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Dive into the research topics where Gijsbertus Mulder is active.

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Featured researches published by Gijsbertus Mulder.


Human Factors | 1987

Operator effort and the measurement of heart-rate variability

Jans Aasman; Gijsbertus Mulder; L.J.M. Mulder

This paper discusses the usefulness of heart-rate variability (sinus arrhythmia) as an index of operator effort. Effort is involved if task performance requires the use of attention-demanding, controlled processing. This form of processing heavily uses a capacity-limited mechanism: working memory. Effort is also required if the current state of the subject deviates from the target or task optimal state because of fatigue, circadian rhythm, time of day, sleep deprivation, time on task, drugs, heat, or noise. Effort is involved whenever an attempt to resolve mismatch of target and current state takes the form of active manipulation of cognitive resources. We argue that spectral analysis of sinus arrhythmia is useful to obtain more insight into the physiological mechanisms that underlie heart-rate variability. In the present study, it is shown that the amplitude of the 0.10-Hz component of this signal systematically decreases as the load on working memory increases. Some suggestions are made to apply the methods and techniques discussed in this investigation.


Neuroreport | 1998

Localizing components of a complex task: sentence processing and working memory

Laurie A. Stowe; Cees A.J. Broere; Anne M. J. Paans; A.A. Wijers; Gijsbertus Mulder; Wim Vaalburg; Frans Zwarts

THREE areas of the left hemisphere play different roles in sentence comprehension. An area of posterior middle and superior temporal gyrus shows activation correlated with the structural complexity of a sentence, suggesting that this area supports processing of sentence structure. The lateral anterior temporal gyrus is more activated bilaterally by all sentence conditions than by word lists; thus the function of the area probably does not directly support processing of structure but rather processing of words specific to a sentence context. Left inferior frontal cortex also shows activation related to sentence complexity but is also more activated in word list processing than in simple sentences; this region may thus support a form of verbal working memory which maintains sentence structural information as well as lexical items.


Acta Psychologica | 1990

Selective response activation can begin before stimulus recognition is complete: a psychophysiological and error analysis of continuous flow

Henderikus G. O. M. Smid; Gijsbertus Mulder; L.J.M. Mulder

In discussions of process models of human information processing, the continuous flow conception (Eriksen and Schultz 1979) plays a prominent role. A central prediction of this conception is that any information in a display associated with a response activates that response as soon as it becomes available in the perceptual system. If it concerns the correct response channel, then response facilitation occurs. If it concerns the incorrect response channel, then response competition occurs. To assess these mechanisms more directly, we used psychophysiological measures as well as reaction time (RT). We used the latency of the P3 component of the event related brain potential (ERP) as an index of stimulus evaluation duration, the onset of lateralized motor activity derived from the ERP as an index of selective central motor activation, and the onset of electromyographic activity as an index of the start of peripheral motor activation. Subjects were required to respond to target letters that were either flanked by letters that signalled the opposite response (incompatible arrays), by the target itself (compatible arrays), by letters not associated with a response (neutral arrays), or by no other letters (targets alone). Our results replicated the basic findings obtained in this paradigm. RTs to targets alone did not differ from RTs to compatible arrays. The latter were faster than RTs to neutral arrays, which were faster than RTs to incompatible arrays. P3 latencies were longer on incompatible than on neutral trials, and longer on compatible than on target alone trials. Incorrect central response activation on incompatible trials and correct central response activation on compatible trials, both began earlier than on target alone trials. Peripheral responding on both trial types, however, began later than on target alone trials. More incompatible but less compatible trials than neutral ones exhibited incorrect peripheral response activation. Peripheral response execution was faster and more accurate on compatible than on target alone trials, while it was slower and less accurate on incompatible than on neutral trials. These results indicate, that the flankers activated their associated response channel while display evaluation was still going on, and that response facilitation and competition occurred. After applying criteria proposed by Miller (1988), it was concluded that the set of stimulus recognition processes and the set of response activation processes cannot be regarded as independent stages of processing.


Psychophysiology | 2001

Working memory constraints on syntactic processing: An electrophysiological investigation

Sandra H. Vos; Thomas C. Gunter; Herman Kolk; Gijsbertus Mulder

Event-related potentials (ERPs) and reaction times (RTs) were used to study how the processing of sentences with morphosyntactic violations is constrained by working memory (WM) capacity. The available WM capacity was varied by three orthogonal manipulations: (1) syntactic complexity; (2) additional WM load; and (3) verbal WM span. The processing of the morphosyntactic violations was reflected in longer RTs in ungrammatical compared with grammatical sentences, and in an anterior negativity and a centroparietal positivity in the ERPs. While the behavioral grammaticality effect was not influenced by the WM manipulations, the ERP effects were. The amplitude of the anterior negativity was modulated by the combination of complexity and load, and by WM span. The onset of the centroparietal positivity was delayed in the high-load condition, and for the low-span group. ERPs over the course of the sentences showed a frontal negative slow wave under high WM load, largest for the low-span group. The finding that online syntactic processing is related to WM span and to additional WM load does not support the theory that there is a WM capacity specific for syntactic processing.


Neuroreport | 1999

An event-related brain potential correlate of visual short-term memory

Peter Klaver; Durk Talsma; A.A. Wijers; Hans-Jochen Heinze; Gijsbertus Mulder

Event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded as 12 subjects performed a delayed matching to sample task. We presented two bilateral abstract shapes and cued spatially which had to be memorized for a subsequent matching task: left, right or both. During memorization a posterior slow negative ERP wave developed over the hemisphere contralateral to the memorized shape. This effect was similar in high and low memory load trials while the memory figures were visible (for 1000 ms). As the figures disappeared (for 1500 ms), the effect persisted only in the low memory load conditions. We suggest that the contralateral negativity reflects a visual short-term memory process and that capacity limitation in the high memory load condition causes this process to collapse.


Circulation | 1997

Heart Rate Variability in Patients With Atrial Fibrillation Is Related to Vagal Tone

M.P van den Berg; Jaap Haaksma; Jolijn Brouwer; Robert G. Tieleman; Gijsbertus Mulder; Harry J.G.M. Crijns

BACKGROUND Analysis of heart rate variability (HRV) has thus far not been applied in patients with atrial fibrillation, probably because of the presumed absence of any form of patterning of the ventricular rhythm, particularly vagally mediated respiratory arrhythmia. However, such patterning is theoretically conceivable given the function of the atrioventricular node in atrial fibrillation and its susceptibility to autonomic influences. METHODS AND RESULTS Sixteen patients (mean age, 56+/-4 years) with long-term atrial fibrillation on fixed doses of digoxin or verapamil were studied; 12 healthy men in sinus rhythm were used as control subjects. HRV (standard deviation of RR intervals [SD], coefficient of variance [CV], the root-mean-square of successive difference [RMSSD], and low-frequency [LF] and high-frequency power [HF]) was analyzed during 500 RR intervals at baseline, after administration of propranolol (0.2 mg/kg I.V.), and after subsequent administration of methylatropine (0.02 mg/kg I.V.). HRV at baseline and changes in HRV after methylatropine were then related to vagal tone (vagal cardiac control), quantified as the decrease in mean RR after methylatropine. Baseline HRV was higher in the atrial fibrillation group than in the control group; after propranolol, HRV increased in both groups; after methylatropine, HRV neared zero in the control group, whereas it returned to baseline values in the atrial fibrillation group. SD, RMSSD, LF, and HF at baseline were significantly (P<.05) correlated with vagal tone in the control group but also in the atrial fibrillation group (correlation coefficients of .60, .61, .57, and .64, respectively). Even stronger correlations were observed between changes in these parameters after methylatropine and vagal tone, particularly in the atrial fibrillation group (correlation coefficients of .89, .87, .72, and .90, respectively). CONCLUSIONS This study shows that HRV in patients with atrial fibrillation is related to vagal tone.


Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience | 2002

Neural Differentiation of Lexico-Syntactic Categories or Semantic Features? Event-Related Potential Evidence for Both

Marion L. Kellenbach; A.A. Wijers; Marjolijn Hovius; Juul Mulder; Gijsbertus Mulder

Event-related potentials (ERPs) were used to investigate whether processing differences between nouns and verbs can be accounted for by the differential salience of visual-perceptual and motor attributes in their semantic specifications. Three subclasses of nouns and verbs were selected, which differed in their semantic attribute composition (abstract, high visual, high visual and motor). Single visual word presentation with a recognition memory task was used. While multiple robust and parallel ERP effects were observed for both grammatical class and attribute type, there were no interactions between these. This pattern of effects provides support for lexicalsemantic knowledge being organized in a manner that takes account both of category-based (grammatical class) and attribute-based distinctions.


Biological Psychology | 1998

Color selection and location selection in ERPs : differences, similarities and 'neural specificity'

J.J. Lange; A.A. Wijers; L.J.M. Mulder; Gijsbertus Mulder

It was hypothesized that color selection consists of two stages. The first stage represents a feature specific selection in neural populations specialized in processing color. The second stage constitutes feature non-specific selections, related to executive attentional processes and/or motor processes. This hypothesis was tested by investigating the effects of selectively attending to a specific color, location, or conjunction of location and color on the ERPs elicited by briefly flashed gratings. The gratings differed on three dimensions: color (red or blue), location in the visual field (4.4 degrees to the left or right of fixation) and form (target or non-target). Subjects had to respond to the presentation of target gratings in the attended category. Color selection was reflected in an enhanced parietal positivity in the 150-190 ms interval. Source analyses suggested that this color selection positivity might be generated in the basal occipital cortex, possibly human V4, an area of the brain specialized in color processing. The effect was separated from the P1 spatial attention effect both in topography and sources. Color selection was also reflected in a contralateral occipitotemporal negativity, which resembled the N1 spatial attention effect both in timing and topography. And finally, color selection was reflected in an N2b component. This N2b was similar in timing, topography and sources to the N2bs elicited by location selection and conjunction selection. We suggested that the N2b reflects feature non-specific selection processes, elicited by a range of attended stimuli, and possibly reflects activity in the anterior cingulate cortex. The NP80 was unaffected by attention to color and/or location and localized in striate cortex.


Psychophysiology | 1999

Sentence comprehension and word repetition: A positron emission tomography investigation

Laurie A. Stowe; Anne M. J. Paans; A.A. Wijers; Frans Zwarts; Gijsbertus Mulder; Willem Vaalburg

Using positron emission tomography, visual presentation of sentences was shown to cause increased regional cerebral blood flow relative to word lists in the left lateral anterior superior and middle temporal gyri, attributable to cognitive processes that occur during sentence comprehension in addition to those carried out during word comprehension. Additional comparisons showed that repeating words (in a different context, when subjects did not attempt to learn the initial lists) led to significant patterns of both increased blood flow (left putamen and right caudate) and decreased blood flow (left posterior temporal lobe). Increases are argued to reflect retrieval of memory traces, whereas decreases reflect diminished necessity for processing of input. A decrease in the left inferior parietal lobe was attributable to other factors.


Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance | 1991

PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGICAL EVIDENCE FOR CONTINUOUS INFORMATION-TRANSMISSION BETWEEN VISUAL-SEARCH AND RESPONSE PROCESSES

Henderikus G. O. M. Smid; Wiebo Lamain; Menno M. Hogeboom; Gijsbertus Mulder; L.J.M. Mulder

This study was designed to test whether information transmission between the perceptual and motor levels occurs continuously or in discrete steps. Ss performed visual search across nontargets that shared visual features with one of two possible targets, each assigned to a different response. In addition to reaction time, psychophysiological measures were used to assess the duration of target search and the onset of central and peripheral motor activity. Nontargets sharing features with a target selectively activated the response associated with that target, even when it was not present in the display. This suggests that information transmission to the motor level can consist of fine-grained visual information and that visual search and response selection occur in parallel.

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A.A. Wijers

University of Groningen

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Monika Althaus

University Medical Center Groningen

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A. Kok

University of Amsterdam

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Henderikus G. O. M. Smid

University Medical Center Groningen

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