Emotions significantly influence our perceptions and interactions with the environment, yet the impact of our emotional states on judging and responding to others remains underexplored. In this... Show moreEmotions significantly influence our perceptions and interactions with the environment, yet the impact of our emotional states on judging and responding to others remains underexplored. In this thesis, I examined how (romantic) attraction influences our attention (Part I), how we judge others’ intentions (Part II), and whether mimicking another facilitates bond formation (Part III). In two empirical chapters, I demonstrate that people have a strong attentional bias towards visual attractiveness and a tendency to indicate interest in establishing a romantic connection to attractive others. In the subsequent empirical chapter, I show that men are more likely to judge women they find attractive as more sexually aroused. Crucially, in a real-life dating study, I show that men who are attracted to another are more likely to assume mutual interest. Further, I introduce a framework suggesting that people align their actions and emotional states with others to foster romantic relationships. The final empirical chapter suggests that mimicking the attraction cues of others enhances bond formation. Overall, this dissertation sheds light on how attractiveness and attraction affect our attention, our social cognition, and the synchronization of actions and emotions, offering insights into the mechanisms underlying romantic connections. Show less
This thesis summarizes a PhD research project, in which we successfully developed and tested a smartphone-based version of the AAT. We used the mobile AAT to show that approach-avoidance tendencies... Show moreThis thesis summarizes a PhD research project, in which we successfully developed and tested a smartphone-based version of the AAT. We used the mobile AAT to show that approach-avoidance tendencies can undergo substantial state-like changes. We further demonstrate how these changes can be systematically related to other state-variables and how important health-related outcomes such as overweight and obesity, can be explained by disruptions of these dynamics. Our findings have broad implications for approach-avoidance research and task-based research in general, as they reveal how smartphones can be used to get insights into the dynamic nature of task outcomes and how (disruptions of) these dynamics can have important real-life consequences. Show less
This dissertation focused on the neural and behavioral mechanisms underlying adolescent learning and mental health in the context of peers and friends. The neuroimaging findings revealed that... Show moreThis dissertation focused on the neural and behavioral mechanisms underlying adolescent learning and mental health in the context of peers and friends. The neuroimaging findings revealed that reward processing for self and peers rely on common reward-related brain regions, whereas a social brain region (TPJ) showed social specificity to observed outcomes for unfamiliar peers compared to friends. Moreover, typically developing adolescents and adolescents with ADHD show neural sensitivity in reward and salience brain regions towards rewards for themselves, friends and peers compared to losses. There were no group differences in neural processing of (vicarious) outcomes between adolescents with and without ADHD, yet a symptom-level approach showed more neural sensitivity for own compared to friends’ losses in individuals with more inattention symptoms. The behavioral findings indicated that adolescents’ learning performance benefitted from observing the choices and outcomes of peers irrespective of the relationship with this peer. The results did not show effects of friendship (quality) and social status on observational and academic learning, but there was a protective effect of friendship quality on internalizing problems. Taken together, these findings highlight adolescence as a period of observational learning opportunities from different types of peers. Adolescence can also serve as a window of opportunity to improve mental health by fostering high-quality friendships. Show less
Parental socialization refers to the process through which parents transmit values and beliefs to their children. During this process, children learn to understand the world and shape their social... Show moreParental socialization refers to the process through which parents transmit values and beliefs to their children. During this process, children learn to understand the world and shape their social functioning. The impact of parental socialization can vary across different cultures. My research focuses on family interactions within Chinese cultures, emphasizing the importance of cultural nuances when examining the role of parental behaviors in children's social development. The study utilized samples of Chinese children and their parents, employing various research methods, including observations, interviews, and questionnaires. The findings indicated that Chinese mothers' psychological control had a relatively minor negative effect on children's emotion regulation and social anxiety. Additionally, the research revealed racism and colorism among Chinese children, which were associated with mothers' color-evasive socialization behaviors. Chinese mothers did not avoid talking about racial appearance and cultural background, which contrasts with studies in White Western populations where most White mothers showed color evasion. Chinese mothers’ acknowledgement of shared culture predicted children’s positive attitudes towards their own racial ingroup with a darker skin tone. My research underscores the unique features of Chinese culture that play a pivotal role in shaping the nature and consequences of parental socialization on children's social functioning. It highlights that Western theories related to parenting and color-evasive socialization may need adaptation when applied to non-Western cultural contexts. Show less
Indian agriculture is widely believed to be in crisis. There is broad consensus among scholar, policymakers and activists that economic hardships and the changing climate have made sustaining a... Show moreIndian agriculture is widely believed to be in crisis. There is broad consensus among scholar, policymakers and activists that economic hardships and the changing climate have made sustaining a livelihood through farming increasingly untenable. There is a strong sense that something has to be done to help farmers deal with the crisis, and in recent years agricultural insurance has been presented as a possible fix for rural distress. This dissertation studies how a new agricultural insurance scheme called PMFBY becomes part of everyday social interactions and experiences. Insurance companies often assert that quantified procedures can accurately - and fairly - calculate the extent of agricultural risk, attach a price tag to it and protect against it. Can quantification really be the antidote to crisis? To answer this question I explore how insurance numbers translate to the everyday experiences of rural people in central Maharashtra. I find that, when seen from the perspective of those encountering them in their daily lives, the numbers are anything but straightforward. The effects of quantification were often arbitrary, and despite promises of transparency, they had a tendency to obscure rather than clarify. In short, the numbers turned out to be inconsistent and ambiguous. The dissertation describes how people attempt to make sense of this ambiguity through their moral understandings. It focusses on the (often heated) discussions, the collective pondering such discussions led to, the personal dilemmas it posed as well as the dreams and aspirations numbers became entwined with. I explore how such quandaries unfold and argue that a focus on the morality of quantification brings to light the social life of numbers beyond their 'objective' factuality. Show less
Two types of financial incentives can help improve healthy lifestyles: carrots (a reward where one can gain something) and sticks (a deposit contract where one can lose something). In a deposit... Show moreTwo types of financial incentives can help improve healthy lifestyles: carrots (a reward where one can gain something) and sticks (a deposit contract where one can lose something). In a deposit contract, participants deposit own money and can lose or earn it back depending on lifestyle changes. We studied the potential of deposit contracts to stimulate a healthy lifestyle.A smartphone app was developed together with the Swiss university ETH Zurich to conduct experimental research into the effects of deposit contracts. In addition, we collaborated with the American company WayBetter to observe the effects of commercially available deposit contracts. Finally, the opinion of people with cardiovascular disease and healthcare professionals regarding financial incentives and deposit contracts for lifestyle change was investigated.The results show that deposit contracts can have strong effects on exercise behavior (daily step counts) in the short term. The results also show that voluntary participation in deposit contracts is limited, but can be increased by doubling the amount deposited and by allowing participants to determine the amount themselves. Finally, healthcare providers think it is a good idea to use financial incentives, but people with cardiovascular disease themselves are skeptical about the use of deposit contracts. Show less
Differentiation has evolved into a systematic feature of European integration. Still, EU member states have been eager to maintain unity and not let differentiated integration (DI) be reflected in... Show moreDifferentiation has evolved into a systematic feature of European integration. Still, EU member states have been eager to maintain unity and not let differentiated integration (DI) be reflected in institutions and processes of EU governance. The sovereign debt crisis was a turning point, triggering an unprecedented reinforcement of euro area specific institutions and policies. So far, few contributions have studied the institutional implications of DI in the EU. This dissertation examines whether and, if so, how and with what implications DI has been institutionalised in EMU governance. It analyses the organisational inclusiveness of crisis management structures, the evolution of the Eurogroup and Eurogroup Working Group, procedural norms and elite ideas. The findings suggest that the distinction between euro area insiders and outsiders has become embedded in how member state representatives perceive political reality, determine mutual role expectations and organise governance processes. While this institutionalisation of DI in EMU was facilitated by particular circumstances of the sovereign debt crisis, its implications are evident in EMU governance and reform processes until today. The dissertation makes theoretical and empirical contributions to account for DI in institutional and political developments in EMU and, thus, aims to enrich institutionalist debates in EU studies. Show less
This thesis generated insights into the neural and affective signatures of connectedness between parents and adolescents and between people in general, which is operationalized by responses to eye... Show moreThis thesis generated insights into the neural and affective signatures of connectedness between parents and adolescents and between people in general, which is operationalized by responses to eye contact and empathy. Overall, our findings show that during adolescence, parents are still highly attuned to their child at the neural and affective level. In addition, adolescents report to feel more connected with their parents than with unknown others, although this was not directly reflected in stronger neural responses. Another interesting finding is that making eye contact for a prolonged period generally enhanced the socio-emotional connection between people, both between parents and adolescents and with unknown others. For individuals with a history of CEM and depressed adolescents eye contact is less socially rewarding, however, and does not seem to foster a stronger connectedness with others. Studying the psychobiological underpinnings of affiliative bonding, including the parent-adolescent bond, brings us a step closer to unraveling how such bonds are established and maintained during adolescence. And even more important: Once we know how these bonds are established, we might be better able to modify and repair these bonds in situations in which they for some reason got disrupted. Show less
Despite decades of research from psychology, anthropology, biology and economics, how social preferences arise and vary across contexts remains an open question. In three empirical chapters, this... Show moreDespite decades of research from psychology, anthropology, biology and economics, how social preferences arise and vary across contexts remains an open question. In three empirical chapters, this dissertation addresses this gap using a variety of economic games and neuroimaging techniques that allow for a tractable modeling of cooperation and competition. Overall, findings suggest that while social preferences are linked to neural structure, they can also adapt to environmental factors as well as beliefs about interaction partners. This doctoral thesis shows that interacting with ingroup or outgroup members, taking decisions publicly or privately, and knowing whether we may interact with others again affect our cooperative behavior. These results highlight the importance of understanding how prosociality may be altered and lay the foundations for policy makers to further those social environments that encourage prosocial behavior. Show less
By monitoring ongoing actions and performance outcomes, we are able to detect errors or mismatches between our intentions or predictions. Disturbances in such performance-monitoring processes may... Show moreBy monitoring ongoing actions and performance outcomes, we are able to detect errors or mismatches between our intentions or predictions. Disturbances in such performance-monitoring processes may importantly contribute to impaired adaptive behavior in clinical disorders, such as excessively impulsive behavior in externalizing disorders or excessively rigid or careful behavior in anxiety- and obsessive-compulsive disorders. In daily life, performance monitoring often takes place in a social context, where our actions have consequences not only for ourselves, but also for others. The investigation of (alterations in) such (pro)social performance-monitoring processes may help explain functional and social impairments across a wide range of clinical disorders. In this dissertation, we used various neuroimaging paradigms to examine subclinical and neurochemical influences on performance monitoring when errors had consequences for oneself or others. The studies in this dissertation indicate that neural performance-monitoring correlates are modulated by social, subclinical, and neurochemical factors, including social (responsibility) context, obsessive-compulsive symptoms, ovarian hormones, and pharmacological manipulations of dopamine and oxytocin. These findings have implications for the potential and utility of error-related brain activity as a clinical biomarker or endophenotype, our insight into social symptoms and impairments in obsessive-compulsive disorder, and for our understanding of the neurochemical mechanisms underlying performance monitoring. Show less
In my study I looked for a plausible cognitive theoretical framework for conforming behavior. The Theory of Event Coding (TEC) was the cognitive theory that offered a good basis for building this... Show moreIn my study I looked for a plausible cognitive theoretical framework for conforming behavior. The Theory of Event Coding (TEC) was the cognitive theory that offered a good basis for building this framework. I conducted an experiment using an existing study design adopted from previous studies of conformity adding a non-social condition where participants were confronted not with what they thought were other students’ choices but with random computer choices. According to TEC, a simple confrontation with an alternative behavior would affect reproduction of your own behavior at a later stage. The study results supported my theory. Unfortunately, the results were possibly influenced by Regression to the Mean. So I changed the study design to eliminate the issue. Also I wanted to see if and how conformity was affected by culture: collectivistic versus individualistic. This study was conducted partially in the lab (in the Netherlands and China) and partially online (in the USA and India). The results confirmed my initial hypothesis: the conformity effect did not differ across all experimental groups irrespective of the country or condition suggesting that people are sensitive to intervening events, but the social nature of these intervening events is irrelevant. Show less
In the realm of cognitive science, the quest to understand cognitive control has persisted for decades. Traditional notions of cognitive control have focused on inhibition through the prefrontal... Show moreIn the realm of cognitive science, the quest to understand cognitive control has persisted for decades. Traditional notions of cognitive control have focused on inhibition through the prefrontal cortex, but this dissertation challenges that perspective with a more comprehensive framework: The Metacontrol State Model (MSM). The MSM proposes that cognitive control emerges from the interplay between two opposing systems – one promoting flexibility and the other promoting persistence. These systems interact to shape our cognitive processing styles, thereby influencing our ability to effectively regulate our actions. This dissertation explores questions such as why individuals exhibit differences in cognitive control capacity and how state-related changes and trait-related predispositions impact cognitive control function. The overarching goal of this dissertation is to empirically test the MSM model and shed light on the factors that influence cognitive control. Through a series of experiments, it seeks to understand how altered states of consciousness, achieved through meditation techniques or serotonergic psychedelics, affect the balance between intentional and habitual processes. Additionally, it examines the extent to which individual trait biases serve as trans-diagnostic markers in various psychopathologies. This work comprises a literature review and six empirical articles. By integrating theory and empirical research, this dissertation takes us on a journey into the intricate world of cognitive control, shaping our understanding of how it influences our lives. Show less
This dissertation focuses on identifying neural mechanisms underlying social evaluations and self-views from a parent-adolescent perspective among adolescents with and without depression, and their... Show moreThis dissertation focuses on identifying neural mechanisms underlying social evaluations and self-views from a parent-adolescent perspective among adolescents with and without depression, and their parents. As part of RE-PAIR, affective and neural responses to praise and criticism about the adolescent child, and neural responses to reliving positive autobiographical memories were assessed, using ecologically valid fMRI-tasks. Particularly criticism seems to be highly salient to parents and adolescents, activating the salience network and decreasing mood. Both praise and reliving positive autobiographical memories activate areas important for self-referential processing in adolescents, which might reflect the ‘positive self’. Aberrant self-related processing when reliving autobiographical memories and increased sensitivity to parental criticism might be key underlying neural mechanisms in adolescent depression. By feeling more negatively, having more negative self-views, interpreting the environment as more negatively, memorizing past experiences in a more negative way, and focusing on negative events more often, adolescents with depression seem to have multiple negativity biases. These negativity biases are likely to negatively impact social relationships, potentially further reinforcing negative feelings and a negative self. Interventions exploring and strengthening the positive self, in particular the positive self aligning with the current self, might be useful for treating, or even preventing adolescent depression. Show less
About 1 in 650-1000 children are born with a 47,XXY, 47,XXX or 47,XYY chromosomal pattern (i.e, sex chromosome trisomies, SCT). The presence of SCT is associated with an increased risk for... Show moreAbout 1 in 650-1000 children are born with a 47,XXY, 47,XXX or 47,XYY chromosomal pattern (i.e, sex chromosome trisomies, SCT). The presence of SCT is associated with an increased risk for neurodevelopmental difficulties across the life-span. Studying neurodevelopment in early childhood in children with SCT could signal deviations in development that serve as risk markers to guide clinical care. This thesis explored the development of self-regulation (emotion, cognition, and behavior) in SCT children and population-based controls, aged 1 to 7 years, who participated in the TRIXY Early Childhood Study. Behavioral symptoms were assessed through structured behavioral observation and parental questionnaires. Neurocognition was measured using performance tests and psychophysiological measures of arousal. Outcomes showed behavioral symptoms of psychopathology and neurocognitive vulnerabilities, already from an early age. Difficulties in self-regulation tended to become more pronounced with increasing age and were rather robust; independent of karyotype, pre/postnatal diagnosis, or intelligence-levels. A developmental neurocognitive perspective is key in increasing our knowledge of gene-brain-behavior pathways in SCT as well as advancing clinical care (diagnostics and treatment). Self-regulation amongst other neurocognitive functions may serve as a valuable target for early, tailor-made interventions to minimize the risk for psychopathology later in life and improving quality of life. Show less
Gerritsen, R.J.S.; Band, G.P.H.; Lafeber, J.; van den Beukel, N.; van Voskuilen, B.; Hoogland, R. 2023
Social anxiety is anxiety about negative evaluation and rejection by others. Social anxiety has been long related to reduced eye contact, this feature is seen as a casual and a maintaining factor... Show moreSocial anxiety is anxiety about negative evaluation and rejection by others. Social anxiety has been long related to reduced eye contact, this feature is seen as a casual and a maintaining factor of social anxiety disorder. However, related empirical findings were equivocal. The dissertation sought to address three key questions: (1) Whether social anxiety is featured by gaze avoidance. (2) Under which conditions socially anxious individuals display gaze avoidance. (3) To what extent subjective experience of gaze avoidance corresponds with actual gaze behavior. Using the combination of naturalistic social settings and wearable eye-trackers, the dissertation provides evidence for the relationship between social anxiety and gaze avoidance particularly in naturalistic social situation, and further reveals that the relationship depends on severity of social anxiety symptoms, type of social situation and age group. Besides, gaze anxiety is moderately associated with actual gaze avoidance. Altogether, the dissertation sheds light on the nature of gaze behavior adopted by socially anxious individuals in naturalistic social interactions. Show less
Cooperation between central banks has been crucial for stabilising the international financial system during the Global Financial Crisis in 2008 and the COVID-19 crisis in 2020. For students of... Show moreCooperation between central banks has been crucial for stabilising the international financial system during the Global Financial Crisis in 2008 and the COVID-19 crisis in 2020. For students of international political economy, understanding why and how central banks cooperate is thus a highly relevant concern. This doctoral dissertation studies central bank cooperation in Europe during and after the Global Financial Crisis. It is based on 25 elite interviews, original archival material and other primary and secondary sources. It reconstructs how central banks came to the decision to conclude credit lines with one another, engaged in Balance-of-Payments assistance programmes, and built new regional institutions to coordinate crisis management and macroprudential policy measures. It finds that central banks motivated their decisions to cooperate not merely on the expected consequences of their actions, but also on their perceptions of appropriateness. Bilateral cooperation was often motivated by norms, such as solidarity, rather than being based predominantly on self-interest; regional financial governance takes the form of inclusive deliberations and consensus-building, rather than clashing national interests. These findings support the conclusions that central banks’ agency, and the ideas that guide their behaviour, need to be better understood to grasp the dynamics of international monetary cooperation. Show less
For people with chronic kidney disease (CKD), adhering to a range of self-management tasks—such as healthy eating, frequent physical activity, and non-smoking—is crucial. However, changing health... Show moreFor people with chronic kidney disease (CKD), adhering to a range of self-management tasks—such as healthy eating, frequent physical activity, and non-smoking—is crucial. However, changing health behaviors is difficult. To support patients in doing so, an eHealth care pathway was developed and evaluated. The results provide different insights into patients' priorities and care needs. Many individuals with CKD experience problems in self-management, which can be hindered by many different barriers of which a common one is psychological distress. Therefore, personalized interventions are needed with screening and treatment of both psychological distress and suboptimal self-management, tailored to the specific barriers and needs of the individual patient. The E-GOAL eHealth care pathway is an example of such a personalized intervention, combining cognitive behavioral therapy with self-management support. Patients were enthusiastic about the eHealth care pathway. However, in a randomized study, the intervention was not effective in reducing psychological distress compared with regular care only. Patients did experience improvements in areas of functioning and self-management that they prioritized themselves. These mixed results show that interventions could be implemented that are person-tailored, with personalized outcomes that reflect individually meaningful treatment goals and improvements for every patient. Show less
This thesis describes the impact of Sex Chromosome Trisomies (SCT; XXX, XXY, XYY) on early social cognition. Individuals with SCT have an increased vulnerability for developing challenges on the... Show moreThis thesis describes the impact of Sex Chromosome Trisomies (SCT; XXX, XXY, XYY) on early social cognition. Individuals with SCT have an increased vulnerability for developing challenges on the social domain, given the convergent impact of the X and Y chromosome on brain networks that underly social adaptive development. We found that already from a very early age on, SCT can be associated with increased risk for vulnerabilities in social interactions, and with increased levels of social impairments associated with ASD. These findings suggest that SCT impact the maturation of the social brain already from an early age, and stresses the importance of early routine monitoring and (preventive) support of early social development in young children with SCT. Show less
The societal toll and human misery associated with mental health disorders is well established. Nonetheless, only about one in five minors with mental health difficulties access adequate... Show moreThe societal toll and human misery associated with mental health disorders is well established. Nonetheless, only about one in five minors with mental health difficulties access adequate professional support. Care pathways and procedures have to facilitate timely recognition and adequate evaluation of patients’ needs to navigate those who can benefit towards ‘the right service in the right place, at the right time, and delivered by the right person’ - a meaningful Chinese proverb often used by authors from the field of healthcare. To reach this meaningful goal, professionals should be able to ‘look’ at a patient and ‘see’ patients’ needs. This by relying on their sufficient knowledge to recognize a probable mental health need, their skills and experience to enquire further, known methods to reliably assess strengths and weaknesses, and readily available resources to translate what they see into an adequate support or management plan. In this PhD thesis we present a series of studies aimed to fill gaps in empirical knowledge on this topic of recognition, assessment, and referral of youth with mental health problems at the interface of primary care and mental healthcare. The results of the studies could inform clinicians on the status quo considering recognition and referral of minors with mental health problems. Moreover, the findings could serve policy and curriculum makers, thereby improving effective practices in child and adolescent mental healthcare. Show less