0
0.0
Sep 10, 2021
09/21
by
Angela Pelletier; Daniel G. Derksen; Daniel M Bernstein
data
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To the best of our knowledge, no studies have explored the effect of rumination on Theory of Mind (ToM) on individuals with high traits of depression. There is some evidence to support a general effect of depression on ToM, but the evidence is mixed on the direction of this relationship and whether there is any effect at all (Weightman et al 2019). Our study design is based on Zainal and Newman's (2018) study on the effect of worry on ToM in individuals with Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD),...
Source: https://osf.io/rmv4k/
0
0.0
Aug 27, 2021
08/21
by
Angela; Daniel M Bernstein; Daniel G. Derksen
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
Source: https://osf.io/w7tj8/
0
0.0
Aug 17, 2021
08/21
by
Angela; Daniel M Bernstein; Daniel G. Derksen
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
Source: https://osf.io/8am5s/
0
0.0
Aug 26, 2021
08/21
by
Daniel G. Derksen; Daniel M Bernstein; Megan E. Giroux; Eryn Newman
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
Source: https://osf.io/e2mpf/
0
0.0
Sep 12, 2021
09/21
by
Daniel G. Derksen; Daniel M Bernstein; Megan E. Giroux; Eryn Newman; Deb Connolly
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
Source: https://osf.io/cg74s/
0
0.0
Nov 12, 2021
11/21
by
Daniel G. Derksen; Megan E. Giroux; Deborah A. Connolly; Eryn Newman; Daniel M Bernstein
data
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favorite 0
comment 0
This study will be a follow-up to Truthiness and Clarification Experiment 1 (https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/XMWER). Results of Experiment 1 were consistent with our first hypothesis (and with prior literature): trivia in still photo trials were more often rated true compared to trivia in no-photo trials. Contrary to our second hypothesis, photos induced similar truthiness effects regardless of whether they were still or clarified. There were two novel features of the design that differed from...
Source: https://osf.io/grj3c/
0
0.0
Sep 8, 2021
09/21
by
Daniel G. Derksen; Megan E. Giroux; Deborah A. Connolly; Eryn Newman; Daniel M Bernstein
data
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favorite 0
comment 0
Previous research on the truthiness effect has shown that non-probative but related photos can bias judgements towards truth. When true-or-false statements are presented with a non-probative but related photo, people are more likely to rate the statement "true" compared to when no photo is present. This effect is consistent, but the magnitude of the effect is small (i.e. hovering around d = 0.2; see Newman, Jalbert, Schwarz, & Ly, (2020) and other truthiness literature). In order...
Source: https://osf.io/xmwer/
0
0.0
Aug 23, 2021
08/21
by
Daniel G. Derksen; Michael Jacob Silverstein; Zach Hamzagic; Daniel M Bernstein; Anna-Lisa Cohen; D. StephenLindsay
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
Source: https://osf.io/kezsc/
0
0.0
Aug 24, 2021
08/21
by
Daniel M Bernstein; Rakefet Ackerman; Megan E. Giroux; Iarenjit Rai
data
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favorite 0
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In this experiment, we will investigate metacognitive hindsight bias, which refers to the extent in which people recall how confident they were in their success in a cognitive task (e.g., answering a knowledge question). No research has investigated metacognitive hindsight bias across the developmental trajectory. Therefore, the goal of this study is to expose developmental patterns in metacognitive hindsight bias as people get older.
Source: https://osf.io/7u862/
0
0.0
Sep 10, 2021
09/21
by
Daniel M Bernstein; Rakefet Ackerman; Megan E. Giroux; Iarenjit Rai
data
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favorite 0
comment 0
Hindsight bias is the tendency for individuals to claim that past events were more predictable than they actually were, while metacognition is awareness of one’s own thoughts. In this experiment, we will investigate metacognitive hindsight bias, which refers to the extent in which people recall how confident they were in their success in a cognitive task (e.g., answering a knowledge question). Past research has shown that hindsight bias is a robust phenomenon found throughout the life span,...
Source: https://osf.io/2de4c/
0
0.0
Mar 14, 2022
03/22
by
Dawn-Leah Lim McDonald; M. Kyle Matsuba; Daniel M. Bernstein; Lori McCullough; Amie Orsetti; Nathan Cassidy
data
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favorite 0
comment 0
The Stroop test is a well known measure of inhibition or cognitive control. In this experiment we will measure the effects of age, sleep, SES (education), and diabetes on participants' Stroop scores (Stroop, 1935) in a sample of approximately 150 older adults (56 years and up). Using regression analysis we will test whether age, sleep, SES (education), or diabetes have an impact on the Stroop scores either individually or cumulatively.
Source: https://osf.io/bnwg7/
0
0.0
Aug 23, 2021
08/21
by
Eric Y Mah; Daniel M Bernstein
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
Source: https://osf.io/377m2/
0
0.0
Aug 20, 2021
08/21
by
Eric Y Mah; Daniel M Bernstein
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
Source: https://osf.io/kbtfj/
0
0.0
Aug 22, 2021
08/21
by
Eric Y Mah; Daniel M Bernstein
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
Source: https://osf.io/smp7d/
0
0.0
Aug 29, 2021
08/21
by
Eric Y Mah; Daniel M Bernstein; Monika Undorf
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
Source: https://osf.io/y8bxf/
0
0.0
Aug 25, 2021
08/21
by
Eric Y Mah; Daniel M Bernstein; Monika Undorf; Dawn-Leah Lim McDonald
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
Source: https://osf.io/p7bn3/
0
0.0
Mar 31, 2022
03/22
by
Eric Y Mah; Daniel M Bernstein; Zach Hamzagic; Daniel G. Derksen
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
Source: https://osf.io/s2gur/
1
1.0
Aug 30, 2021
08/21
by
Glen Bodner; Dawn-Leah Lim McDonald; Daniel G. Derksen; Daniel M Bernstein
data
eye 1
favorite 0
comment 0
Words that have been produced (e.g., read aloud, whispered, typed, written, sung, etc.) are better recalled than non-produced words (i.e. silent reading). This is known as the production effect. There are two proposed mechanisms for the production effect, (1) the distinctiveness account; and (2) the strength account. According to the distinctiveness account, production provides an additional mode of encoding at study. Participants have read the word silently and read it aloud. This makes the...
Source: https://osf.io/kue7s/
0
0.0
Dec 27, 2021
12/21
by
Jeevan Bains; Carla Lindsay MacLean; Daniel G. Derksen; Daniel M Bernstein; Deb Connolly; Justin Kantner
data
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favorite 0
comment 0
The current experiment is a replication of Winkielman et al.’s (2015) Experiment #4 with a few modifications. This experiment tests if we will obtain latent reaction times and relatively lower trust ratings for androgynous faces, compared to gendered faces, when participants are asked to gender categorize the face (male or female) and no difference in reaction times or trust ratings when categorizing the faces by race (White or Asian).
Source: https://osf.io/6fxnr/
0
0.0
Mar 31, 2022
03/22
by
Jeevan Bains; Carla Lindsay MacLean; Daniel G. Derksen; Daniel M Bernstein; Deb Connolly; Justin Kantner
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
The current experiment studies how the fluency elicited by a gendered face impacts eyewitness believability, compared to a disfluently-processed androgynous face. Ultimately, we expect that participants will classify androgynous faces with greater latency than gendered faces during a gender categorization task. Furthermore, given the previous linkage between disfluency and devaluation, we expect that participants will rate androgynous faces as less “believable” than gendered faces during a...
Source: https://osf.io/d2vru/
0
0.0
Sep 10, 2021
09/21
by
Jeevan Bains; Carla Lindsay MacLean; Daniel G. Derksen; Daniel M Bernstein; Justin Kantner; Deb Connolly
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
This pilot study tests if we will obtain latent reaction times for androgynous faces, compared to gendered faces, when participants are asked to gender categorize the face (male or female) and no difference in reaction times when judging gender quality (degree of masculinity and femininity). If our experiment is successful, this manipulation will be used in future research.
Source: https://osf.io/tnmvc/
0
0.0
Sep 10, 2021
09/21
by
Kristen Zeller; Amanda Vella Tabert; Daniel M Bernstein; Jim Tanaka; Kevin Brandon Smith
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
This project investigates the influence of trait anxiety and depression on Theory of Mind. We intend to investigate 1) how traits influence the type of errors that are being made when evaluating social situations 2) what visual information are people focusing on when they are making these errors.
Source: https://osf.io/brfyt/
0
0.0
Sep 5, 2021
09/21
by
Kristen Zeller; Amanda Vella Tabert; Daniel M Bernstein; Jim Tanaka; Kevin Brandon Smith
data
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favorite 0
comment 0
Methods and Measures
Source: https://osf.io/edgjy/
0
0.0
Sep 11, 2021
09/21
by
Kristen Zeller; Amanda Vella Tabert; Daniel M Bernstein; Jim Tanaka; Kevin Brandon Smith
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
This project investigates the influence of trait anxiety,depression and autism on Theory of Mind. We intend to investigate 1) how traits influence the type of errors that are being made when evaluating social situations 2) what visual information people are focusing on when they are making these errors.
Source: https://osf.io/g53dt/
0
0.0
Sep 9, 2021
09/21
by
Kristen Zeller; Amanda Vella Tabert; Daniel M Bernstein; Jim Tanaka; Kevin Brandon Smith
data
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favorite 0
comment 0
Description of esstential elements
Source: https://osf.io/t7qej/
0
0.0
Aug 21, 2021
08/21
by
Kristen Zeller; Amanda Vella Tabert; Daniel M Bernstein; Jim Tanaka; Kevin Brandon Smith
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
Experimental Procedure
Source: https://osf.io/6qpuk/
0
0.0
Aug 18, 2021
08/21
by
Kristen Zeller; Amanda Vella Tabert; Daniel M Bernstein; Jim Tanaka; Kevin Brandon Smith
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
Methods
Source: https://osf.io/as2kd/
0
0.0
Aug 31, 2021
08/21
by
Kristen Zeller; Amanda Vella Tabert; Daniel M Bernstein; Jim Tanaka; Kevin Brandon Smith
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
Materials
Source: https://osf.io/jqabz/
0
0.0
Aug 30, 2021
08/21
by
Kristen Zeller; Amanda Vella Tabert; Daniel M Bernstein; Jim Tanaka; Kevin Brandon Smith
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
References
Source: https://osf.io/8gky7/
0
0.0
Sep 8, 2021
09/21
by
Kristen Zeller; Amanda Vella Tabert; Kevin Brandon Smith; Jim Tanaka; Daniel M Bernstein
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
Source: https://osf.io/r8sgw/
0
0.0
Aug 30, 2021
08/21
by
Kristen Zeller; Daniel M Bernstein; Jim Tanaka; Amanda Vella Tabert; Kevin Brandon Smith
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
Design and Analysis
Source: https://osf.io/k7f9v/
0
0.0
Aug 31, 2021
08/21
by
Lifespan Cognition Lab; Daniel M Bernstein
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
Source: https://osf.io/d5m2u/
0
0.0
Sep 10, 2021
09/21
by
Lifespan Cognition Lab; Daniel M Bernstein; Beatrice G. Kuhlmann
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
Source: https://osf.io/8x2ev/
0
0.0
Sep 1, 2021
09/21
by
Lifespan Cognition Lab; Heather Ferguson; Daniel M Bernstein
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
Source: https://osf.io/sqae5/
0
0.0
Mar 22, 2022
03/22
by
Lifespan Cognition Lab; Kamaljit Bajwa; Kirandeep Dogra; Paneet Gill; Daniel M Bernstein
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
Decision-making is an important skill when evaluating possible risks and benefits in one’s everyday life. This skill is substantially impaired among prevalent alcohol and tobacco users due to impulsivity, reward-seeking behaviour and their inability to learn from experience. Past work has examined context-dependent alcohol use (i.e., participants who are intoxicated during the testing phase). However, research on long-term effects of alcohol and tobacco use on decision-making is limited,...
Source: https://osf.io/axd2y/
0
0.0
Mar 26, 2022
03/22
by
Lifespan Cognition Lab; Kamaljit Bajwa; Kirandeep Dogra; Travis Takarangi; Karin Ishida; Daniel M Bernstein; M. Kyle Matsuba
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
Affective Theory of Mind (ToM) is an important ability as it allows an individual to determine the emotions of others. The Reading in the Mind Eyes Task (RMET) assesses affective theory of mind (ToM). Past work noted that performance on the RME task decreases with age. The research also shows that females usually score higher than males on the RME task. We replicated this past work by examining age and gender using the RME task.
Source: https://osf.io/j9usv/
0
0.0
Sep 11, 2021
09/21
by
Lilli Pavich; Daniel M Bernstein; M. Kyle Matsuba; Heather Ferguson
data
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favorite 0
comment 0
Theory of Mind will be asses via short narratives that describe a character having correct knowledge (i.e., a true belief) or out of date knowledge (i.e. a false belief) about the location of an object; participants will be asked to quickly and accurately infer this character's belief about the object's location. Counterfactual thinking will be assessed via short narratives that either describe facts about the world, or describe a novel fiction (i.e. counterfactual) version of the world;...
Source: https://osf.io/sm7fp/
0
0.0
Aug 20, 2021
08/21
by
Megan E. Giroux; Daniel G. Derksen; Daniel M Bernstein; Patricia I Coburn
data
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favorite 0
comment 0
The purpose of this study is to explore how beliefs about the COVID-19 pandemic change over time across the world. Specifically, we plan to test whether participants exhibit hindsight bias for the outcomes of COVID-19. Hindsight bias is the tendency to see the outcome of an event as more foreseeable once the outcome is known than before the outcome was known. It is important to study the effects of hindsight bias for this global event because it can affect people's evaluations of the...
Source: https://osf.io/pwbrd/
0
0.0
Aug 26, 2021
08/21
by
Megan E. Giroux; Daniel M Bernstein; Daniel G. Derksen; Eryn Newman
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
Source: https://osf.io/tkg5a/
0
0.0
Aug 25, 2021
08/21
by
Megan E. Giroux; Daniel M Bernstein; Deb Connolly
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
Previous research has demonstrated that contextual information can produce a confirmation bias for degraded audio recordings. For example, Lange et al. (2011) showed that participants who learn that recorded statements are taken from criminal suspect interviews misinterpret innocuous degraded audio recordings (e.g., “Next thing I knew, there was mud everywhere”) as incriminating (e.g., “Next thing I knew, there was blood everywhere”). Additionally, when participants receive written...
Source: https://osf.io/dnbh2/
0
0.0
Sep 12, 2021
09/21
by
Megan E. Giroux; Daniel M Bernstein; Deb Connolly
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
There is preliminary evidence that contextual information can influence people's interpretation of degraded audio recordings. Specifically, learning that recordings come from criminal suspects' interviews makes people more likely to interpret innocuous recordings as incriminating. However, previously no research had yet investigated whether presenting additional contextual information increases this effect. Therefore, we conducted a study in which we investigated whether additional contextual...
Source: https://osf.io/tpfkv/
0
0.0
Aug 26, 2021
08/21
by
Megan E. Giroux; Daniel M Bernstein; Deb Connolly
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
Source: https://osf.io/t7z4s/
0
0.0
Sep 8, 2021
09/21
by
Megan E. Giroux; Daniel M Bernstein; Deb Connolly
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
As the presence of recording devices such as cell phones and body cams becomes more prevalent, audio recordings are more frequently being used as evidence in criminal cases. However, these audio recordings are often degraded due to various factors such as wiretapping, background noise, and poor-quality connections in phone calls. Due to these factors, the audio recordings can be hard to hear. Therefore, written transcripts may be permitted to accompany the recordings to aid the trier of fact in...
Source: https://osf.io/7ms9f/
0
0.0
Apr 9, 2022
04/22
by
Nathan Cassidy; Daniel G. Derksen; Daniel M Bernstein
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
False Belief tasks are the primary task used in Theory of Mind research (Beaudoin et al., 2020). The purpose of such tasks is to understand when children develop a Theory of Mind, the ability to understand that others can hold beliefs that don’t represent reality (Wang & Leslie, 2016). In a common version of the False Belief task called the change of location task, participants view a story in which a protagonist watches someone move an object from location A to a location B. The...
Source: https://osf.io/ad5gw/
0
0.0
Jan 31, 2022
01/22
by
Nathan; Daniel G. Derksen; Daniel M Bernstein
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
Background: False Belief tasks are the primary task used in Theory of Mind research (Beaudoin et al., 2020). The purpose of such tasks is to understand when children develop a Theory of Mind, the ability to understand that others can hold beliefs that don’t represent reality (Wang & Leslie, 2016). In a common version of the False Belief task called the change of location task, participants view a story in which a protagonist watches someone move an object from location A to a location B....
Source: https://osf.io/vez3r/
0
0.0
Sep 10, 2021
09/21
by
Zach Hamzagic; Daniel G. Derksen; Daniel M Bernstein; Eric Y Mah
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
Source: https://osf.io/k7z5m/
0
0.0
Sep 10, 2021
09/21
by
Zach Hamzagic; Daniel M. Bernstein; Daniel Derksen; Kyle Matsuba
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
Source: https://osf.io/vhspg/
0
0.0
Sep 10, 2021
09/21
by
Zach Hamzagic; Daniel M. Bernstein; Daniel Derksen; Kyle Matsuba
data
eye 0
favorite 0
comment 0
Source: https://osf.io/ykvcg/