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Dive into the research topics where Daniel J. Schad is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniel J. Schad.


Journal of Personality Assessment | 2009

Are Implicit and Explicit Motive Measures Statistically Independent? A Fair and Balanced Test Using the Picture Story Exercise and a Cue- and Response-Matched Questionnaire Measure

Oliver C. Schultheiss; Diana Yankova; Benjamin Dirlikov; Daniel J. Schad

Previous studies that have examined the relationship between implicit and explicit motive measures have consistently found little variance overlap between both types of measures regardless of thematic content domain (i.e., power, achievement, affiliation). However, this independence may be artifactual because the primary means of measuring implicit motives—content-coding stories people write about picture cues—are incommensurable with the primary means of measuring explicit motives: having individuals fill out self-report scales. To provide a better test of the presumed independence between both types of measures, we measured implicit motives with a Picture Story Exercise (PSE; McClelland, Koestner, & Weinberger, 1989) and explicit motives with a cue- and response-matched questionnaire version of the PSE (PSE–Q) and a traditional measure of explicit motives, the Personality Research Form (PRF; Jackson, 1984) in 190 research participants. Correlations between the PSE and the PSE–Q were small and mostly nonsignificant, whereas the PSE–Q showed significant variance overlap with the PRF within and across thematic domains. We conclude that the independence postulate holds even when more commensurable measures of implicit and explicit motives are used.


Neuropsychobiology | 2014

Model-Based and Model-Free Decisions in Alcohol Dependence

Miriam Sebold; Lorenz Deserno; Stefan Nebe; Daniel J. Schad; Maria Garbusow; Claudia Hägele; Jürgen Keller; Elisabeth Jünger; Norbert Kathmann; Michael N. Smolka; Michael A. Rapp; Florian Schlagenhauf; Andreas Heinz; Quentin J. M. Huys

Background: Human and animal work suggests a shift from goal-directed to habitual decision-making in addiction. However, the evidence for this in human alcohol dependence is as yet inconclusive. Methods: Twenty-six healthy controls and 26 recently detoxified alcohol-dependent patients underwent behavioral testing with a 2-step task designed to disentangle goal-directed and habitual response patterns. Results: Alcohol-dependent patients showed less evidence of goal-directed choices than healthy controls, particularly after losses. There was no difference in the strength of the habitual component. The group differences did not survive controlling for performance on the Digit Symbol Substitution Task. Conclusion: Chronic alcohol use appears to selectively impair goal-directed function, rather than promoting habitual responding. It appears to do so particularly after nonrewards, and this may be mediated by the effects of alcohol on more general cognitive functions subserved by the prefrontal cortex.


Addiction Biology | 2016

Pavlovian-to-instrumental transfer effects in the nucleus accumbens relate to relapse in alcohol dependence

Maria Garbusow; Daniel J. Schad; Miriam Sebold; Eva Friedel; Nadine Bernhardt; Stefan Koch; Bruno Steinacher; Norbert Kathmann; Dirk E. M. Geurts; Christian Sommer; Dirk K. Müller; Stephan Nebe; Sören Paul; Hans-Ulrich Wittchen; Ulrich S. Zimmermann; Henrik Walter; Michael N. Smolka; Philipp Sterzer; Michael A. Rapp; Quentin J. M. Huys; Florian Schlagenhauf; Andreas Heinz

In detoxified alcohol‐dependent patients, alcohol‐related stimuli can promote relapse. However, to date, the mechanisms by which contextual stimuli promote relapse have not been elucidated in detail. One hypothesis is that such contextual stimuli directly stimulate the motivation to drink via associated brain regions like the ventral striatum and thus promote alcohol seeking, intake and relapse. Pavlovian‐to‐Instrumental‐Transfer (PIT) may be one of those behavioral phenomena contributing to relapse, capturing how Pavlovian conditioned (contextual) cues determine instrumental behavior (e.g. alcohol seeking and intake). We used a PIT paradigm during functional magnetic resonance imaging to examine the effects of classically conditioned Pavlovian stimuli on instrumental choices in n = 31 detoxified patients diagnosed with alcohol dependence and n = 24 healthy controls matched for age and gender. Patients were followed up over a period of 3 months. We observed that (1) there was a significant behavioral PIT effect for all participants, which was significantly more pronounced in alcohol‐dependent patients; (2) PIT was significantly associated with blood oxygen level‐dependent (BOLD) signals in the nucleus accumbens (NAcc) in subsequent relapsers only; and (3) PIT‐related NAcc activation was associated with, and predictive of, critical outcomes (amount of alcohol intake and relapse during a 3 months follow‐up period) in alcohol‐dependent patients. These observations show for the first time that PIT‐related BOLD signals, as a measure of the influence of Pavlovian cues on instrumental behavior, predict alcohol intake and relapse in alcohol dependence.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2014

Processing speed enhances model-based over model-free reinforcement learning in the presence of high working memory functioning

Daniel J. Schad; Elisabeth Jünger; Miriam Sebold; Maria Garbusow; Nadine Bernhardt; Amir-Homayoun Javadi; Ulrich S. Zimmermann; Michael N. Smolka; Andreas Heinz; Michael A. Rapp; Quentin J. M. Huys

Theories of decision-making and its neural substrates have long assumed the existence of two distinct and competing valuation systems, variously described as goal-directed vs. habitual, or, more recently and based on statistical arguments, as model-free vs. model-based reinforcement-learning. Though both have been shown to control choices, the cognitive abilities associated with these systems are under ongoing investigation. Here we examine the link to cognitive abilities, and find that individual differences in processing speed covary with a shift from model-free to model-based choice control in the presence of above-average working memory function. This suggests shared cognitive and neural processes; provides a bridge between literatures on intelligence and valuation; and may guide the development of process models of different valuation components. Furthermore, it provides a rationale for individual differences in the tendency to deploy valuation systems, which may be important for understanding the manifold neuropsychiatric diseases associated with malfunctions of valuation.


Neuropsychobiology | 2014

Pavlovian-to-Instrumental Transfer in Alcohol Dependence: A Pilot Study

Maria Garbusow; Daniel J. Schad; Christian Sommer; Elisabeth Juenger; Miriam Sebold; Eva Friedel; Jean Wendt; Norbert Kathmann; Florian Schlagenhauf; Ulrich S. Zimmermann; Andreas Heinz; Quentin J. M. Huys; Michael A. Rapp

Background: Pavlovian processes are thought to play an important role in the development, maintenance and relapse of alcohol dependence, possibly by influencing and usurping ongoing thought and behavior. The influence of pavlovian stimuli on ongoing behavior is paradigmatically measured by pavlovian-to-instrumental transfer (PIT) tasks. These involve multiple stages and are complex. Whether increased PIT is involved in human alcohol dependence is uncertain. We therefore aimed to establish and validate a modified PIT paradigm that would be robust, consistent and tolerated by healthy controls as well as by patients suffering from alcohol dependence, and to explore whether alcohol dependence is associated with enhanced PIT. Methods: Thirty-two recently detoxified alcohol-dependent patients and 32 age- and gender-matched healthy controls performed a PIT task with instrumental go/no-go approach behaviors. The task involved both pavlovian stimuli associated with monetary rewards and losses, and images of drinks. Results: Both patients and healthy controls showed a robust and temporally stable PIT effect. Strengths of PIT effects to drug-related and monetary conditioned stimuli were highly correlated. Patients more frequently showed a PIT effect, and the effect was stronger in response to aversively conditioned CSs (conditioned suppression), but there was no group difference in response to appetitive CSs. Conclusion: The implementation of PIT has favorably robust properties in chronic alcohol-dependent patients and in healthy controls. It shows internal consistency between monetary and drug-related cues. The findings support an association of alcohol dependence with an increased propensity towards PIT. 2014 S. Karger AG, Basel


Biological Psychiatry | 2017

When habits are dangerous - Alcohol expectancies and habitual decision-making predict relapse in alcohol dependence

Miriam Sebold; Stephan Nebe; Maria Garbusow; Matthias Guggenmos; Daniel J. Schad; Anne Beck; Soeren Kuitunen-Paul; Christian Sommer; Robin Frank; Peter Neu; Ulrich S. Zimmermann; Michael A. Rapp; Michael N. Smolka; Quentin J. M. Huys; Florian Schlagenhauf; Andreas Heinz

BACKGROUND Addiction is supposedly characterized by a shift from goal-directed to habitual decision making, thus facilitating automatic drug intake. The two-step task allows distinguishing between these mechanisms by computationally modeling goal-directed and habitual behavior as model-based and model-free control. In addicted patients, decision making may also strongly depend upon drug-associated expectations. Therefore, we investigated model-based versus model-free decision making and its neural correlates as well as alcohol expectancies in alcohol-dependent patients and healthy controls and assessed treatment outcome in patients. METHODS Ninety detoxified, medication-free, alcohol-dependent patients and 96 age- and gender-matched control subjects underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging during the two-step task. Alcohol expectancies were measured with the Alcohol Expectancy Questionnaire. Over a follow-up period of 48 weeks, 37 patients remained abstinent and 53 patients relapsed as indicated by the Alcohol Timeline Followback method. RESULTS Patients who relapsed displayed reduced medial prefrontal cortex activation during model-based decision making. Furthermore, high alcohol expectancies were associated with low model-based control in relapsers, while the opposite was observed in abstainers and healthy control subjects. However, reduced model-based control per se was not associated with subsequent relapse. CONCLUSIONS These findings suggest that poor treatment outcome in alcohol dependence does not simply result from a shift from model-based to model-free control but is instead dependent on the interaction between high drug expectancies and low model-based decision making. Reduced model-based medial prefrontal cortex signatures in those who relapse point to a neural correlate of relapse risk. These observations suggest that therapeutic interventions should target subjective alcohol expectancies.


Vision Research | 2010

Eye movements during reading of randomly shuffled text

Daniel J. Schad; Antje Nuthmann; Ralf Engbert

In research on eye-movement control during reading, the importance of cognitive processes related to language comprehension relative to visuomotor aspects of saccade generation is the topic of an ongoing debate. Here we investigate various eye-movement measures during reading of randomly shuffled meaningless text as compared to normal meaningful text. To ensure processing of the material, readers were occasionally probed for words occurring in normal or shuffled text. For reading of shuffled text we observed longer fixation times, less word skippings, and more refixations than in normal reading. Shuffled-text reading further differed from normal reading in that low-frequency words were not overall fixated longer than high-frequency words. However, the frequency effect was present on long words, but was reversed for short words. Also, consistent with our prior research we found distinct experimental effects of spatially distributed processing over several words at a time, indicating how lexical word processing affected eye movements. Based on analyses of statistical linear mixed-effect models we argue that the results are compatible with the hypothesis that the perceptual span is more strongly modulated by foveal load in the shuffled reading task than in normal reading. Results are discussed in the context of computational models of reading.


Journal of cognitive psychology | 2015

When preview information starts to matter: Development of the perceptual span in German beginning readers

Anja Sperlich; Daniel J. Schad; Jochen Laubrock

How is reading development reflected in eye-movement measures? How does the perceptual span change during the initial years of reading instruction? Does parafoveal processing require competence in basic word-decoding processes? We report data from the first cross-sectional measurement of the perceptual span of German beginning readers (n = 139), collected in the context of the large longitudinal PIER (Potsdamer Intrapersonale Entwicklungsrisiken/Potsdam study of intra-personal developmental risk factors) study of intrapersonal developmental risk factors. Using the moving-window paradigm, eye movements of three groups of students (Grades 1–3) were measured with gaze-contingent presentation of a variable amount of text around fixation. Reading rate increased from Grades 1–3, with smaller increases for higher grades. Perceptual-span results showed the expected main effects of grade and window size: fixation durations and refixation probability decreased with grade and window size, whereas reading rate and saccade length increased. Critically, for reading rate, first-fixation duration, saccade length and refixation probability, there were significant interactions of grade and window size that were mainly based on the contrast between Grades 3 and 2 rather than Grades 2 and 1. Taken together, development of the perceptual span only really takes off between Grades 2 and 3, suggesting that efficient parafoveal processing presupposes that basic processes of reading have been mastered.


Addiction Biology | 2018

No association of goal-directed and habitual control with alcohol consumption in young adults

Stephan Nebe; Nils B. Kroemer; Daniel J. Schad; Nadine Bernhardt; Miriam Sebold; Dirk K. Müller; Lucie Scholl; Sören Kuitunen-Paul; Andreas Heinz; Michael A. Rapp; Quentin J. M. Huys; Michael N. Smolka

Alcohol dependence is a mental disorder that has been associated with an imbalance in behavioral control favoring model‐free habitual over model‐based goal‐directed strategies. It is as yet unknown, however, whether such an imbalance reflects a predisposing vulnerability or results as a consequence of repeated and/or excessive alcohol exposure. We, therefore, examined the association of alcohol consumption with model‐based goal‐directed and model‐free habitual control in 188 18‐year‐old social drinkers in a two‐step sequential decision‐making task while undergoing functional magnetic resonance imaging before prolonged alcohol misuse could have led to severe neurobiological adaptations. Behaviorally, participants showed a mixture of model‐free and model‐based decision‐making as observed previously. Measures of impulsivity were positively related to alcohol consumption. In contrast, neither model‐free nor model‐based decision weights nor the trade‐off between them were associated with alcohol consumption. There were also no significant associations between alcohol consumption and neural correlates of model‐free or model‐based decision quantities in either ventral striatum or ventromedial prefrontal cortex. Exploratory whole‐brain functional magnetic resonance imaging analyses with a lenient threshold revealed early onset of drinking to be associated with an enhanced representation of model‐free reward prediction errors in the posterior putamen. These results suggest that an imbalance between model‐based goal‐directed and model‐free habitual control might rather not be a trait marker of alcohol intake per se.


Cognition | 2016

Language production is facilitated by semantic richness but inhibited by semantic density: Evidence from picture naming

Milena Rabovsky; Daniel J. Schad

Communicating meaningful messages is the ultimate goal of language production. Yet, verbal messages can differ widely in the complexity and richness of their semantic content, and such differences should strongly modulate conceptual and lexical encoding processes during speech planning. However, despite the crucial role of semantic content in language production, the influence of this variability is currently unclear. Here, we investigate influences of the number of associated semantic features and intercorrelational feature density on language production during picture naming. While the number of semantic features facilitated naming, intercorrelational feature density inhibited naming. Both effects follow naturally from the assumption of conceptual facilitation and simultaneous lexical competition. They are difficult to accommodate with language production theories dismissing lexical competition.

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Michael N. Smolka

Dresden University of Technology

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Ulrich S. Zimmermann

Dresden University of Technology

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Stephan Nebe

Dresden University of Technology

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Christian Sommer

Dresden University of Technology

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