Lennart Högman
Stockholm University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Lennart Högman.
International Journal of Psychophysiology | 2015
László Harmat; Örjan de Manzano; Töres Theorell; Lennart Högman; Håkan Fischer; Fredrik Ullén
Flow is the subjective experience of effortless attention, reduced self-awareness, and enjoyment that typically occurs during optimal task performance. Previous studies have suggested that flow may be associated with a non-reciprocal coactivation of the sympathetic and parasympathetic systems and, on a cortical level, with a state of hypofrontality and implicit processing. Here, we test these hypotheses, using the computer game TETRIS as model task. The participants (n=77) played TETRIS under three conditions that differed in difficulty (Easy<Optimal<Difficult). Cardiac and respiratory activities, and the average oxygenation changes of the prefrontal cortex were measured continuously with functional near infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) during performance. The Optimal condition was characterized by the highest levels of state flow, positive affect, and effortless attention. The associations between self-reported psychological flow and physiological measures were investigated using a series of repeated measures linear mixed model analyses. The results showed that higher flow was associated with larger respiratory depth and lower LF. The higher respiratory depth during high flow is indicative of a more relaxed state with an increased parasympathetic activity, and thus provides partial support for the main hypotheses. There was no association between frontal cortical oxygenation and flow, even at liberal thresholds; i.e. we found no support that flow is related to a state of hypofrontality.
Environment International | 1997
Edvard Lidén; Arne Ulander; Fuat Deniz; Anita Gidöf Gunnarsson; Steven Nordin; Lennart Högman
Abstract The present field study addressed the need for a procedure that provides a defined unit of measurement of perceived annoyance from environmental odors, calibrating the estimates for individual scaling behavior and context effects. In including 25 subjects, the purpose was to demonstrate the applicability of the master-scale procedure with magnitude estimation to perform such a calibration of odor-annoyance estimates for target stimuli such as road-traffic combustion exhausts (13 000 vehicles/d; averaging 47 μg/m 3 over the day/night with peaks exceeding 100 μg/m 3 of nitrogen dioxide; NO 2 ). For comparison, calibrated estimates were also obtained for a backyard expected to be considerably less polluted (comparable with 18 μg/m 3 of NO 2 ) and for blank stimuli presented indoors. The data transformation for the calibration procedure with which annoyance is expressed in either master-scale units or pyridine equivalents requires estimates of a reference stimulus for which seven concentrations of pyridine were used. The results provide an illustration of master scaling of odor annoyance, and imply that use of a modulus (standard stimulus with a predefined annoyance magnitude), in contrast to master scaling, is not sufficient for calibration for individual scaling behavior and context effects.
Frontiers in Psychology | 2015
Andreas Gerhardsson; Lennart Högman; Håkan Fischer
In our daily perception of facial expressions, we depend on an ability to generalize across the varied distances at which they may appear. This is important to how we interpret the quality and the intensity of the expression. Previous research has not investigated whether this so called perceptual constancy also applies to the experienced intensity of facial expressions. Using a psychophysical measure (Borg CR100 scale) the present study aimed to further investigate perceptual constancy of happy and angry facial expressions at varied sizes, which is a proxy for varying viewing distances. Seventy-one (42 females) participants rated the intensity and valence of facial expressions varying in distance and intensity. The results demonstrated that the perceived intensity (PI) of the emotional facial expression was dependent on the distance of the face and the person perceiving it. An interaction effect was noted, indicating that close-up faces are perceived as more intense than faces at a distance and that this effect is stronger the more intense the facial expression truly is. The present study raises considerations regarding constancy of the PI of happy and angry facial expressions at varied distances.
Behaviour Research and Therapy | 2004
Jenny Wikström; Lars-Gunnar Lundh; Joakim Westerlund; Lennart Högman
Chemical Senses | 1998
Edvard Lidén; Steven Nordin; Lennart Högman; Arne Ulander; Fuat Deniz; Anita Gidlöf Gunnarsson
WFSBP Congress 2019, The 14th World Congress of Biological Psychiatry, Vancouver, Canada, June 2-6, 2019 | 2019
Anette Johansson; Anna-Natalia Hellsing; László Harmat; Marianne Kristiansson; Håkan Fischer; Lennart Högman
Archive | 2017
Stephan Hau; Håkan Fischer; Lennart Högman
First annual meeting of the master in emotion psychology, Östersund, Sweden, November 7, 2016 | 2016
Lillian Döllinger; Tanja Bänziger; Lennart Högman; Irena Makower; Petri Laukka; Diana S. Cortes; Håkan Fischer; Stephan Hau
First annual meeting of the master in emotion psychology, Östersund, Sweden, November 7, 2016 | 2016
Isabelle Letellier; Lillian Döllinger; Lennart Högman; Emma Neal; Petri Laukka; Tanja Bänziger; Irena Makower; Håkan Fischer; Stephan Hau
First annual meeting of the master in emotion psychology, Östersund, Sweden, November 7, 2016 | 2016
Isabelle Letellier; Lillian Döllinger; Lennart Högman; Emma Neal; Petri Laukka; Tanja Bänziger; Irena Makower; Håkan Fischer; Stephan Hau