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Dive into the research topics where Anna Oleszkiewicz is active.

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Featured researches published by Anna Oleszkiewicz.


Computers in Human Behavior | 2016

Sex differences in online selfie posting behaviors predict histrionic personality scores among men but not women

Piotr Sorokowski; Agnieszka Sorokowska; Tomasz Frackowiak; Maciej Karwowski; Irmina Rusicka; Anna Oleszkiewicz

The common usage and novelty of social media is reflected in the emergence of many new psychological phenomena. Here, we explored the relationship between number of uploaded selfies (a self-portrait photograph of oneself) and individual personality differences that are likely to be related with self-promoting behavior, i.e., histrionic personality. A total of 748 people (355 women and 393 men) completed a self-assessment questionnaire on histrionic personality, self-assessed physical and interpersonal attractiveness, and reported the numbers of three types of selfies (selfies alone, selfies with a group, and selfies with a romantic partner) posted within the last month to any type of social media. We found that females posted more own and group selfies (but not selfies with a partner) than did males. Relationships between histrionic personality and the number of selfies were statistically significant only for men. We discuss our results in the context of social media related gender differences and self-presentation. We ran the study with a pooled sample of 748 Polish men and women aged 17-47 years.Correlation between aggregated number of selfies and HPD was robust.Histrionic personality and the number of selfies was related only in men.Selfies may manifest of maladaptive patterns of personality among men.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Developmental Changes in Adolescents' Olfactory Performance and Significance of Olfaction.

Anna Oleszkiewicz; Ute Walliczek-Dworschak; Paula Klötze; Friederike Gerber; Ilona Croy; Thomas Hummel

Aim of the current work was to examine developmental changes in adolescents’ olfactory performance and personal significance of olfaction. In the first study olfactory identification abilities of 76 participants (31 males and 45 females aged between 10 and 18 years; M = 13.8, SD = 2.3) was evaluated with the Sniffin Stick identification test, presented in a cued and in an uncued manner. Verbal fluency was additionally examined for control purpose. In the second study 131 participants (46 males and 85 females aged between 10 and 18 years; (M = 14.4, SD = 2.2) filled in the importance of olfaction questionnaire. Odor identification abilities increased significantly with age and were significantly higher in girls as compared to boys. These effects were especially pronounced in the uncued task and partly related to verbal fluency. In line, the personal significance of olfaction increased with age and was generally higher among female compared to male participants.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Chemical complexity of odors increases reliability of olfactory threshold testing

Anna Oleszkiewicz; Robert Pellegrino; Katharina Pusch; Celine Margot; Thomas Hummel

Assessment of odor thresholds is a widely recognized method of measuring olfactory abilities in humans. To date no attempts have been made to assess whether chemical complexity of odors used can produce more reliable results. To this end, we performed two studies of repeated measures design with 121 healthy volunteers (age 19–62 years). In Study 1, we compared thresholds obtained from tests based on one odor presented in a pen-like odor dispensing device with three odors and six odors mixtures presented in glass containers. In study 2 we compared stimuli of one and three odors, both presented in glass containers. In both studies measurements were performed twice, separated by at least three days. Results indicate that the multiple odor mixtures produced more reliable threshold scores, as compared to thresholds based on a single substance.


Psychonomic Bulletin & Review | 2017

Voice-based assessments of trustworthiness, competence, and warmth in blind and sighted adults

Anna Oleszkiewicz; Katarzyna Pisanski; Kinga Lachowicz-Tabaczek; Agnieszka Sorokowska

The study of voice perception in congenitally blind individuals allows researchers rare insight into how a lifetime of visual deprivation affects the development of voice perception. Previous studies have suggested that blind adults outperform their sighted counterparts in low-level auditory tasks testing spatial localization and pitch discrimination, as well as in verbal speech processing; however, blind persons generally show no advantage in nonverbal voice recognition or discrimination tasks. The present study is the first to examine whether visual experience influences the development of social stereotypes that are formed on the basis of nonverbal vocal characteristics (i.e., voice pitch). Groups of 27 congenitally or early-blind adults and 23 sighted controls assessed the trustworthiness, competence, and warmth of men and women speaking a series of vowels, whose voice pitches had been experimentally raised or lowered. Blind and sighted listeners judged both men’s and women’s voices with lowered pitch as being more competent and trustworthy than voices with raised pitch. In contrast, raised-pitch voices were judged as being warmer than were lowered-pitch voices, but only for women’s voices. Crucially, blind and sighted persons did not differ in their voice-based assessments of competence or warmth, or in their certainty of these assessments, whereas the association between low pitch and trustworthiness in women’s voices was weaker among blind than sighted participants. This latter result suggests that blind persons may rely less heavily on nonverbal cues to trustworthiness compared to sighted persons. Ultimately, our findings suggest that robust perceptual associations that systematically link voice pitch to the social and personal dimensions of a speaker can develop without visual input.


Biology Letters | 2016

Can blind persons accurately assess body size from the voice

Katarzyna Pisanski; Anna Oleszkiewicz; Agnieszka Sorokowska

Vocal tract resonances provide reliable information about a speakers body size that human listeners use for biosocial judgements as well as speech recognition. Although humans can accurately assess mens relative body size from the voice alone, how this ability is acquired remains unknown. In this study, we test the prediction that accurate voice-based size estimation is possible without prior audiovisual experience linking low frequencies to large bodies. Ninety-one healthy congenitally or early blind, late blind and sighted adults (aged 20–65) participated in the study. On the basis of vowel sounds alone, participants assessed the relative body sizes of male pairs of varying heights. Accuracy of voice-based body size assessments significantly exceeded chance and did not differ among participants who were sighted, or congenitally blind or who had lost their sight later in life. Accuracy increased significantly with relative differences in physical height between men, suggesting that both blind and sighted participants used reliable vocal cues to size (i.e. vocal tract resonances). Our findings demonstrate that prior visual experience is not necessary for accurate body size estimation. This capacity, integral to both nonverbal communication and speech perception, may be present at birth or may generalize from broader cross-modal correspondences.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Voice cues are used in a similar way by blind and sighted adults when assessing women’s body size

Katarzyna Pisanski; David R. Feinberg; Anna Oleszkiewicz; Agnieszka Sorokowska

Humans’ ability to gauge another person’s body size from their voice alone may serve multiple functions ranging from threat assessment to speaker normalization. However, how this ability is acquired remains unknown. In two experiments we tested whether sighted, congenitally blind and late blind adults could accurately judge the relative heights of women from paired voice stimuli, and importantly, whether errors in size estimation varied with task difficulty across groups. Both blind (n = 56) and sighted (n = 61) listeners correctly judged women’s relative heights on approximately 70% of low difficulty trials, corroborating previous findings for judging men’s heights. However, accuracy dropped to chance levels for intermediate difficulty trials and to 25% for high difficulty trials, regardless of the listener’s sightedness, duration of vision loss, sex, or age. Thus, blind adults estimated women’s height with the same degree of accuracy, but also the same pattern of errors, as did sighted controls. Our findings provide further evidence that visual experience is not necessary for accurate body size estimation. Rather, both blind and sighted listeners appear to follow a general rule, mapping low auditory frequencies to largeness across a range of contexts. This sound-size mapping emerges without visual experience, and is likely very important for humans.


Games and Culture | 2018

Attitudes Toward Punishment and Rehabilitation as Perceived Through Playing a Prison Tycoon Game

Anna Oleszkiewicz; M. Kanonowicz; Piotr Sorokowski; Agnieszka Sorokowska

The present study brings personality research into the realm of computer games. We used a novel method—the Prison Tycoon computer game—to explore participants’ attitudes toward rehabilitation and punishment. Forty-two men and 48 women were asked to construct a virtual prison equipped with rehabilitation, correction, and neutral facilities. Financial investment spent on each respective type of facility was treated as an indicator of a participant’s particular attitudes toward punishment. Additionally, participants completed the NEO Five-Factor Personality Inventory. Results indicated that Neuroticism and Openness to experience may be reliable predictors of one’s willingness to rehabilitate prisoners (measured as the amount of money spent on rehabilitation/correction facilities). This novel experimental method sheds new light on the issue of reliably and ecologically measuring attitudes in the lab and provides further evidence that computer games offer a new, effective alternative to classical research methods in this area.


International Journal of Psychophysiology | 2017

Olfactory deficits decrease the time resolution for trigeminal lateralization

Anna Oleszkiewicz; Thomas Meusel; M. Güpfert; Birgit Westermann; Thomas Hummel; A. Welge-Lüssen

OBJECTIVES To date the temporal resolution of the detection of almost simultaneously applied intranasal trigeminal stimuli is unknown. The aim of our study was to examine this temporal resolution in an/hyposmic subjects, who are known to have reduced trigeminal sensitivity and compare it with healthy controls. METHODS Participants were 20 posttraumatic an/hyposmic patients, and 23 healthy controls (matched with regard to sex and age). Olfactory function was tested psychophysically using the Sniffin´ Sticks test battery. Bilateral trigeminal stimulation was carried out using a birhinal high-precision olfactometer. The trigeminal stimulus used was CO₂ 60% v/v, the interstimulus interval ranged from 28 to 32s, stimulus duration was 200ms. Time-lags tested between right and left side of stimulation were at 40, 80, 120, 160 and 200ms. Subjects raised their left or right hand to indicate the side on which the stimulus had been perceived first. RESULTS In both groups the accuracy in the trigeminal lateralization task increased with the time-lag but normosmic subjects significantly outperformed an/hyposmics in the 200ms time-lag condition. Normosmics significantly exceeded 50% chance level at the time-lag of 80ms, whereas an/hyposmics were only able to score above chance starting from 120ms time-lag. Lateralization scores significantly decreased with age. CONCLUSIONS At a time lag of 200ms intranasal trigeminal stimuli can be lateralized. The reduced trigeminal sensitivity in patients with anosmia or hyposmia leads to an increased time lag required for correct perception of intranasal, almost simultaneously, applied stimuli.


Computers in Human Behavior | 2017

Children can accurately recognize facial emotions from emoticons

Anna Oleszkiewicz; Tomasz Frackowiak; Agnieszka Sorokowska; Piotr Sorokowski

Abstract Developmental studies on childrens ability to recognize emotions have focused on communication in physical, but not virtual space. Emotion recognition in real life is based on observation of facial expression whereas in virtual communication emotions are expressed with simple graphics named emoticons. To examine whether children can accurately identify emotions depicted with emoticons, we asked 68 children (4–8 years; 33 girls; no social media or smart phone experience) to indicate what emotions are expressed in photos of faces or emoticons. Our results indicate that children are able to accurately assign emotions from both photographs and emoticons, and that this ability develops earlier in girls than boys. The origins of accurate emotion recognition in virtual communication, as well as childrens readiness to use virtual communication, are discussed.


Journal of Neuroscience Methods | 2018

The confounding effect of background odors on olfactory sensitivity testing

Anna Oleszkiewicz; L. Rambacher; K.L. Whitcroft; Thomas Hummel

BACKGROUND Human olfactory sensitivity is known to vary significantly across subjects. Furthermore, environmental factors such as background noise and odor are known to affect target odor threshold scores but have not yet been fully delineated. We aimed to determine whether congruent and non-congruent background odor impaired target odor threshold scores. NEW METHOD We performed odor threshold testing in 103 normosmic adults, using phenylethylalcohol (PEA) or linalool as target odors, under three conditions: (a) congruent target and background odors (e.g., PEA in the test and PEA in the background), (b) non-congruent target and background odors (e.g. PEA in the test and Linalool in the background) and (c) no background odor. Background odor was applied to the investigators glove and testing was performed in an otherwise odorless room. RESULTS We found that congruent background odors significantly impaired target odor threshold scores. Non-congruent background odors also impaired target odor threshold, but significantly more so with PEA as target and Linalool as background odor. The best threshold scores were obtained with no background odor. Comparison with Existing Method(s). At present, many testing environments may be contaminated with ambient background odors. We have shown that this may negatively affect odor threshold scores, particularly where background and target odors are congruent. CONCLUSIONS We suggest that investigators performing odor threshold testing do so in well ventilated, odor free environments.

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Thomas Hummel

Dresden University of Technology

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Antje Hähner

Dresden University of Technology

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Pengfei Han

Dresden University of Technology

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Robert Pellegrino

Dresden University of Technology

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