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Posts by Erik Bijleveld

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We built the openESM database:
▶️60 openly available experience sampling datasets (16K+ participants, 740K+ obs.) in one place
▶️Harmonized (meta-)data, fully open-source software
▶️Filter & search all data, simply download via R/Python

Find out more:
🌐 openesmdata.org
📝 doi.org/10.31234/osf...

5 months ago 278 144 14 14
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Postdoc Position: Workplace Communication and Employee Wellbeing | Radboud University Do you want to work as a Postdoc: Workplace Communication and Employee Wellbeing at the Faculty of Social Sciences? Check our vacancy!

2-year postdoc in our team, supervised by Laura Fruhen and Tirza van Noorden.

www.ru.nl/en/working-a...

6 months ago 1 2 0 0

@jonasdora.bsky.social seen this?

6 months ago 4 0 1 0
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Motivation and Emotion is seeking a new Editor-in-Chief! 4-year term starting Jan 2025. Looking for someone with vision, experience in motivation/emotion research, and editorial chops. Deadline: Aug 1. Ready to shape the field? Details: morgan.ryan@springer.com

9 months ago 8 8 1 0
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In our new RR, we will test whether and how mental fatigue impacts dishonesty:

rr.peercommunityin.org/PCIRegistere...

I am already excited about the to-be-collected data.

Nice work led by Mara Bialas 👏 (also with @maartenboksem.bsky.social)

10 months ago 10 1 1 1

also obviously it's 1377

11 months ago 2 0 0 0
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ashamedly i've never tried this (from Kahneman's 1973 'Attention and Effort')

11 months ago 2 1 1 0

I can confirm this (but I also really wanted it to happen)

11 months ago 1 0 1 0
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Day-to-day fluctuations in motivation drive effort-based decision-making www.pnas.org/doi/full/10....

11 months ago 10 3 0 0

You do not need to be Dutch to sign. If you simply care to preserve programs that have been leaders in rigor and reform in psychology, then signal your support for them to continue to thrive.

11 months ago 17 16 0 0
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On rewarded actions and punishment-avoidant inactions: The action–valence asymmetry in face perception Although social interactions are ubiquitous, people often choose not to interact with others—for example, people may choose to not greet a stranger, t…

New paper in JESP: "On rewarded actions and punishment-avoidant inactions: The action–valence asymmetry in face perception.”

In four preregistered experiments, we show that inactions influence evaluations of faces. (1/5)

www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...

1 year ago 11 5 2 2

"First, the idea that a few minutes of self-control can leave you unable to resist temptation later has been thoroughly debunked. What remains is something far more mundane: fatigue."

1 year ago 6 0 0 0
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Forthcoming at JEP: General is some more work from my dissertation. Over three experiments we test a popular model of cognitive effort aversion—the opportunity cost model, first proposed by Kurzban et al. (2013)—and find negligible support for its primary predictions. osf.io/preprints/ps...

1 year ago 11 3 1 1
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'Since the establishment of that template, this norm of the 40-hour working week, Monday to Friday, we see that not much has changed'

1 year ago 6 6 1 0

I'm excited to share a new preprint: In a novel experimental paradigm, we found evidence that stress induces a computational bias during alcohol-related decision-making in favor of alcohol, but this bias was only sometimes strong enough to overcome competing considerations (e.g., taste preferences).

1 year ago 41 24 3 3
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New large study (n ~ 6 million) in @JAMApsych tracking mental disorder trends in Denmark showing increases in mood disorders in recent birth cohorts tinyurl.com/c5nyfd8k

1 year ago 47 19 3 3
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The dynamics of boredom This Collection aims to advance our theoretical understanding of boredom, improve the methods used to study boredom, and consider practical applications for ...

📢 Call for Papers: Special Issue on Boredom! 📢

Boredom signals unsatisfactory interactions with our inner & outer worlds. For HSSComms, @corimartarelli.bsky.social & I are editing a collection exploring it through diverse lenses & methods 🤩

➡️ www.nature.com/collections/...

pls share liberally 🙏

1 year ago 3 10 0 0
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The unfathomable richness of seeing: http://osf.io/jmg35/

2 years ago 1 1 0 0

We're in the process of making a (I think) nice online Mackworth Clock Task in OpenSesame. Will share it at some point.

2 years ago 2 1 1 0
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All of this is not to criticize Hull, who gave ample credit to Tsai.

But... I think we could cite Tsai a bit more often, when we discuss how people (and other animals) minimize the expenditure of effort.
(5/5)

2 years ago 3 1 0 0

Many thanks to dr. Yong Wang and dr. Wei Chen at the Center for Brain, Mind, and Education at Shaoxing University for sending me Tsai's monograph. They published a lovely biography on Tsai in 2022 (which is the source of the portrait above). doi.org/10.1007/s132... (4/5)

2 years ago 1 0 1 0
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Tsai's "law of minimum effort" (left, 1932) is super similar to Hull's "law of less work" (right, 1943). (3/5)

2 years ago 0 0 1 0
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Tsai (1932) published a monograph titled "The laws of minimum effort and maximum satisfaction in animal behavior".

The monograph describes data from 21 T-maze experiments. Experiments 1-13 show that, when given the choice, rats learn to choose the option that requires least effort. (2/5)

2 years ago 2 0 1 0
portrait of Loh-Seng Tsai

portrait of Loh-Seng Tsai

Clark Hull usually gets credit for coming up with "law of less work" (or the "law of least effort") in 1943.

I recently learned that the Chinese psychologist Loh-Seng Tsai published the same idea 11 years before Hull.

🧵Short history thread (1/5):

2 years ago 10 3 1 0
Figure 1: Foraging trial diagram. On each trial participants chose to harvest the tree they were at (down arrow key) or travel to a new tree (right arrow key), during the travel they completed an effortful task, after which they arrived at a new patch with a replenished supply of apples. The tree is a green circle and rectangular brown trunk. The apples are red and lined up in a row on the bottom of the screen. There is a warrior avatar with a shield, helmet, and sword who jumps to harvest the apples.

Figure 1: Foraging trial diagram. On each trial participants chose to harvest the tree they were at (down arrow key) or travel to a new tree (right arrow key), during the travel they completed an effortful task, after which they arrived at a new patch with a replenished supply of apples. The tree is a green circle and rectangular brown trunk. The apples are red and lined up in a row on the bottom of the screen. There is a warrior avatar with a shield, helmet, and sword who jumps to harvest the apples.

I'm elated to share my PhD keystone paper published
@PNAS
www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/... I've poured my heart & soul into this project since 2016 (8 yrs!) & I'm happy to introduce the Effort Foraging Task to the world #CognitivePsychology #Motivation #Effort #Foraging #DecisionMaking 🧵

2 years ago 81 45 5 0
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Acute stress reduces effortful prosocial behaviour Participants under acute stress were less willing to exert a relatively low level of physical effort for actions that benefit another person compared to actions that benefit themselves.

New paper from the SCAN-Unit! How does acute stress impact effortful prosocial behaviour? @elife.bsky.social Forbes et al. elifesciences.org/articles/87271 1/8

2 years ago 12 10 1 1
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Guide to Effect Sizes and Confidence Intervals

Big 2024 announcement! The “Guide to Effect Sizes and Confidence Intervals” had a pretty substantial update and is slowly becoming the most comprehensive resource on effect sizes and confidence intervals. Here is a thread of some of the new additions 1/5 t.co/ByeSMQNJdp

2 years ago 120 69 1 6
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‚Science Advances‘ published our paper in which we asked:

"Where does all the sugar go in the brain?"
doi.org/10.1126/scia...

Short answer and 4 main findings in 🧵 below.
#funding: ERC_Research
#neuroskyence

2 years ago 72 36 2 3

Oh, wait, Bartley and Chute said this already *in 1945*.

2 years ago 0 0 0 0