TY - JOUR
AU - Hou, Peng
AU - Oechsle, Peter
AU - Kuckling, Dirk
AU - Paradies, Jan
ID - 22236
JF - Macromolecular Rapid Communications
SN - 1022-1336
TI - Palladium‐Catalyzed Polycondensation for the Synthesis of Poly(Aryl)Sulfides
ER -
TY - CHAP
AU - Schmidt, Jochen
ED - Schmidt, Jochen
ID - 36944
T2 - Erzähltes Selbst. Narrative Ethik aus theologischer und literaturwissenschaftlicher Perspektive – The narrated self. Narrative Ethics from the perspectives of theology and literary studies
TI - “Depression is the loneliest fucking thing on Earth” (Elisabeth Wurtzel): Depression memoirs as acts of lamentation?
ER -
TY - BOOK
AU - Schmidt, Jochen
ID - 36250
TI - Erzähltes Selbst. Narrative Ethik aus theologischer und literaturwissenschaftlicher Perspektive – The narrated self. Narrative Ethics from the perspectives of theology and literary studies
VL - 27
ER -
TY - JOUR
AU - Schmidt, Jochen
ID - 36943
JF - NZSTh
KW - hermeneuthik
KW - Ethik
TI - Die ethische Pascaline: Versuch über hermeneutische Ethik
VL - 62
ER -
TY - CONF
AU - Krause, Daniel
AU - Richert, Benjamin
AU - Weigelt, Matthias
ID - 38121
TI - Differences in event-related potentials indicate differential use of mental rotation processes in parity judgements of humanoid and alphanumeric stimuli
ER -
TY - CONF
AU - Krause, Daniel
AU - Richert, Benjamin
AU - Weigelt, Matthias
ID - 38115
TI - Neuronale Korrelate der mentalen Rotation von menschlichen Figuren und alphanumerischen Stimuli
ER -
TY - JOUR
AB - IntroductionNursing staff is burdened by high workload and stress. Furthermore, heavy lifting, as well as transferring nursing home residents, cause lumbar tissue damage and back pain. Exercise intervention studies to reduce work-related problems are rare and the evidence for efficacy of studies among nurses is limited. Studies including targeted analysis of requirements are necessary to generate effective recommendations and tailored interventions for health promotion programmes. The purpose of this multicentred intervention study is to identify work-related problems, to implement health promotion programmes and to evaluate their effectiveness.Methods and analysisA randomised controlled trial will be conducted, including a total of 48 nursing home facilities in eight regions of Germany with an estimated sample size of 700 nurses. Standardised ergonomics and posture training (10 weeks, once a week for 20–30 min) and subsequently, back-fitness training (12 weeks, once a week for 45–60 min) will be administered. Following the implementation of standardised health promotion programmes, further demand-oriented interventions can be implemented. The perceived exposure to work-related demands, work-related pain in different parts of the body, health-related quality of life, perceived stress, work-related patterns of behaviour and experience, presentism behaviour, work environment as well as general needs and barriers to health promotion, will be assessed at baseline (pre-test), at 10 weeks (post-test, after ergonomics training), at 22 weeks (post-test, after back-fitness training) and at 34 weeks of the programme (follow-up).Ethics and disseminationThe study was reviewed and approved by the local ethics committee of the University of Hamburg (AZ: 2018_168). The results of the study will be published in open-access and international journals. Furthermore, the results will be presented in the participating nursing homes and at national and international conferences.Trial registration numberDRKS.de (DRKS00015241).
AU - Otto, Ann-Kathrin
AU - Pietschmann, Juliane
AU - Appelles, Luisa-Marie
AU - Bebenek, Michael
AU - Bischoff, Laura L
AU - Hildebrand, Claudia
AU - Johnen, Bettina
AU - Jöllenbeck, Thomas
AU - Kemmler, Wolfgang
AU - Klotzbier, Thomas
AU - Korbus, Heide
AU - Rudisch, Julian
AU - Schott, Nadja
AU - Schoene, Daniel
AU - Voelcker-Rehage, Claudia
AU - Vogel, Oliver
AU - Vogt, Lutz
AU - Weigelt, Matthias
AU - Wilke, Jan
AU - Zwingmann, Katharina
AU - Wollesen, Bettina
ID - 37828
IS - 10
JF - BMJ Open
KW - General Medicine
SN - 2044-6055
TI - Physical activity and health promotion for nursing staff in elderly care: a study protocol for a randomised controlled trial
VL - 10
ER -
TY - JOUR
AU - Schmidt, Jochen
ID - 38125
IS - 5
JF - Wege zum Menschen
SN - 0043-2040
TI - Schmerz und die Grenzen der Sprache
VL - 72
ER -
TY - JOUR
AB - AbstractPurposeIn sports games, tactical instructions are mostly presented on tactic boards under temporal constraints determined by the length of time outs (e.g., 20–60 s time outs in basketball) and coaches’ instructional behavior. Thus, instructions should be presented in a way that enables fast and errorless information processing. High affordances in visual–spatial transformation (e.g., mental rotation processes) might both impede information processing and decrease execution performance. The aim of this study was to scrutinize the effect of different orientations of visual tactical displays on observation time under self-paced conditions as well as to compare the effects on execution performance to those of externally paced conditions. According to the self-determination theory, self-control over observation time is assumed to increase performance.MethodsIn a mixed-factors design with two factors, 48 participants were instructed to execute a basketball playing pattern, which was presented on a virtual tactic board in one of five different spatial disparities to the players’ on-court perspective. The Self-Paced Group determined the observation time in a self-controlled manner, whereas in the Yoked Group observation times were externally controlled, i.e., the observation time was constrained to match that of the Self-Paced Group..ResultsThe self-controlled time for watching the pattern before execution was significantly shorter and spatial accuracy in pattern execution was significantly higher for low disparity between instruction perspective and on-court perspective. Self-control over observation time did not affect execution accuracy.ConclusionThe orientation effects might be explained by interfering mental rotation processes that are necessary to transform the instructional perspective into the players’ egocentric perspective. According to these results, coaches should align their tactic boards to their players’ on-court viewing perspective.
AU - Krause, Daniel
AU - Weigelt, Matthias
ID - 37787
IS - 3
JF - German Journal of Exercise and Sport Research
KW - Physical Therapy
KW - Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation
KW - Orthopedics and Sports Medicine
SN - 2509-3142
TI - Mental rotation and performance in basketball: effects of self-controlled and externally controlled time constraints on the processing and execution of tactic board instructions with varied orientations
VL - 50
ER -
TY - JOUR
AB - BACKGROUND: A detail of previous studies on mental rotation, which has not received any attention so far, relates to the testing situation of the participants. In nearly every study, participants were tested in a sitting posture (and not standing). However, when considering embodied cognition approaches on mental processes, participants may not be able to fully exploit these processes when performing mental rotation tasks in a sitting posture.
AIM: Therefore, the aim of the present study is to examine the potential influence of two different postures (sitting vs. standing), when solving mental body rotation tasks.
METHOD: Sixteen participants (6 females) were tested in two mental body-rotation tasks (MBRT), requiring either an object-based spatial transformation (based on a same-different judgment) or an egocentric transformation (based on a left-right judgment) in a sitting and in a standing posture. Reaction times and response errors were analysed in two three-way ANOVAs, with the factors orientation, task, and posture.
RESULTS: Results revealed an effect of orientation and task, indicating that participants performed better for egocentric than for object-based transformations. However, there was no effect of posture.
CONCLUSION: The different dynamics of postural control during sitting and standing do not induce different embodiment effects on mental rotation.
AU - Budde, Kirsten
AU - Barela, José Angelo
AU - Figueiredo, Gabriella Andreeta
AU - Weigelt, Matthias
ID - 37796
IS - 2
JF - Brazilian Journal of Motor Behavior
KW - General Engineering
SN - 2446-4902
TI - Mental body rotation with egocentric and object-based transformations in different postures: sitting vs. standing
VL - 14
ER -