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Dive into the research topics where Jonathan R. Zadra is active.

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Featured researches published by Jonathan R. Zadra.


Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Cognitive Science | 2011

Emotion and Perception: The Role of Affective Information

Jonathan R. Zadra; Gerald L. Clore

Visual perception and emotion are traditionally considered separate domains of study. In this article, however, we review research showing them to be less separable than usually assumed. In fact, emotions routinely affect how and what we see. Fear, for example, can affect low-level visual processes, sad moods can alter susceptibility to visual illusions, and goal-directed desires can change the apparent size of goal-relevant objects. In addition, the layout of the physical environment, including the apparent steepness of a hill and the distance to the ground from a balcony can both be affected by emotional states. We propose that emotions provide embodied information about the costs and benefits of anticipated action, information that can be used automatically and immediately, circumventing the need for cogitating on the possible consequences of potential actions. Emotions thus provide a strong motivating influence on how the environment is perceived. WIREs Cogni Sci 2011 2 676-685 DOI: 10.1002/wcs.147 This article is categorized under: Psychology > Emotion and Motivation.


NeuroImage | 2009

Category-specific activations during word generation reflect experiential sensorimotor modalities

Kai Hwang; Erica D. Palmer; Surina Basho; Jonathan R. Zadra; Ralph-Axel Müller

According to the sensorimotor theory of lexicosemantic organization, semantic representations are neurally distributed and anatomically linked to category-specific sensory areas. Previous functional neuroimaging studies have demonstrated category specificity in lexicosemantic representations. However, little evidence is available from word generation paradigms, which provide access to semantic representations while minimizing confounds resulting from low-level perceptual features of stimulus presentation. In this study, 13 healthy young adults underwent fMRI scanning while performing a word generation task, generating exemplars to nine different semantic categories. Each semantic category was assigned to one of three superordinate category types, based upon sensorimotor modalities (visual, motor, somatosensory) presumed to predominate in lexical acquisition. For word generation overall, robust activation was seen in left inferior frontal cortex. Analyses by sensorimotor modality categories yielded activations in brain regions related to perceptual and motor processing: Visual categories activated extrastriate cortex, motor categories activated the intraparietal sulcus and posterior middle temporal cortex, and somatosensory categories activated postcentral and inferior parietal regions. Our results are consistent with the sensorimotor theory, according to which lexicosemantic representations are distributed across brain regions participating in sensorimotor processing associated with the experiential components of lexicosemantic acquisition.


Acta Psychologica | 2011

Explicit and motoric dependent measures of geographical slant are dissociable: a reassessment of the findings of Durgin, Hajnal, Li, Tonge, and Stigliani (2010).

Dennis R. Proffitt; Jonathan R. Zadra

Durgin et al. (2010) argued that the apparent accuracy of the palmboard measure of geographical slant is accidental and reflects limitations in wrist flexion that reduce palmboard adjustments by just the right amount given the perceptual overestimations upon which they are based. This account is inconsistent with findings that verbal reports and palmboard adjustments are dissociable. In addition to previous evidence found for such dissociation, Durgin et al. also found verbal/palmboard dissociations in Experiment 2. Experiments 1 and 3 of Durgin et al. lacked verbal reports and instead compared palmboard adjustments to free-hand estimates in the context of small wooden surfaces. These experiments are not relevant to the issue of verbal/palmboard dissociability. Across studies, the accuracy of Durgin et al.s palmboard implementation is far less than that found by others (Feresin & Agostini, 2007). The design of Durgin et al.s Experiment 5 misrepresented the experimental conditions of Creem and Proffitt (1998), and consequently, the findings of this study have no bearing on the issue at hand.


Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance | 2016

Walkable distances are bioenergetically scaled.

Jonathan R. Zadra; Arthur Weltman; Dennis R. Proffitt

In perceiving spatial layout, the angular units of visual information are transformed into linear units appropriate for specifying size and extent. This derivation of linear units from angular ones requires geometry and a ruler. Numerous studies suggest that the requisite perceptual rulers are derived from the observers body. In the case of walkable extents, it has been proposed that people scale distances to the bioenergetic resources required to traverse the extents relative to the bioenergetic resources currently available. The current study sought to rigorously test this proposal. Using methods from exercise physiology, a host of physiological measures were recorded as participants engaged in exercise on 2 occasions: once while provided with a carbohydrate supplement and once with a placebo. Distance estimates were made before and after exercise on both occasions. As in previous studies, the carbohydrate manipulation caused decreased distance estimates relative to the placebo condition. More importantly, individual differences in physiological measures that are associated with physical fitness predicted distance estimates both before and after the experimental manipulations. Results suggest that walkable distances are bioenergetically scaled.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Implicit Associations Have a Circadian Rhythm

Jonathan R. Zadra; Dennis R. Proffitt

The current study shows that peoples ability to inhibit implicit associations that run counter to their explicit views varies in a circadian pattern. The presence of this rhythmic variation suggests the involvement of a biological process in regulating automatic associations—specifically, with the current data, associations that form undesirable social biases. In 1998, Greenwald, McGhee, and Schwartz introduced the Implicit Association Test as a means of measuring individual differences in implicit cognition. The IAT is a powerful tool that has become widely used. Perhaps most visibly, studies employing the IAT demonstrate that people generally hold implicit biases against social groups, which often conflict with their explicitly held views. The IAT engages inhibitory processes similar to those inherent in self-control tasks. Because the latter processes are known to be resource-limited, we considered whether IAT scores might likewise be resource dependent. Analyzing IAT performance from over a million participants across all times of day, we found a clear circadian pattern in scores. This finding suggests that the IAT measures not only the strength of implicit associations, but also the effect of variations in the physiological resources available to inhibit their undesirable influences on explicit behavior.


Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting | 2008

Engaging, Non-Invasive Brain-Computer Interfaces (BCIs) for Improving Training Effectiveness & Enabling Creative Expression:

Evan D. Rapoport; Erin M. Nishimura; Jonathan R. Zadra; Peter M. Wubbels; Dennis R. Proffitt; Traci H. Downs; J. Hunter Downs

Controlling computers and other electronic devices using only ones thoughts is an exciting yet unlikely and distant reality for most people. However, for people with locked-in syndrome, their disabilities are so severe that they have no other alternatives. Applications that are consciously controlled using signals from the brain (called brain-computer interfaces, or BCIs) have been shown to restore some communication and environmental control for these individuals. Unfortunately, BCIs can be slow and tedious to learn or operate, reducing their effectiveness. This demonstration presents engaging BCI applications, including a video game and a digital painting program, that enable users to have fun while they improve their control over the brain signals required to use BCIs.


Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting | 2016

Effects of Auditory Working Memory Tasks while Switching between Autonomous and Manual Driving

Madeleine M. McCarty; Kelly Funkhouser; Jonathan R. Zadra; Frank A. Drews

As the prevalence of autonomous vehicles onto the road increases, understanding the cognitive processes of the inevitably distracted driver is important. When engaged in a secondary task while driving, the driver’s limited supply of attentional resources is diminished, resulting in less attention available to process the unpredictable road ahead. While driving distracted causes performance to suffer across the board (Fitousi & Wenger, 2011), some individuals are more apt at multitasking than others due to a high working memory capacity (WMC). We evaluated the differences in braking reaction times (RT) according to individual difference in WMC, specifically while driving in an autonomous car simulation and engaged in a cognitively demanding task. Results showed an interaction between current level of cognitive load and an individual’s WMC where individuals who scored lower on a complex operation span task (OSPAN) experienced greater RTs compared to individuals who scored higher. Average RT during the autonomous scenario, in which OSPAN was concurrently performed, yielded a 33% increase in RT compared to baseline RT with the same OSPAN task. Additionally, sleep and length of time spent in autonomous mode influenced RT.


59th International Annual Meeting of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society, HFES 2014 | 2015

Evaluation of health care icons

Frank A. Drews; Jonathan R. Zadra; Jeremy R. Gleed; William Plew; Jennifer Heroult; Nancy R. Wilck

The current study evaluated a large number of health care icons that are currently in use in numerous Electronic Health Record Systems. For this purpose health care providers were asked to select icon – subject associations that best represent the icon in a multiple choice task. While in some cases a high level of agreement was identified between icons and subject, in the majority the agreement among provider selections was poor. In addition, there was little agreement between provider groups (physicians vs. nurses). Finally, the study provides evidence that numerous icons that are displayed to providers on a daily basis were not identified correctly. Overall, the results of this study indicate that there is a need for a usability-driven icon design process for health care icons.


Perception | 2010

Direct evidence for the economy of action: Glucose and the perception of geographical slant

Simone Schnall; Jonathan R. Zadra; Dennis R. Proffitt


Journal of Vision | 2010

Direct Physiological Evidence for an Economy of Action: Bioenergetics and the Perception of Spatial Layout

Jonathan R. Zadra; Simone Schnall; Arthur Weltman; Dennis R. Proffitt

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David A. Rosenbaum

Pennsylvania State University

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