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Regular version of the site

A New Research Adventure Begins

On December 4-6, a cross-disciplinary workshop called ‘Cognitive Control, Communication and Perception: Psychological and Neurobiological Aspects’ will be held at Higher School of Economics in Moscow. The workshop is planned as an inaugural event for the recently launched Centre for Cognition & Decision Making at the HSE Faculty of Psychology. The centre incorporates a number of individual research groups, leaded by Vasily Klucharev,  Yury Shtyrov, Vadim Nikulin, Boris Gutkin, and Alexei Ossadtchi, whose studies cover a broad range of topics, including attention and decision-making, emotions, communication, action and perception (e.g., language comprehension and production), neurodynamics, neuroimaging and computational modelling of neurocognitive processes.

The centre is committed to establishing and maintaining a strong international research programme. Dr Pascal Belin, Professor at the Faculty of Medicine at Aix-Marseille University, Director of the European Center for Research in Medical Imaging, one of the key participants at the event, kindly agreed to speak with the HSE news service and shed some light on his research.

— The meeting in Moscow is an inaugural event for the newly organized Centre for Cognition & Decision Making at the HSE Faculty of Psychology. How do you see your participation in this kind of international research body?

— I’m looking forward to participating in this inaugural event, and I’m really happy to be there and begin a new adventure. I hope that during the three-day inauguration, I will meet some colleagues who share some specific interests with me, and then we will perhaps be able to collaborate. I would like to develop my own research interests and hopefully ensure that the Russian public and researchers know more about my work. In another direction, I would also be delighted to know more about the specific research done at this centre, and about how possible long-term collaboration might be envisaged.  That would be rather interesting.

— Could you please tell us a little about your report 'A Vocal Brain: Cerebral Processing of Voice Information'? What are the highlights and main findings of your research? 

— As for the highlights, I will present on the way our brain analyzes the sounds of the human voice. Not just speech but also all paralinguistic cues. There is varied research on it. For example, there is an interesting finding, a discovery that every single person, you, me – all of us – have areas of the brain dedicated to the voice. The human voice is an important signal; it plays such an important role in our social interactions that we have brain modules dedicated to specifically analyzing the voice.

— What makes our voice so important?

— It is really important because it contains lots of different sources of information, of course speech but also information on the body of a person, information on the emotional state, information on a person’s identity. During the millions of years of evolution, we elaborated on the abilities that we share with other animals. Speech is special, speech is unique for humans, but recognizing individuals by the voice, recognizing the emotions – these are the things that we share with many other animals that have a long evolutionary history. We are really good at that. And these abilities play a really important role. For example, when you hear somebody speaking, you might detect irony; that’s when what is being said is not exactly the same as the way you say it.

See also:

Psychologists Study Daydreaming in Russian Cultural Context

Researchers at HSE University, having examined the role of daydreaming in the Russian cultural context, conclude that constructive daydreaming can help people with gaining insight into their life's trajectory, fostering personal growth, discovering existential meaning, enhancing psychological wellbeing, and cultivating a balanced temporal perspective. The study findings have been published in Cultural-Historical Psychology.

Workaholism Helps Young Narcissists Boost New Venture Performance

An international team of researchers including Professor Galina Shirokova, Director of the Strategic Entrepreneurship Centre at HSE University in St Petersburg, and her students Nailya Galieva and Diana Doktorova, examined the impact of narcissism on young entrepreneurs' success. The authors have demonstrated that a company founder's workaholism can amplify the influence of narcissism on a new venture's performance. 

Plurilingualism Compensates for Low Extraversion in Nurturing Creative Skills

Researchers at the HSE Laboratory for Linguistic, Intercultural, and Creative Competencies have examined the role of the Big Five personality traits in moderating the development of creativity among individuals who use multiple languages and have intercultural experiences. It has been found that acquiring multiple languages and engaging with diverse cultures can enhance an individual's creativity and compensate for some deficiencies in communicative abilities. That said, language practices are likely to foster creativity only in mentally stable individuals. The paper has been published in the International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism.

Attainment of Happiness in Psychologically Mature Individuals Linked to Pursuit of Meaning

Austrian psychiatrist Viktor Frankl believed that the quest for meaning constitutes a fundamental and intrinsic motivation for all human beings. Some other authors suggest that the need for meaning or purpose only emerges at higher levels of personality development. According to a team of psychologists from HSE and the University of Paris Nanterre, individuals who have achieved higher levels of ego development are inclined to relinquish hedonistic motives in favour of cultivating mindfulness and embarking on a quest for meaning. These findings have been published in Frontiers in Psychology.

Married Men Less Prone to Workplace Burnout

Greater marital satisfaction lowers the risk of professional burnout, with this correlation being more pronounced among men than women. This is a conclusion made by HSE psychologists after conducting a study on the effect of social interactions on workplace burnout on a sample of 203 employees from several Russian companies. According to the researchers, gaining a better understanding of the specific aspects of burnout experienced by individuals makes it possible to address this syndrome more effectively. The paper has been published in Organizational Psychology.

HSE Psychologists Propose New Approach to Building Soft Skills

Researchers at HSE's School of Psychology have used the findings of studies into creativity and multilingualism to develop 'Plurilingual Intercultural Creative Keys’ (PICK), a new programme which integrates both aspects into the teaching and learning process. The study results have been published in Psychology. Journal of the Higher School of Economics.

Card File: Plurilingual Creativity

Fluency in foreign languages has multiple advantages in terms of cognitive abilities, communication skills, cultural awareness, and career advancement. But can bilingualism and plurilingualism (knowledge of multiple languages and related cultural contexts) contribute to creative thinking and one's ability to generate new ideas? Studies have shown that linguistic, intercultural and creative competencies are interrelated, and their synergy can give rise to plurilingual creativity. The following overview is based on several papers by Anatoly Kharkhurin, Director of the HSE Laboratory for Linguistic, Intercultural and Creative Competencies.

Readers Found to Rely on Word Spelling Rather Than Sound in Reading

Skilled readers are known to extract information not only from the word they are looking at but from the one directly following it. This phenomenon is called pre-processing. Researchers from the HSE Centre for Language and Brain analysed the eye movements of primary school children and adults during silent reading and found both groups to rely on orthographic, rather than phonological, information in pre-processing an upcoming word. The study has been published in the Journal of Experimental Child Psychology.

Psychological Intervention Reduced Stress during COVID Lockdown

Resilience and well-being in difficult times can be developed via online interventions in the workplace. An international team of researchers from France, the UK, and Russia (with the participation of researchers from the HSE International Laboratory of Positive Psychology of Personality and Motivation) studied the effectiveness of SPARK Resilience, a programme for developing resilience, at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. The results of the study were published in the PLOS One journal.

Light Breezes Improve Moods of Social Media Users

Sergey Smetanin, Research Fellow of the HSE Graduate School of Business, conducted a large-scale analysis to examine the impact of weather conditions on the sentiments expressed by users of the Odnoklassniki (OK) social network. The findings have been published in PeerJ Computer Science. This is the first study of its kind in Russia.