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Dive into the research topics where Anna M. Lomanowska is active.

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Featured researches published by Anna M. Lomanowska.


Neuroscience | 2017

Parenting begets parenting: A neurobiological perspective on early adversity and the transmission of parenting styles across generations

Anna M. Lomanowska; Michel Boivin; Clyde Hertzman; Alison S. Fleming

The developing brains of young children are highly sensitive to input from their social environment. Nurturing social experience during this time promotes the acquisition of social and cognitive skills and emotional competencies. However, many young children are confronted with obstacles to healthy development, including poverty, inappropriate care, and violence, and their enhanced sensitivity to the social environment means that they are highly susceptible to these adverse childhood experiences. One source of social adversity in early life can stem from parenting that is harsh, inconsistent, non-sensitive or hostile. Parenting is considered to be the cornerstone of early socio-emotional development and an adverse parenting style is associated with adjustment problems and a higher risk of developing mood and behavioral disorders. Importantly, there is a growing literature showing that an important predictor of parenting behavior is how parents, especially mothers, were parented themselves. In this review, we examine how adversity in early-life affects mothering behavior in later-life and how these effects may be perpetuated inter-generationally. Relying on studies in humans and animal models, we consider evidence for the intergenerational transmission of mothering styles. We then describe the psychological underpinnings of mothering, including responsiveness to young, executive function and affect, as well as the physiological mediators of mothering behavior, including hormones, brain regions and neurotransmitters, and we consider how development in these relevant domains may be affected by adversity experienced in early life. Finally, we explore how genes and early experience interact to predict mothering behavior, including the involvement of epigenetic mechanisms. Understanding how adverse parenting begets adverse parenting in the next generation is critical for designing interventions aimed at preventing this intergenerational cycle of early adversity.


Computers in Human Behavior | 2014

My avatar is pregnant! Representation of pregnancy, birth, and maternity in a virtual world

Anna M. Lomanowska; Matthieu J. Guitton

Despite the potential for limitless creativity, many activities observed in the increasingly popular multi-user virtual worlds involve recreating real-life experiences. This is particularly evident in the social domain, as individuals reenact activities that reflect real human social needs, such as interpersonal intimacy. Surprisingly, one aspect of virtual experience tied to intimate relationships that has emerged in this context involves the reenactment of pregnancy, birth and maternity. The aim of this study was to examine how pregnancy, birth, and maternity are represented in a virtual world. Quantitative and qualitative data were collected over a 10month period in the popular virtual world of Second Life to investigate the individual, social, and environmental aspects of these activities. Four different themes related to pregnancy, birth, and maternity were identified, including medical clinic services, family activities, sexual activities, and retail, with participation varying between female and male avatars. Analysis of related online media external to the virtual world provided further insight into the way that virtual pregnancy, birth, and maternity were constructed and experienced by the participating individuals. These insights are particularly valuable for understanding how intimate aspects of social interactions can be represented in immersive virtual applications for health care and related domains.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Virtually Naked: Virtual Environment Reveals Sex-Dependent Nature of Skin Disclosure

Anna M. Lomanowska; Matthieu J. Guitton

The human tendency to reveal or cover naked skin reflects a competition between the individual propensity for social interactions related to sexual appeal and interpersonal touch versus climatic, environmental, physical, and cultural constraints. However, due to the ubiquitous nature of these constraints, isolating on a large scale the spontaneous human tendency to reveal naked skin has remained impossible. Using the online 3-dimensional virtual world of Second Life, we examined spontaneous human skin-covering behavior unhindered by real-world climatic, environmental, and physical variables. Analysis of hundreds of avatars revealed that virtual females disclose substantially more naked skin than virtual males. This phenomenon was not related to avatar hypersexualization as evaluated by measurement of sexually dimorphic body proportions. Furthermore, analysis of skin-covering behavior of a population of culturally homogeneous avatars indicated that the propensity of female avatars to reveal naked skin persisted despite explicit cultural norms promoting less revealing attire. These findings have implications for further understanding how sex-specific aspects of skin disclosure influence human social interactions in both virtual and real settings.


Computers in Human Behavior | 2012

Spatial proximity to others determines how humans inhabit virtual worlds

Anna M. Lomanowska; Matthieu J. Guitton

Highly immersive three-dimensional virtual worlds have emerged as a popular medium for human social interactions. These environments enable multimodal sensory engagement and provide an immersive graphical representation of physical space where users can interact via avatars. However, when compared to two-dimensional virtual settings such as chats, virtual worlds impose constraints on social interactions due to the physical distance between individuals. Using the popular platform of Second Life as a model, we examined how humans manage this interindividual distance in virtual worlds. Taking advantage of methods developed in population ecology, we investigated how avatars are distributed in relation to each other to populate a virtual world. Our results revealed a striking dichotomy in the spatial relationships between avatars. Considerable aggregation, largely independent of population density, was observed alongside surprisingly marked physical isolation. These findings demonstrate that the spatial proximity to others determines how humans inhabit virtual worlds.


Patient Education and Counseling | 2017

Understanding online health information: Evaluation, tools, and strategies.

Elisabeth Beaunoyer; Marianne Arsenault; Anna M. Lomanowska; Matthieu J. Guitton

OBJECTIVE Considering the status of the Internet as a prominent source of health information, assessing online health material has become a central issue in patient education. We describe the strategies available to evaluate the characteristics of online health information, including readability, emotional content, understandability, usability. METHODS Popular tools used in assessment of readability, emotional content and comprehensibility of online health information were reviewed. Tools designed to evaluate both printed and online material were considered. RESULTS Readability tools are widely used in online health material evaluation and are highly covariant. Assessment of emotional content of online health-related communications via sentiment analysis tools is becoming more popular. Understandability and usability tools have been developed specifically for health-related material, but each tool has important limitations and has been tested on a limited number of health issues. CONCLUSION Despite the availability of numerous assessment tools, their overall reliability differs between readability (high) and understandability (low). Approaches combining multiple assessment tools and involving both quantitative and qualitative observations would optimize assessment strategies. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS Effective assessment of online health information should rely on mixed strategies combining quantitative and qualitative evaluations. Assessment tools should be selected according to their functional properties and compatibility with target material.


Pharmacology, Biochemistry and Behavior | 2010

Interactions between the effects of early isolation rearing and complex housing on adult locomotor activity and sensitivity to amphetamine in rats involve noradrenergic neurotransmission.

Anna M. Lomanowska; Narmeen Ammari; Gary W. Kraemer

Increased sensitivity to the locomotor-activating effects of amphetamine in rats with a history of early-life social isolation is commonly attributed to alteration of the dopamine system. The locomotor response to amphetamine may also be due to effects on the noradrenergic system and particularly alpha-adrenergic receptors. The present study examined whether noradrenergic neurotransmission mediates the increased sensitivity to the locomotor effects of amphetamine resulting from early social isolation and whether this effect can be reversed by later-life social housing experience. Rats reared in complete social isolation (artificially reared, AR) exhibited higher levels of locomotor activity than maternally reared (MR) rats in response to amphetamine (0.25mg/kg). Increased sensitivity to the locomotor effects of amphetamine in AR rats was reduced by the alpha-adrenergic receptor antagonist prazosin (0.5mg/kg). Prazosin alone reduced activity in AR rats to the level of MR rats. Group housing in cages that were more complex than standard laboratory cages reduced activity in both AR and MR rats. Group housing did not decrease the sensitivity of AR rats to the locomotor effects of either amphetamine or prazosin. Differences in activity between rats in standard and complex housing conditions were not altered by drug treatments. These findings indicate that pre-weaning social experience alters the responsiveness of the noradrenergic system to drug challenges, whereas post-weaning housing experience may not, even though ongoing activity is affected. Increased activity and sensitivity to amphetamine resulting from social isolation in early life may be mediated by changes in noradrenergic alpha-receptor mediated neurotransmission.


Internet Interventions | 2016

Online intimacy and well-being in the digital age

Anna M. Lomanowska; Matthieu J. Guitton

Engagement in intimate social interactions and relationships has an important influence on well-being. However, recent advances in Internet and mobile communication technologies have lead to a major shift in the mode of human social interactions, raising the question of how these technologies are impacting the experience of interpersonal intimacy and its relationship with well-being. Although the study of intimacy in online social interactions is still in its early stages, there is general agreement that a form of online intimacy can be experienced in this context. However, research into the relationship between online intimacy and well-being is critically limited. Our aim is to begin to address this research void by providing an operative perspective on this emerging field. After considering the characteristics of online intimacy, its multimodal components and its caveats, we present an analysis of existing evidence for the potential impact of online intimacy on well-being. We suggest that studies thus far have focused on online social interactions in a general sense, shedding little light on how the level of intimacy in these interactions may affect well-being outcomes. We then consider findings from studies of different components of intimacy in online social interactions, specifically self-disclosure and social support, to indirectly explore the potential contribution of online intimacy to health and well-being. Based on this analysis, we propose future directions for fundamental and practical research in this important new area of investigation.


Behavioural Brain Research | 2014

Increased behavioral output but intact goal-directed and habitual responding for food reward following early-life social deprivation in rats.

Anna M. Lomanowska; Gary W. Kraemer

Early-life social adversity, such as child neglect and institutionalized rearing, is associated with later-life difficulties of inhibitory control that may reflect altered attribution of salience to external stimuli. Studies in rats demonstrate that early-life social deprivation results in enhanced responsiveness to reward stimuli and conditioned reward cues. This study examined whether these effects are related to fundamental changes in appetitive conditioning processes involving instrumental goal-directed and habitual responding for food reward. Rats were reared either by the mother (maternal rearing; MR) or in complete isolation from the mother and litter (artificial rearing; AR) and tested as adults in two appetitive conditioning tasks. AR and MR rats did not differ in the amount of goal-directed effort they exerted to obtain food reward on progressive ratio schedules of reinforcement. AR and MR rats also did not differ in the shift from goal-directed to habitual responding on a random interval schedule and they were equally sensitive to changes in reward value. The major difference between AR and MR rats was that AR rats exhibited more non-instrumental responses (empty food magazine entries, ineffective lever presses). Thus, early-life social deprivation of rats through AR affects the expression of unreinforced extraneous behaviors when motivational requirements are high, but does not affect conditioned goal-directed and habitual responding to reward. The findings have implications for understanding what aspects of responsiveness to external stimuli may be selectively affected in disorders of inhibition associated with early-life social adversity.


Computers in Human Behavior | 2018

Virtual intimacy: Propensity for physical contact between avatars in an online virtual environment

Adam S. Sadowski; Anna M. Lomanowska

Abstract Physical contact in human interactions conveys important social cues and plays a role in health and well-being. Although popular social technologies are limited in transmitting the physical aspects of human contact, avatars in online multi-user virtual environments can be used to visualize the physical characteristics of social interactions. Naturalistic observations of physical contact between avatars were performed in IMVU, an online virtual chat room platform where users control the physical interactions of their avatars by selecting among available animated poses. A third of the available poses examined across different user-generated chat rooms enabled physical contact between avatars, but only about one in ten of the avatars observed used these intimate poses, most commonly when dancing or sitting. While more female avatars were observed in non-intimate behavior, the number of males and female avatars observed in intimate interactions was relatively equivalent, with most intimate dyads being of heterosexual composition. Engagement in intimate interactions was not related to the presence of other avatars or their total number. The findings provide insight into the propensity of users to engage in physical contact via their avatars and have implications for the development of social technologies that facilitate virtual intimacy.


Behavioural Brain Research | 2011

Inadequate early social experience increases the incentive salience of reward-related cues in adulthood

Anna M. Lomanowska; Vedran Lovic; Michael J. Rankine; Skyler J. Mooney; Terry E. Robinson; Gary W. Kraemer

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Clyde Hertzman

University of British Columbia

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M. Chatterjee-Chakraborty

Centre for Addiction and Mental Health

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