through thought, experience, and the senses. Previous studies on user cognition mostly based on statistical mathematics which prefer focusing on results to expression of research object. With the development of computer technology, the emergence of machine learning, deep neural networks and artificial intelligence technology are used to user cognition study, Machine understanding research is becoming more and more important, Research on the mathematical expression of user cognition solves the problem essentially. Therefore, fuzzy expression was applied to express user cognition which convert the research of complex subject into the research on behalf of its factor set. A solution was proposed that using internet big data to get factor set which was processed in quantity by weighting algorithm and fuzzy statistics. Take intelligent refrigerator for the research object in this paper. Crawl fifty thousand pages on the internet to acquire factor set related to intelligent refrigerator. Each membership of factor was computed to verify the authenticity of the factor set which turn out all the membership of factors are in a high value. To further demonstration that factor set reflect the user cognition acquired by fuzzy expression and text mining (FE-TM), our research group has conducted a traditional user research (TUR) lasted for two months, including online survey, competitive analysis, user in-depth interviews, questionnaire survey, its experimental data was compared to FE-TM. As it shows in table 2 that the experimental data of FE-TM has good coherence with experimental data of TUR which means FE-TM has a high practical and scientific. Since all the factors and its membership are both acquired and computed, mathematical expression of user cognition is finally settled and proved. User cognition is a very basic concept in cognitive psychology disciplines. Although the concept of cognition proposed for a long time, but the research on mathematics expression of user cognition is rare which make it impossible to deeper studies. For example, In the field of cognitive psychology, it is a consensus that user cognition and user behavior has a certain relevance, but what is the relationship? Whether the relationship enables the mutual conversion between each other? How to use their relationship to achieve more natural and more dimensions of human-computer interaction is rarely studied. In this paper, fuzzy expression and text mining technology together were applied to express user cognition which was demonstrated through the intelligent refrigerator project. More importantly, this solution is suitable for any other complex objects. Compared with the traditional methods of user research, this solution has the following advantages: more sensitive perception of new technologies; predict trends of user cognition; provide a basis theory for further research; saving consumption with high precision.
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    Research on Evolvement and Development Trend of Mentalizing Accounts of Social Cognition ——Reflections on Submentalizing
    2017, 40(5): 1274-1279. 
    Abstract ( )   PDF (312KB) ( )  
    Two fundamental theories in social cognition are long debated about how people understand the mental states of others. The mentalizing account posits mind-reading abilities as reflective, theory-based inferential processes that develop gradually from childhood learning, whereas the embodiment account contends them as reflexive, simulation-based enactive processes that are genetically inherited. Recent research found new evidence that even infants and non-human primates can automatically represent what others see, intend, and believe. For instance, infants and chimpanzees can expect an agent to reach toward a location where he or she believes a desirable object to be hidden, even when the agent’s belief is false. This ‘implicit mentalizing’ is interpreted as the root form of explicit, language-based mind reading skills in adults, and is believed to build a bridge linking two theories, since it confirms the inferential component of mentalizing account and also favors the nativist view of embodied account. However, a new theory named ‘submentalizing’ was recently proposed to provide an alternative interpretation for implicit mentalizing. By re-examining methodological flaws of all relevant studies in children and adults, submentalizing theorists assert that implicit mentalizing depends on general purpose neurocognitive mechanisms, rather than mechanisms that are specialized for inferential process or embodied process. Specifically, they point out that most empirical evidence for implicit mentalizing to date could be simply caused by domain-general cognitive mechanisms (e.g. Involuntary attentional orienting, spatial memory, retroactive interference and distraction), because they all can simulate the behavioral effects of mentalizing. Therefore, the submentalizing theory concludes that humans may not need dedicated mentalizing/embodiment as much as previously thought for social cognition—domain-general processes alone can provide a fast and efficient substrate to understand other’s mind in everyday life, allowing people to navigate a wide range of social situations without really thinking about or simulating mental states. We suggest this ‘submentalizing’ theory provides a novel and promising approach to explore the underlying mechanisms of implicit mentalizing. It goes beyond the classical debate of ‘mentalizing vs embodiment’ in social cognition, and instead posits submentalizing processes can ultimately substitute both theories. Its theoretical framework not only challenges the core position of mental states ascription in mentalizing account, but also refutes the nativist view of embodied account. It motivates researchers to re-evaluate all existing evidence of implicit mentalizing and provides a reductionism perspective to understand the nature of social cognition (i.e. the relationship between social and non-social processes). In addition to its theoretical contributions, the submentalizing theory also gives constructive implications for methodological issues and sheds light on future research directions. For example, future studies in mind reading should start to utilize well-controlled procedures (e.g. self-informed belief induction) to manipulate subjects’ perceptual and belief states, and also need to include closely matched inanimate control conditions and subtle attentional measures to completely rule out the interpretations of domain-general processes. In conclusion, we suggest the submentalizing theory has taken an ambitious but solid first step to question current theories in social cognition. To fully validate its claims and implications (e.g. substitute mentalizing/embodiment theories), future studies are needed to be implemented in multiple disciplines (i.e. neuropsychology and primate research) and with novel experimental strategies and advanced technologies (e.g. eye-tracking, fMRI, fNIRS).
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