@article{MTMT:34718463, title = {Exploring the role of working memory gate opening process in creativity: An ERP study using the reference-back paradigm}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34718463}, author = {Csizmadia, Petra and Nagy, Boglárka and Kővári, Lili and Gaál, Zsófia Anna}, doi = {10.1016/j.biopsycho.2024.108765}, journal-iso = {BIOL PSYCHOL}, journal = {BIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY}, volume = {187}, unique-id = {34718463}, issn = {0301-0511}, year = {2024}, eissn = {1873-6246}, orcid-numbers = {Kővári, Lili/0009-0000-0095-6449} } @article{MTMT:34715227, title = {Frontal asymmetry and physiological responses in religious and spiritual problems with and without conversion}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34715227}, author = {Kéri, Szabolcs}, doi = {10.1080/2153599X.2024.2307373}, journal-iso = {RELIGION BRAIN AND BEHAVIOUR}, journal = {RELIGION BRAIN AND BEHAVIOUR}, unique-id = {34715227}, issn = {2153-599X}, abstract = {Religious conversion is often associated with a negative emotional state accompanied by profound changes in sacred beliefs, values, attitudes, and practices. This negative emotional state is referred to as "Religious or Spiritual Problem" (RSP) in the revised 5th edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5-TR, 2022). The physiological and neuronal correlates of RSP and religious conversion are not known. Therefore, we measured lateralized frontal alpha-asymmetry, saliva cortisol levels, and heart rate in 24 individuals who experienced religious conversion with RSP, 23 individuals with RSP without religious conversion, and 20 problem-free controls with matched religiosity. In the baseline condition, participants read newspapers and listened to non-religious music; in the religious condition, they read Bible verses and listened to sacred music. Relative to the controls, both groups with RSP showed stress responses in the religious condition, including increased frontal alpha-asymmetry (left > right frontal activation), elevated saliva cortisol concentrations, and higher heart rate. Participants experiencing religious conversion displayed higher frontal alpha-asymmetry than those without conversion, but the cortisol levels and heart rate responses were similar in converters and non-converters. These results indicate that religious conversion with RSP demands a higher cognitive load than RSP alone.}, keywords = {STRESS; NETWORKS; EEG ASYMMETRY; Religious conversion; Spiritual or religious problem; frontal alpha-asymmetry}, year = {2024}, eissn = {2153-5981}, orcid-numbers = {Kéri, Szabolcs/0000-0001-7638-1741} } @article{MTMT:34630821, title = {The effects of aging and hearing impairment on listening in noise}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34630821}, author = {Boncz, Ádám and Szalárdy, Orsolya and Velősy, Péter Kristóf and Béres, Luca and Robert, Baumgartner and Winkler, István and Tóth, Brigitta}, doi = {10.1016/j.isci.2024.109295}, journal-iso = {ISCIENCE}, journal = {ISCIENCE}, volume = {.}, unique-id = {34630821}, year = {2024}, eissn = {2589-0042}, pages = {1-31}, orcid-numbers = {Szalárdy, Orsolya/0000-0001-9171-1147; Winkler, István/0000-0002-3344-6151} } @article{MTMT:34621193, title = {Preliminary validation of the Mental Health Test in a psychiatric sample}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34621193}, author = {Zábó, Virág and Erát, Dávid and Gonda, Xénia and Harangozó, Judit and Iváncsics, Máté and Vincze, Ágnes and Farkas, Judit and Balogh, Gábor and Oláh, Attila and Kéri, Szabolcs and Purebl, György and Vargha, András}, doi = {10.1038/s41598-024-54537-4}, journal-iso = {SCI REP}, journal = {SCIENTIFIC REPORTS}, volume = {14}, unique-id = {34621193}, issn = {2045-2322}, abstract = {To assist psychiatrists and clinical psychologists to assess their patients’ psychological immune competence-based capacities and resources, depending on the mental health disorder diagnosis and the severity of the symptoms, the present study examined the psychometric properties of the Mental Health Test in a psychiatric sample. The research was carried out in four Hungarian healthcare facilities using a cross-sectional design. A total of 331 patients (140 male, 188 female, and 3 who preferred not to disclose their gender) completed the Mental Health Test, six well-being and mental health measures, and the Symptom Checklist-90. Psychiatrists and clinical psychologists reported the mental disorder status of each participant. Confirmatory factor analysis showed a good fit of the five-factor model to the data for the clinical version of the Mental Health Test (CFI = 0.972, RMSEA = 0.034). High internal consistency coefficients (α: 0.70–0.84; ω: 0.71–0.85) and excellent external and content validity were reported. The test is not sensitive to sociodemographic indicators but is sensitive to the correlates of well-being and to the symptoms of different types of mental disorders. Our preliminary findings suggest that the Mental Health Test is a suitable measure for assessing mental health capacities and resources in psychiatric samples.}, year = {2024}, eissn = {2045-2322}, orcid-numbers = {Erát, Dávid/0000-0001-9681-2713; Gonda, Xénia/0000-0001-9015-4203; Farkas, Judit/0000-0002-2450-0355; Kéri, Szabolcs/0000-0001-7638-1741; Purebl, György/0000-0002-9750-2001} } @article{MTMT:34568378, title = {Automatic Change Detection in Interwoven Sequences: A Visual Mismatch Negativity Study}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34568378}, author = {Csikós, Nóra and Petró, Béla and Kojouharova, Petia Steftcheva and Gaál, Zsófia Anna and Czigler, István}, doi = {10.1162/jocn_a_02099}, journal-iso = {J COGNITIVE NEUROSCI}, journal = {JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE}, volume = {36}, unique-id = {34568378}, issn = {0898-929X}, abstract = {In this study, we investigated whether the cognitive system, known to be able to register regular visual event sequences and the violation of these sequences automatically, had the capacity of processing two sequences simultaneously. To this end, we measured the visual mismatch negativity (vMMN) component of ERPs as interwoven event sequences simultaneously presented to the left and right side of the screen. One of the sequences consisted of geometric patterns (diamonds); the other, photographs of human faces. In successive cycles, parts of the stimuli vanished and then re-appeared (the OFF/ON method). The vanishing parts served as either standard (frequently vanishing parts) or infrequent (deviant) events, but these events were task-irrelevant. The 20 adult participants (age 21.40 ± 2.72 years) performed a visual tracking task, with the OFF/ON task being a passive oddball paradigm. According to the results, both OFF and ON events, and both diamond and face stimuli elicited the vMMN component, showing that the system underlying this activity is capable of processing two event sequences if the sequences consist of fairly different kind of objects as stimuli. The sLORETA analysis showed that the source of vMMN was more frequent contralaterally to the deviant event, and the sources comprised loci from ventral and dorsal structures, as well as some anterior loci.}, year = {2024}, eissn = {1530-8898}, pages = {534-550}, orcid-numbers = {Kojouharova, Petia Steftcheva/0000-0001-6315-4822} } @article{MTMT:34568140, title = {Study protocol of the Hungarian Longitudinal Study of Healthy Brain Aging (HuBA).}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34568140}, author = {Bankó, Éva Mária and Weiss, Béla and Hevesi, István and Manga, Annamária Eszter and Vakli, Pál and Havadi-Nagy, Menta and Kelemen, Rebeka and Somogyi, Eszter and Homolya, István and Bihari, Adél and Simon, Ádám and Nárai, Ádám and Tóth, Krisztina and Báthori, Noémi and Tomacsek, Vivien and Horváth, András Attila and Kamondi, Anita and Racsmány, Mihály and Dénes, Ádám and Simor, Péter and Kovács, Tibor and Hermann, Petra and Vidnyánszky, Zoltán}, doi = {10.18071/isz.77.0051}, journal-iso = {IDEGGYOGY SZEMLE}, journal = {IDEGGYOGYASZATI SZEMLE / CLINICAL NEUROSCIENCE}, volume = {77}, unique-id = {34568140}, issn = {0019-1442}, abstract = {Neuro­cog­nitive aging and the associated brain diseases impose a major social and economic burden. Therefore, substantial efforts have been put into revealing the lifestyle, the neurobiological and the genetic underpinnings of healthy neurocognitive aging. However, these studies take place almost exclusively in a limited number of highly-developed countries. Thus, it is an important open question to what extent their findings may generalize to neurocognitive aging in other, not yet investigated regions. The purpose of the Hungarian Longitudinal Study of Healthy Brain Aging (HuBA) is to collect multi-modal longitudinal data on healthy neurocognitive aging to address the data gap in this field in Central and Eastern Europe..We adapted the Australian Ima­ging, Biomarkers and Lifestyle (AIBL) study of aging study protocol to local circumstances and collected demographic, lifestyle, men­tal and physical health, medication and medical history related information as well as re­cor­ded a series of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data. In addition, participants were al­so offered to participate in the collection of blood samples to assess circulating in­flam­matory biomarkers as well as a sleep study aimed at evaluating the general sleep quality based on multi-day collection of subjective sleep questionnaires and whole-night elec­troencephalographic (EEG) data..Baseline data collection has al­ready been accomplished for more than a hundred participants and data collection in the se­condsession is on the way. The collected data might reveal specific local trends or could also indicate the generalizability of previous findings. Moreover, as the HuBA protocol al­so offers a sleep study designed for tho­rough characterization of participants’ sleep quality and related factors, our extended multi-modal dataset might provide a base for incorporating these measures into healthy and clinical aging research. .Besides its straightforward na­tional benefits in terms of health ex­pen­di­ture, we hope that this Hungarian initiative could provide results valid for the whole Cent­ral and Eastern European region and could also promote aging and Alzheimer’s disease research in these countries..}, keywords = {sleep; Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI); neurocognitive aging; neuro­in­flam­mation}, year = {2024}, eissn = {2498-6208}, pages = {51-59}, orcid-numbers = {Bankó, Éva Mária/0009-0001-5354-5077; Weiss, Béla/0000-0003-1031-0283; Nárai, Ádám/0000-0001-5972-6509; Báthori, Noémi/0000-0003-3971-4441; Kamondi, Anita/0000-0001-9860-730X; Kovács, Tibor/0000-0002-8603-8848} } @inproceedings{MTMT:34560795, title = {Az egészség jele a szöveg EGÉSZsége? - Szövegkoherencia borderline személyiségzavarban}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34560795}, author = {Felletár, Fanni and Yang, Zijian Győző and Babarczy, Anna}, booktitle = {XX. Magyar Számítógépes Nyelvészeti Konferencia}, unique-id = {34560795}, year = {2024}, pages = {201-214} } @article{MTMT:34519809, title = {Task-relevance and change detection in action-effect binding}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34519809}, author = {Varga, Sámuel and Pfister, Roland and Neszmélyi, Bence and Kunde, Wilfried and Horváth, János}, doi = {10.1016/j.actpsy.2024.104147}, journal-iso = {ACTA PSYCHOL}, journal = {ACTA PSYCHOLOGICA}, volume = {243}, unique-id = {34519809}, issn = {0001-6918}, year = {2024}, eissn = {1873-6297}, orcid-numbers = {Horváth, János/0000-0003-0147-4518} } @article{MTMT:34501871, title = {Can you believe your eyes? Positive schizotypy is associated with increased susceptibility to the Müller-Lyer illusion}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34501871}, author = {Lányi, Orsolya and Kéri, Szabolcs and Pálffy, Zsófia and Polner, Bertalan}, doi = {10.1016/j.schres.2023.12.023}, journal-iso = {SCHIZOPHR RES}, journal = {SCHIZOPHRENIA RESEARCH}, volume = {264}, unique-id = {34501871}, issn = {0920-9964}, abstract = {Visual illusions provide a unique opportunity to understand cognitive and perceptual alterations in schizophrenia-spectrum conditions. Schizophrenia patients often exhibit increased susceptibility to the Müller-Lyer illusion. Here, we investigate susceptibility to the Müller-Lyer visual illusion in the general population with different levels of schizotypy.We assessed a population-based convenience sample (N = 263) on an online platform. In addition to basic demographics, participants completed the Müller-Lyer illusion, the Cardiff Anomalous Perceptions Scale (CAPS) to measure perceptual anomalies, and the Multidimensional Schizotypy Scale - Brief (MSS-B) for schizotypic traits. To evaluate what predicts susceptibility to the illusion, we fitted a large set of multilevel logistic regression models and performed model averaging over the coefficients.We found support for increased illusion susceptibility among individuals with high positive schizotypy. However, we did not find a comparable effect for anomalous perceptions alone, or for negative or disorganized schizotypy.The increased Müller-Lyer effect in positive schizotypy might be specific to delusion-like beliefs and magical ideation. Further research is needed to clarify how a hierarchical Bayesian formulation of brain function (e.g. imbalances between bottom-up perceptual processing and substantial reliance on prior expectations) can account for the Müller-Lyer effect in schizophrenia-spectrum conditions.}, keywords = {Visual Perception; SCHIZOTYPY; Psychosis-spectrum; visual illusions}, year = {2024}, eissn = {1573-2509}, pages = {327-335}, orcid-numbers = {Kéri, Szabolcs/0000-0001-7638-1741} } @article{MTMT:34476360, title = {Emotions under control? Better cognitive control is associated with reduced negative emotionality but increased negative emotional reactivity within individuals}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34476360}, author = {Rónai, Levente and Hann, Flóra and Kéri, Szabolcs and Ettinger, Ulrich and Polner, Bertalan Kristóf}, doi = {10.1016/j.brat.2023.104462}, journal-iso = {BEHAV RES THER}, journal = {BEHAVIOUR RESEARCH AND THERAPY}, volume = {173}, unique-id = {34476360}, issn = {0005-7967}, abstract = {Associations between impaired cognitive control and maladaptive emotion regulation have been extensively studied between individuals. However, it remains unclear if this relationship holds within individuals. In this study, we tested the assumption that momentary within-person fluctuation in cognitive control (working memory updating and response inhibition) is associated with emotional reactivity in everyday life. We conducted an experience sampling study (eight two-hourly prompts daily) where participants repeatedly performed short 2-back and Go/no-go tasks in daily life. We assessed negative and positive affective states, and unpleasantness of a recent event to capture emotional reactivity. We analyzed two overlapping samples: a Go/no-go and a 2-back dataset (N = 161/158). Our results showed that better momentary working memory updating was associated with decreased negative affect if the recent event was on average unpleasant for the given individual. However, better-than-average working memory updating in interaction with higher event-unpleasantness predicted higher negative affect levels (i.e., higher negative emotional reactivity). These findings may challenge the account of better cognitive control being universally related to adaptive emotion regulation. Although it is unlikely that emotional reactivity boosts working memory, future studies should establish the direction of causality.}, keywords = {COGNITIVE CONTROL; emotion regulation; emotional reactivity; Multilevel models; experience sampling method}, year = {2024}, eissn = {1873-622X}, orcid-numbers = {Kéri, Szabolcs/0000-0001-7638-1741} }