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Featured researches published by Jana Kube.


Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews | 2016

Neural processing of negative emotional stimuli and the influence of age, sex and task-related characteristics

Isabel Garcia-Garcia; Jana Kube; Michael Gaebler; Annette Horstmann; Arno Villringer; Jane Neumann

Negative emotional stimuli are particularly salient events that receive privileged access to neurocognitive resources. At the neural level, the processing of negative stimuli relies on a set of sensory, limbic, and prefrontal areas. However, controversies exist on how demographic and task-related characteristics modulate this brain pattern. Here, we used activation likelihood estimation (ALE) meta-analysis and replicator dynamics to investigate the processing of negative visual stimuli in healthy adults. Our findings endorse the central role of the amygdala. This result might reflect how this structure modulates perceptual and attentional mechanisms in response to emotional stimuli. Additionally, we characterize how the neural processing of negative visual stimuli is influenced by the demographic factors of age and sex as well as by task-related characteristics like stimulus type, emotion category, and task instruction, with the amygdala showing comparable engagement across different sexes, stimulus types, and task instructions. Our findings practically inform experimentation in the affective neurosciences but also suggest brain circuits for neurobiological investigations of affective symptomatology.


Cognitive, Affective, & Behavioral Neuroscience | 2017

Parasympathetic cardio-regulation during social interactions in individuals with obesity—The influence of negative body image

Anne Schrimpf; Jana Kube; Jane Neumann; Annette Horstmann; Arno Villringer; Michael Gaebler

Individuals with obesity in Western societies often face weight-related stigmatization and social exclusion. Recurrent exposure to prejudice and negative social feedback alters one’s behavior in future social interactions. In this study, we aimed to investigate autonomic nervous system and affective responses to social interactions in individuals with obesity. Women and men with (n = 56) and without (n = 56) obesity participated in episodes of social inclusion and social exclusion using a virtual ball-tossing game. During the experiment, heart rate was measured and parasympathetic activity (overall high-frequency power and event-related cardiac slowing) was analyzed. Our results show that in novel social interactions, women with obesity, relative to the other groups, exhibited the strongest increase in parasympathetic activity. Furthermore, parasympathetic activity was related to a more negative body image in individuals with obesity, but not in lean individuals. Additionally, women with obesity reported a stronger decrease in mood after social exclusion than did the other participants. Our results demonstrate influences of objective and subjective bodily characteristics on parasympathetic cardio-regulation during social interactions. In particular, they show behavioral and physiological alterations during social interactions in women with obesity.


Psychophysiology | 2016

Differential heart rate responses to social and monetary reinforcement in women with obesity

Jana Kube; Anne Schrimpf; Isabel Garcia-Garcia; Arno Villringer; Jane Neumann; Annette Horstmann

Obesity is often accompanied by weight stigmatization; subsequently, individuals with obesity frequently face social rejection. It has been shown that recurrent negative social experiences can alter the perception of social cues. However, the way individuals with obesity process social stimuli is not well understood. This study aims to investigate obesity-related alterations in social compared to nonsocial information processing. Women with obesity (n = 14) and without obesity (n = 14) participated in a social and a monetary incentive delay task in which they anticipated and received positive, negative, and neutral outcomes in the form of faces or money. During the experiment, phasic heart rate changes and reaction times were measured. Women with obesity, compared to lean women, exhibited a stronger differentiation during the anticipation of monetary and social reinforcement, showing slower reaction times to social cues compared to monetary cues. During the outcome processing phase, women with obesity relative to controls demonstrated diminished heart rate responses particularly to negative social outcomes. Interestingly, differences in cardiac responses in participants with obesity were moderated by weight-related teasing experiences. In women with obesity, a higher BMI was associated with blunted cardiac responses to social cues relative to monetary cues only if they reported more emotional pain after weight-related teasing. Our results contribute to a better understanding of social information processing in obesity and give first evidence for the role of negative social experiences in reinforcement processing.


Appetite | 2018

Keeping track of promised rewards: Obesity predicts enhanced flexibility when learning from observation

Marie T. Meemken; Jana Kube; Carolin Wickner; Annette Horstmann

Goal-directed behaviour depends on successful association of environmental cues with reward or punishment. Obesity has been linked to diminished learning success in this domain. In contrast, here we demonstrate superior learning in obese participants independent of reward type. We tested association learning in 85 participants with a wide body-mass-index (BMI) range (lean to obese) in four probabilistic reversal-learning experiments. Experiments differed regarding learning mode (active and passive) and reward stimulus (pictures of snack food and money). Food and monetary rewards were adjusted regarding their motivational value in order to allow a direct comparison of related learning characteristics. Our results reveal enhanced associative learning in obese compared to normal-weight participants - reward-independently for expectancy updating and specifically for food-rewards for initial acquisition. When comparing the influence of continuous BMI in active and passive learning, food reward was associated with opposite effects of BMI on performance. Our data indicate generalized, weight-dependent differences in essential reward-learning, though particularly for food reward. We thereby argue that flexible updating of reward-related information may in fact be enhanced in people with obesity - and, thus, possibly promote unhealthy food choices in modern society.


Brain Imaging and Behavior | 2017

Altered monetary loss processing and reinforcement-based learning in individuals with obesity

Jana Kube; David Mathar; Annette Horstmann; Sonja A. Kotz; Arno Villringer; Jane Neumann


Culture and Brain | 2018

Socio-cultural norms of body size in Westerners and Polynesians affect heart rate variability and emotion during social interactions

Anne Schrimpf; Stephen T. McGarvey; Daniel B. M. Haun; Jana Kube; Arno Villringer; Michael Gaebler


2018 Organization for Human Brain Mapping Annual Meeting | 2018

Hemispheric bias in resting state EEG and fMRI is related to approach/avoidance behaviors, but not BMI

Filip Morys; Lieneke Katharina Janssen; Elena Cesnaite; Isabel Garcia-Garcia; Jana Kube; Anne Schrimpf; Deniz Kumral; Nora Mehl; Keyvan Mahjoory; Daniel S. Margulies; Michael Gaebler; Arno Villringer; Jane Neumann; Vadim V. Nikulin; Annette Horstmann


Frontiers in Neuroscience | 2017

Cardiac Concomitants of Feedback and Prediction Error Processing in Reinforcement Learning

Lucas Kastner; Jana Kube; Arno Villringer; Jane Neumann


22nd Annual Meeting of the Organization for Human Brain Mapping (OHBM) | 2016

Altered functional connectivity during prediction error processing in individuals with obesity

Jana Kube; David Mathar; Arno Villringer; Annette Horstmann; Jane Neumann


45th Annual Meeting of the Society for Neuroscience (SfN) | 2015

Cardiac concomitants of decreased reinforcement learning in individuals with obesity

Jana Kube; David Mathar; Lucas Kastner; Annette Horstmann; Arno Villringer; Jane Neumann

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Arno Villringer

Humboldt State University

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Arno Villringer

Humboldt State University

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