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Dive into the research topics where Isabell Wartenburger is active.

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Featured researches published by Isabell Wartenburger.


Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience | 2008

Individual differences in moral judgment competence influence neural correlates of socio-normative judgments

Kristin Prehn; Isabell Wartenburger; Katja Mériau; Christina Scheibe; Oliver R. Goodenough; Arno Villringer; Elke van der Meer; Hauke R. Heekeren

To investigate how individual differences in moral judgment competence are reflected in the human brain, we used event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging, while 23 participants made either socio-normative or grammatical judgments. Participants with lower moral judgment competence recruited the left ventromedial prefrontal cortex and the left posterior superior temporal sulcus more than participants with greater competence in this domain when identifying social norm violations. Moreover, moral judgment competence scores were inversely correlated with activity in the right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) during socio-normative relative to grammatical judgments. Greater activity in right DLPFC in participants with lower moral judgment competence indicates increased recruitment of rule-based knowledge and its controlled application during socio-normative judgments. These data support current models of the neurocognition of morality according to which both emotional and cognitive components play an important role.


Frontiers in Human Neuroscience | 2009

Altered function of ventral striatum during reward-based decision making in old age.

Thomas Mell; Isabell Wartenburger; Alexander Marschner; Arno Villringer; Friedel M. Reischies; Hauke R. Heekeren

Normal aging is associated with a decline in different cognitive domains and local structural atrophy as well as decreases in dopamine concentration and receptor density. To date, it is largely unknown how these reductions in dopaminergic neurotransmission affect human brain regions responsible for reward-based decision making in older adults. Using a learning criterion in a probabilistic object reversal task, we found a learning stage by age interaction in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) during decision making. While young adults recruited the dlPFC in an early stage of learning reward associations, older adults recruited the dlPFC when reward associations had already been learned. Furthermore, we found a reduced change in ventral striatal BOLD signal in older as compared to younger adults in response to high probability rewards. Our data are in line with behavioral evidence that older adults show altered stimulus–reward learning and support the view of an altered fronto-striatal interaction during reward-based decision making in old age, which contributes to prolonged learning of reward associations.


Frontiers in Human Neuroscience | 2011

Fluid Intelligence Allows Flexible Recruitment of the Parieto-Frontal Network in Analogical Reasoning

Franziska Preusse; van der Meer Elke; Gopikrishna Deshpande; Frank Krueger; Isabell Wartenburger

Fluid intelligence is the ability to think flexibly and to understand abstract relations. People with high fluid intelligence (hi-fluIQ) perform better in analogical reasoning tasks than people with average fluid intelligence (ave-fluIQ). Although previous neuroimaging studies reported involvement of parietal and frontal brain regions in geometric analogical reasoning (which is a prototypical task for fluid intelligence), however, neuroimaging findings on geometric analogical reasoning in hi-fluIQ are sparse. Furthermore, evidence on the relation between brain activation and intelligence while solving cognitive tasks is contradictory. The present study was designed to elucidate the cerebral correlates of geometric analogical reasoning in a sample of hi-fluIQ and ave-fluIQ high school students. We employed a geometric analogical reasoning task with graded levels of task difficulty and confirmed the involvement of the parieto-frontal network in solving this task. In addition to characterizing the brain regions involved in geometric analogical reasoning in hi-fluIQ and ave-fluIQ, we found that blood oxygenation level dependency (BOLD) signal changes were greater for hi-fluIQ than for ave-fluIQ in parietal brain regions. However, ave-fluIQ showed greater BOLD signal changes in the anterior cingulate cortex and medial frontal gyrus than hi-fluIQ. Thus, we showed that a similar network of brain regions is involved in geometric analogical reasoning in both groups. Interestingly, the relation between brain activation and intelligence is not mono-directional, but rather, it is specific for each brain region. The negative brain activation–intelligence relationship in frontal brain regions in hi-fluIQ goes along with a better behavioral performance and reflects a lower demand for executive monitoring compared to ave-fluIQ individuals. In conclusion, our data indicate that flexibly modulating the extent of regional cerebral activity is characteristic for fluid intelligence.


Memory & Cognition | 2018

A close call: Interference from semantic neighbourhood density and similarity in language production

Nora Fieder; Isabell Wartenburger

The present study investigated how lexical selection is influenced by the number of semantically related representations (semantic neighbourhood density) and their similarity (semantic distance) to the target in a speeded picture-naming task. Semantic neighbourhood density and similarity as continuous variables were used to assess lexical selection for which competitive and noncompetitive mechanisms have been proposed. Previous studies found mixed effects of semantic neighbourhood variables, leaving this issue unresolved. Here, we demonstrate interference of semantic neighbourhood similarity with less accurate naming responses and a higher likelihood of producing semantic errors and omissions over accurate responses for words with semantically more similar (closer) neighbours. No main effect of semantic neighbourhood density and no interaction between semantic neighbourhood density and similarity was found. We assessed further whether semantic neighbourhood density can affect naming performance if semantic neighbours exceed a certain degree of semantic similarity. Semantic similarity between the target and each neighbour was used to split semantic neighbourhood density into two different density variables: The number of semantically close neighbours versus distant neighbours. The results showed a significant effect of close, but not of distant, semantic neighbourhood density: Naming pictures of targets with more close semantic neighbours led to longer naming latencies, less accurate responses, and a higher likelihood for the production of semantic errors and omissions over accurate responses. The results show that word inherent semantic attributes such as semantic neighbourhood similarity and the number of coactivated close semantic neighbours modulate lexical selection supporting theories of competitive lexical processing.


Neurobiology of Learning and Memory | 2016

The role of fluid intelligence and learning in analogical reasoning: How to become neurally efficient?

Annika Dix; Isabell Wartenburger; Elke van der Meer

This study on analogical reasoning evaluates the impact of fluid intelligence on adaptive changes in neural efficiency over the course of an experiment and specifies the underlying cognitive processes. Grade 10 students (N=80) solved unfamiliar geometric analogy tasks of varying difficulty. Neural efficiency was measured by the event-related desynchronization (ERD) in the alpha band, an indicator of cortical activity. Neural efficiency was defined as a low amount of cortical activity accompanying high performance during problem-solving. Students solved the tasks faster and more accurately the higher their FI was. Moreover, while high FI led to greater cortical activity in the first half of the experiment, high FI was associated with a neurally more efficient processing (i.e., better performance but same amount of cortical activity) in the second half of the experiment. Performance in difficult tasks improved over the course of the experiment for all students while neural efficiency increased for students with higher but decreased for students with lower fluid intelligence. Based on analyses of the alpha sub-bands, we argue that high fluid intelligence was associated with a stronger investment of attentional resource in the integration of information and the encoding of relations in this unfamiliar task in the first half of the experiment (lower-2 alpha band). Students with lower fluid intelligence seem to adapt their applied strategies over the course of the experiment (i.e., focusing on task-relevant information; lower-1 alpha band). Thus, the initially lower cortical activity and its increase in students with lower fluid intelligence might reflect the overcoming of mental overload that was present in the first half of the experiment.


Zdm | 2010

Long-term characteristics of analogical processing in high-school students with high fluid intelligence: an fMRI study

Franziska Preusse; Elke van der Meer; Dorothea Ullwer; Martin Brucks; Frank Krueger; Isabell Wartenburger


NeuroImage | 2001

The functional anatomy of moral judgment — an fMRI-study

Hauke R. Heekeren; Isabell Wartenburger; Helge Schmidt; C. Denkler; Hans-Peter Schwintowski; Arno Villringer


Archive | 2005

Neural correlates of individual differences in the ability to identify and communicate one's emotional state

Katja Mériau; Philipp Kazzer; Isabell Wartenburger; Kristin Prehn; Claas-Hinrich Lammers; Arno Villringer; Hauke Heekeren


Archive | 2012

BRIEF REPORT Human Aging Compromises Attentional Control of Auditory Perception

Susanne Passow; Max Planck; Isabell Wartenburger; Kenneth Hugdahl; Hauke R. Heekeren; Ulman Lindenberger; Shu-Chen Li


16th Annual Meeting of the Organization for Human Brain Mapping | 2010

Intelligence modulates deactivation of the default-mode network

Jan Mehnert; Franziska Preusse; Daniel S. Margulies; Arno Villringer; Elke van der Meer; Isabell Wartenburger

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Elke van der Meer

Humboldt University of Berlin

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Franziska Preusse

Humboldt University of Berlin

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Kristin Prehn

Free University of Berlin

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