Inventaire


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Units : Laboratory of Neurophysiology and Movement Biomechanics | ULB382



Description :


This doctoral thesis is an interdisciplinary project, combining concepts and methods from the fields of psychology,
psycholinguistics, neuroscience, and motor skills sciences. The objective is investigating the role of alpha wave oscillations (8-12Hz),
measured via electroencephalography (EEG), during a ThinkNothink task (Anderson and Green, 2001). The ThinkNothink paradigm is a
cognitive adaptation of the well-known Go-NoGo task that allows to measure response inhibition. 
Some of the main hypotheses
are:
1)	Stronger event-related alpha synchronization (ERS) in the Nothink condition, compared to the Think condition in participants with low
psychotic traits. This would be interpreted as a sign of active inhibition of the suppressed stimuli. 
2)	Participants with high
psychotic traits will not manifest such stronger alpha ERS. For them, the Nothink instruction will be equivalent to a Think
instruction. 
3)	This distinction between participants with low psychotic traits and participants with high psychotic traits will be
even more pronounced within the phonologically linked stimulus category. This would be explained as a sign of predominant System 1
(associative) processes and a deficit of System 2 (inhibitory) processes (Kahneman, 2011).
4)	Participants with high psychotic
traits will show no significant difference in the number of correctly recalled word pairs between the two experimental conditions,
consistent with the expected EEG results described above. This distinction will be even more salient in the phonologically linked
stimulus category.

Collaboration : Cotutelle Prof. Ariane Bazan & Prof. Ana Maria Cebolla

List of persons in charge :


  • CEBOLLA ALVAREZ Ana Maria

  • VITKOVA Viktoriya