Natalie Borter
University of Bern
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Publication
Featured researches published by Natalie Borter.
Frontiers in Psychology | 2015
Thomas Rammsayer; Natalie Borter; Stefan J. Troche
A common finding in time psychophysics is that temporal acuity is much better for auditory than for visual stimuli. The present study aimed to examine modality-specific differences in duration discrimination within the conceptual framework of the Distinct Timing Hypothesis. This theoretical account proposes that durations in the lower milliseconds range are processed automatically while longer durations are processed by a cognitive mechanism. A sample of 46 participants performed two auditory and visual duration discrimination tasks with extremely brief (50-ms standard duration) and longer (1000-ms standard duration) intervals. Better discrimination performance for auditory compared to visual intervals could be established for extremely brief and longer intervals. However, when performance on duration discrimination of longer intervals in the 1-s range was controlled for modality-specific input from the sensory-automatic timing mechanism, the visual-auditory difference disappeared completely as indicated by virtually identical Weber fractions for both sensory modalities. These findings support the idea of a sensory-automatic mechanism underlying the observed visual-auditory differences in duration discrimination of extremely brief intervals in the millisecond range and longer intervals in the 1-s range. Our data are consistent with the notion of a gradual transition from a purely modality-specific, sensory-automatic to a more cognitive, amodal timing mechanism. Within this transition zone, both mechanisms appear to operate simultaneously but the influence of the sensory-automatic timing mechanism is expected to continuously decrease with increasing interval duration.
Journal of Sex Research | 2017
Thomas Rammsayer; Natalie Borter; Stefan J. Troche
The present study was designed to systematically investigate the functional relationships among biological sex; masculine and feminine gender-role characteristics; and sociosexual behavior, attitude toward, and desire for uncommitted casual sex as three facets of sociosexual orientation. For this purpose, facets of sociosexuality were assessed by the Revised Sociosexual Orientation Inventory (SOI-R) and masculine and feminine gender-role characteristics were assessed by a revised German version of the Bem Sex-Role Inventory in 499 male and 958 female heterosexual young adults. Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) and structural equation modeling (SEM) revealed differential mediating effects of masculine and feminine gender-role characteristics on the relationship between biological sex and the three facets of sociosexual orientation. Sociosexual behavior was shown to be primarily controlled by an individual’s level of masculine gender-role characteristics irrespective of biological sex. Sociosexual desire was identified as being a sole function of biological sex with no indication for any effect of masculine or feminine gender-role characteristics, while sociosexual attitude was influenced by biological sex as well as by masculine and feminine gender-role characteristics to about the same extent.
Archive | 2014
Natalie Borter; Stefan J. Troche; Yulia Dodonova; Thomas Rammsayer
Intelligence | 2018
Natalie Borter; Stefan J. Troche; Thomas Rammsayer
Archive | 2017
Natalie Borter; Olivier Pahud; Thomas Rammsayer
Journal of Advanced Nursing | 2016
Simeon Zürcher; Christa Vangelooven; Natalie Borter; Daniel Schnyder; Sabine Hahn
ITC 2016 Conference | 2016
Natalie Borter; Stefan J. Troche; Thomas Rammsayer
Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2015
Corinna S. Martarelli; Natalie Borter; Jana Bryjova; Fred W. Mast; Simone Munsch
Archive | 2015
Janina Larissa Bühler; Natalie Borter; S. Troche; Thomas Rammsayer
Archive | 2014
Natalie Borter; Stefan J. Troche; Yulia Dodonova; Thomas Rammsayer