At DHPRlab, we study human performance in sports (@uni-hamburg.de) using psychology, neuroscience & physiology.
PI: @wanjawolff.bsky.social.
Account managed by: @senaozayotgonbayar.bsky.social.
Dynamics of Human Performance Regulation Lab
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New #DHPRLab preprint by @senaozayotgonbayar.bsky.social together with , @bcheval.bsky.social, @corimartarelli.bsky.social, Dr. Maltagliati, Dr. Chastin and @wanjawolff.bsky.socialππΌ
Check out Sena's post below, in case you're interested! β¬οΈ
Had a great time presenting at asp conference in Heidelberg! We dove into how perceived time and effort costs interact in movement-related decisions, and which factors matter most when studying them together.
Wanna know more? ππΌ doi.org/10.31234/osf...
We are excited to welcome our new intern, Miriana Palmero! π
We are excited to welcome Dr. Kristina Bruemmer to our team as a senior researcher and lecturer! π
We had the pleasure of welcoming Dr. Robert Bielitzki from from University of Hamburg to our #DHPRlab meeting.
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He talked about psychophysiological responses to blood flow restricted exercise.
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Thank you for taking the time and inspiring discussions! π
We had the pleasure of welcoming Dr. Lorenz AsslΓ€nder (Uni Konstanz) to our #DHPRlab meeting.
He spoke about the cybernetics of human balance -how the nervous system integrates sensory cues to maintain stability- and about Augmented Visual Orientation Cues technology.
Thank you, @cybal.bsky.socialπ
I really enjoyed presenting preliminary findings from our study on the effects of concurrent physical effort on explore-exploit behavior at this year's asp conference in Heidelberg π΄π
Already looking forward to next year π
Interested in information search? ππ
Make sure to check out our latest theory explaining how people search for information; now out in Psychological Review!
@sgluth.bsky.social @jordantdeakin.bsky.social and JΓΆrg Rieskamp
Effort β performance π―
At the Integrating Effort symposium @ASP, I showed that perceived effort maps non-linearly onto performance. Equal increases in prescribed effort produce disproportionately large increases in performance, likely because of compressed number representation and motor noise π’πͺ
A snippet of this week's episode of The Sport Psych Show with Katja Rewitz. Katja and I speak about a fascinating paper she led which examines the explore-exploit framework related to decision making in sport and exercise.
Listen to here buff.ly/2kubwcI
Video
Dynamics of Human Performance Regulation Lab
Dynamics of Human Performance Regulation Lab
Dynamics of Human Performance Regulation Lab
Dynamics of Human Performance Regulation Lab
Sena Ozay-Otgonbayar
Dynamics of Human Performance Regulation Lab
Katja Rewitz
Cognitive Modelling & Decision Neuroscience Lab
Really happy to share that my first PhD preprint is finally out!π₯³
We suggest that time and effort should be studied together as a shared experiential cost w/@bcheval.bsky.social, @corimartarelli.bsky.social, Dr. Maltagliati, Dr. Chastin, and @wanjawolff.bsky.social
Curious?π
doi.org/10.31234/osf...
Lukas Hack
Dan Abrahams
How do people search for information to make efficient decisions?
Our new theory, now out in Psychological Review, suggests that an efficient search rule is (at the core of) the answer. And eye-tracking data support our theory.
Check out here (it's open access): psycnet.apa.org/fulltext/202...