Publications by authors named "Rafal Skiba"

Article Synopsis
  • Neurocognitive impairment is a key characteristic of schizophrenia spectrum disorders (SSDs), with existing research indicating a strong link between cognitive issues and negative symptoms of the disorders.
  • The study utilized iterative Constrained Principal Component Analysis (iCPCA) on a group of 121 SSD patients to analyze the connection between 18 cognitive measures and 46 symptoms, aiming to clarify which specific negative symptoms correlate with cognitive impairments.
  • Results revealed that verbal memory problems were associated with negative and disorganized emotional communication, while working memory deficits were linked to motor impairment symptoms, suggesting different brain networks are affected and emphasizing the need for more research into tailored treatments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Humans can successfully correct deviations of movements without conscious detection of such deviations, suggesting limited awareness of movement details. We ask whether such limited awareness impairs confidence (metacognition). We recorded functional magnetic resonance imaging data while 31 human female and male participants detected cursor deviations during a visuomotor reaching task and rated their confidence retrospectively.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This fMRI study examines the role of local and global motion information in facial movements during exposure to novel dynamic face stimuli. We found that synchronous expressions distinctively engaged medial prefrontal areas in the rostral and caudal sectors of anterior cingulate cortex (r/cACC) extending to inferior supplementary motor areas, as well as motor cortex and bilateral superior frontal gyrus (global temporal-spatial processing). Asynchronous expressions in which one part of the face unfolded before the other activated more the right superior temporal sulcus (STS) and inferior frontal gyrus (local temporal-spatial processing).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The opportunity an object presents for action is known as an affordance. A basic assumption in previous research was that images of objects, which do not afford physical action, elicit effects on attention and behavior comparable with those of real-world tangible objects. Using a flanker task, we compared interference effects between real graspable objects and matched 2-D or 3-D images of the items.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Tools afford specialized actions that are tied closely to object identity. Although there is mounting evidence that functional objects, such as tools, capture visuospatial attention relative to non-tool competitors, this leaves open the question of which part of a tool drives attentional capture. We used a modified version of the Posner cueing task to determine whether attention is oriented towards the head versus the handle of realistic images of common elongated tools.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Research studies in psychology typically use two-dimensional (2D) images of objects as proxies for real-world three-dimensional (3D) stimuli. There are, however, a number of important differences between real objects and images that could influence cognition and behavior. Although human memory has been studied extensively, only a handful of studies have used real objects in the context of memory and virtually none have directly compared memory for real objects vs.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Though useful from a clinical and practical standpoint uniform, large-field chromatic stimuli are likely to contain luminance contributions from retinal inhomogeneities. Such contribution can significantly influence psychophysical thresholds. However, the degree to which small luminance artifacts influence the chromatic VEP has been debated.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF