Publications by authors named "R BIEGLER"

People prefer music with an intermediate level of predictability; not so predictable as to be boring, yet not so unpredictable that it ceases to be music. This sweet spot for predictability varies due to differences in the perception of predictability. The symptoms of both psychosis and Autism Spectrum Disorder have been attributed to overestimation of uncertainty, which predicts a preference for predictable stimuli and environments.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: Diametrically aberrant mentalising biases, namely hypermentalising in psychosis and hypomentalising in autism, are postulated by some theoretical models. To test this hypothesis, we measured psychotic-like experiences, autistic traits and mentalising biases in a visual chasing paradigm.

Methods: Participants from the general population (= 300) and psychotic patients (=26) judged the absence or presence of a chase during five-second long displays of seemingly randomly moving dots.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background And Objectives: A plethora of studies has investigated and compared social cognition in autism and schizophrenia ever since both conditions were first described in conjunction more than a century ago. Recent computational theories have proposed similar mechanistic explanations for various symptoms beyond social cognition. They are grounded in the idea of a general misestimation of uncertainty but so far, almost no studies have directly compared both conditions regarding uncertainty processing.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Gagliano et al. (Oecologia 175(1):63-72, 2014) reported that Mimosa pudica habituates to repeated stimulation, as shown by a reduction in response, dishabituation, and stimulus specificity. I argue that Gagliano et al.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Various forms of uncertainty influence decision-making, particularly in assessing the precision of spatial memory.
  • In three experiments, it was found that participants adjusted their search strategies based on spatial precision in one task but not in another, indicating inconsistencies in how they utilized this information.
  • The third experiment revealed that reminding participants of uncertainty's importance in one task improved their search efforts in another, suggesting that understanding precision can be activated but isn't always applied instinctively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF