Research
Interests
Professor Hsieh’s research
fields include below topics.
- The mechanism of attention conversion of executive function.
- The discussion on the source of loss in multiple task.
- Sleep deprivation and error monitor
- Electrophysiological research on elders’ control function
- Basic research on emotional standard stimuli and response norms by using emotional films
- Related research in neuropsychology
- Related research in clinical psychology
- Other future research topics include : aging and cognition, neural feedback and health promotion, sleep and cognition, emotion and cognition, religion and cognition, and premature infants and cognition, etc.
Professor Hsieh’s researches
cover different experiment approaches.
Such as…
- Traditional behavioral measurement (reaction time and error rate)
- Test the cognitive function loss in Patients with Brain Injury the elders
- ERP ,NIRS(Near-infrared spectroscopy) and fMRI (Functional magnetic resonance imaging) technique.
Research topics:
I. The mechanism of attentional shifting of
executive function.
Over the past five years, to
understand the control theory of attention, Professor Hsieh has systematically
manipulated the mechanism of attentional shifting and sorted out several
variables that may affect the loss of job conversion.
After cooperation with Israel Scholars,
we discovered a brand-new suppression process. This suppression process is an
original selective attention phenomenon, which was just published in the
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory and Cognition, the
phenomenon is named "Competitor Rule Suppression (CRS)". The CRS
phenomenon is that when subjects encounter absolute switching task, to
effectively improve the preparation of each task switching, they would start up
a highly elaborative operation mechanism.That is, if a certain task dimension
in one trial is interfered by the reaction, it would be suppressed immediately.
So, if the suppressed task dimension becomes the current target after the task conversion,
that would be an extra time required for the anti-suppression process in RTs. This
inhibitory mechanism is different from the long-term inhibitory function found
in the previous study, and the activity area of brain is also different. At
present, the component wave has also been found (Accepts by Cognitive,
Affective, and Behavioral Neuroscience). The recent paper try to examines
whether CRS fades over time passively or whether is involved in the memory re-
retrieval and memory elimination.
II. The source of function loss from multiple task
When subjects execute two tasks continuously, which factor would affect the psychological refractory period is also the issue in our lab in the past few years.
Psychological refractory period effect comes from Telford (1931). He found that when the subjects are asked to react two tasks continuously, the response to two tasks would be different. When time interval between two tasks is too short, subjects’ response to second task will be slower. But to the first task, they have no difference in different length of time.
III. Sleep
deprivation and error monitoring
IV. Electrophysiological
study of attention control in aging brain
A. Aging in Attentional Blink
“Attentional blink” is, after
correct identification of the first target, the wrong identification of second
target which appear within 500 milliseconds would happen. Professor Hsieh use
some instant attention paradigms to test whether encounter ventral task (number
recognition) and dorsal task (click on the target) at the same time can surmount
such limitation of the attention. And we also test the difference between elder
and young. The result of the study shows that young people would not be
disturbed by identification tasks when they are clicking static or moving
objects. The result is in line with “dual system theory” proposed by Milner and
Goodale (1995).
The result also suggests the elder would be disturbed by identification tasks when the dual task’s target distance is 100 milliseconds. At this condition, old people need more time to complete the click, that is, the elder would be disturbed more severely. But when the target distance is 700 milliseconds, the difference between single task and dual task disappears gradually.
The behavior results of clicking disappear target show, both the elder and the young are affected by digital recognition when target distance is 100 milliseconds. This result is also consistent with the idea that the ventral system is responsible for objects of grasping memory.
B. Aging and Task Switching
Professor Hsieh's lab also
confirmed that aging has a specific rather than comprehensive effect on task
switching. This study uses the "same-difference judgment “paradigm to
examine the effect of aging on task switching. In this study, we manipulated two
dimensions, perception and conceptual, when subjects made same or different
judgments, and we also manipulated time interval of "cue-target" to
check whether aging would affect the preparation process of task conversion.
The results show that although the elder have a large conversion loss, their
preparation for conversion has not been flawed, or even have more benefits than
young people.
In addition, the biggest
innovation of we used the MMLM developed by Yantis et al. (1991), and this
research also based on the formula proposed by de Jong ’s (2000). We used this
formula to test what causes the conversion loss of the elder? Is it because the
elder have difficulty in preparing for switching jobs to increase gradually? Or
is it because of other external factors which operate preparation progress?
We found that there are difference causes of vary conversion loss value when elder are doing difference judgement task. In the perception judgment, the elder have smaller ratio of absolutely prepare in advance than young people; In the conceptual judgment, the elder are obviously limited to the external waiting factors which induce preparation progress. The phenomenon of aging showing double dissociation in different types of conversion loss mechanisms is an innovative discovery in this study.
C. Aging and inhibitory function
Professor Hsieh recently found that there are significant differences in response of brain waves between old people and young people, although the performance of the elder is not necessarily worse than young people. The results have been accepted for publication in Clinical Neurophysiology.
V. Emotional Standard Stimulus and
Response Norms: Emotional Films
This project intends to establish a database including various standard stimuli which arouses emotions and the norm of Chinese people's response to these stimuli.
We have three goals:
1. Build a database of standard stimuli which arouses emotions, and focus on eight dimensions such as facial expressions, pictures, words, metaphors, jokes, tones, short films, and music.
2. Based on above standard stimulus database, we establish normative data of Chinese people's emotional responses, including cognitive assessment, muscle response (eye movement), and peripheral autonomic response (heartbeat, blood pressure, breath and skin electrical response, etc.).
3. Explore the brain activity (EEG and ERP) of Chinese people to different emotional stimuli.
VI. Neuropsychology
1. Cognitive and attentional function changes in patients with brain injury.
2. Discussion on the attention conversion function of basal nucleus and frontal striatum circuit.
3. Compilation of neuropsychological test and establishment of norms, etc.
Professor Hsieh's research in neuropsychology is mainly focused on the attention function of patients with Parkinson's disease. The motivation for this type of research is that the frontal lobe is mainly responsible for performing control functions, and there is an inseparable neural circuit connection between the basal nucleus and the frontal lobes. It is important to understand the role of the basal nucleus in cognitive function. However, most researchers have only observed that patients with impaired frontal lobe and patients with Parkinson's disease exhibit similar cognitive defects, but in fact the internal causes of their cognitive defects are likely to be different.
Through empirical research, Professor Hsieh found that attention deficits in patients with Parkinson's disease are specific, and only in the reverse conversion of the consistent stimulus-response connection. This result is likely to be the basis of future research to distinguish the difference between cognitive functions of frontal lobe and cognitive functions of basal nucleus.In addition, Professor Hsieh also discussed the attentional function of frontal epilepsy and found the function defect is different from that of patients with Parkinson's disease. This also shows that the frontal lobe and basal nucleus may play different roles in attention function.
In the children's cognitive function study, children with learning disabilities are unlike other special children have clear causes and diagnostic criteria. So, there is an urgent need to develop test tools to help understand the specific cognitive defects of these children, which hinder effective learning. This early project that Professor Hsieh participated in has had concrete results such as reliability and norms, and has been used in clinical.
VII. Clinical Psychology
In the field of clinical
psychology, Professor Hsieh has directed master students of the Institute of
Behavioral Medicine to conduct the following three studies: (1) & (2) have
been published in the Chinese Journal of Mental Health.
(1) Discussion on Selective
Attention in College Students with Obsessive-Compulsive Symptoms Facilities
The goal of the present study was
to explore the function of selective attention in people with
obsessive-compulsion symptoms. The visuospatial priming paradigm with
non-verbal stimulus, e.g., location, was employed in this study. The paradigm
was designed to examine the ability of facilitating the relevant information
and/or inhibiting the irrelevant information. All participants completed the
Health Personality Habits Inventory, and Maudsley Obsessional-Compulsive
Inventory, and they were classified into three groups, non-anxious control
group, general-anxious control group, and obsessional-compulsive group based on
the screening score reflected on the two Inventories. They further performed
the visuospatial priming paradigm. The result showed that the inhibition effect
is significantly smaller in the obsessional-compulsive group than the other two
groups. Contrary to the previous finding of no diminished inhibition, our
results show that people with obsessive-compulsion symptoms suffered from
inhibition deficit on the location-based priming task.
(2) Attention Inhibition and
Memory Retrieval toward Emotional Faces on Patients of Obsessive-Compulsive
Disorder and Other Anxiety Disorders: Using Negative Priming Paradigm
In this study we tried to confirm the defect inhibition hypothesis and assumed a vanished negative priming effect in anxious individuals. We also tried to see if there was a different threat-related negative priming that may differentiate between the inhibition and the retrieval process in these anxious individuals.
Study subjects included twenty two medication-free patients of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and twenty one medication-free patients of other anxiety disorders (OAD), as well as thirty matched healthy subjects without any psychiatric history. Each subject's anxiety level was evaluated by the use of the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory. The Flanker paradigm of the negative priming task was used. ANOVA reaction time analysis show that normal people have negative and threatening priming effects. Other patients with anxiety disorder do not have neutral negative priming effects, but they have negative threatening priming effects. However, the negative priming effects of patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder disappeared.The results of the study prove the hypothesis of suppressing defects and imply a possible cognitive avoidance effect. Patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder and other anxiety disorders have significantly different types of performance, suggesting that they have different pathological mechanisms. In the discussion, the possible effects of attention suppression and memory extraction are included, and try to explain relevant clinical performance of the patients.
(3) Selective Processing of Positive and Negative Information inClinical Depression: The Bias of Activation and Inhibition.
The present study was designed to examine selective attentional functioning in clinical depressive participants. Experimental variables were repetition (repeating and non-repeating) and stimulus valence (neutral, positive and negative contents). The participants included 22 major depressive patients and 30 matched healthy participants. A negative priming task included prime and probe pairs. The repeated condition differed from the non-repeated one in that the probe display target was the same words as the prime display distractor. Color cue, distractor and target were simultaneously presented for 500 msec, and then the participants quickly pressed an assigned key. The recorded key-press time was analyzed by the nonparametric statistical method. Results showed that depressive patients failed to exhibit negative priming at all conditions, and that healthy subjects revealed negative priming only at the neutral condition. Compared to the healthy subjects, the depressive patients are not capable of inhibiting neutral distractors. The findings can be explained by the attention inhibition and memory retrieval hypotheses, which suggest depressive patients disrupt attention inhibition and memory retrieval function and that processing differences in neutral distractors exist between the healthy participants and depressive patients.
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