385 results on '"Discrimination (Psychology)"'
Search Results
202. Attentional orienting and awareness: evidence from a discrimination task
- Author
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López Ramón, Mf, Chica, Ab, Bartolomeo, Paolo, Lupiáñez, J., López Ramón, Mf, Chica, Ab, Bartolomeo, Paolo, and Lupiáñez, J.
- Abstract
We used several cue-target SOAs (100, 500, 1000 ms) and three different degrees of cue predictability (Non-predictive-50%, Predictive-75%, Counter-predictive-25%), to investigate the role of awareness of cue-target predictability on cueing effects. A group of participants received instructions about the informative value of the cue, while another group did not receive such instructions. Participants were able to extract the predictive value of a spatially peripheral cue and use it to orient attention, whether or not specific instructions about the predictive value of the cue were given, and no matter their ability to correctly report it in a post-test questionnaire. In the non-predictive block, bad estimators who received no instructions showed regular cueing effects, while good estimators exhibited smaller and non-significant facilitatory effects at the short SOA and an absence of significant IOR at longer SOAs. However, for the instructions group, the pattern of results reversed.
- Published
- 2011
203. Spatial attention and conscious perception: the role of endogenous and exogenous orienting
- Author
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Chica, Ab, Lasaponara, S, Chanes, L, Valero Cabré, A, Doricchi, F, Lupiáñez, J, Bartolomeo, Paolo, Chica, Ab, Lasaponara, S, Chanes, L, Valero Cabré, A, Doricchi, F, Lupiáñez, J, and Bartolomeo, Paolo
- Abstract
Attention has often been considered to be a gateway to consciousness (Posner, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 91(16), 7398-7403, 1994). However, its relationship with conscious perception (CP) remains highly controversial. While theoretical models and experimental data support the role of attention in CP (Chica, Lasaponara, Lupiáñez, Doricchi, & Bartolomeo, NeuroImage, 51, 1205-1212, 2010; Dehaene, Changeux, Naccache, Sackur, & Sergent, Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 10, 204-211, 2006; Mack & Rock, Inattentional blindness, 1998), recent studies have claimed that at least some forms of attention--endogenous or top-down spatial attention--are neither sufficient nor necessary for CP (Koch & Tsuchiya, Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 11, 16-22, 2007). In the present experiments, we demonstrate the importance of exogenously triggered attention for the modulation of CP. Weak or null effects were instead observed when attention was triggered endogenously. Our data are discussed in the framework of recent neuropsychological models (Dehaene et al., Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 10, 204-211, 2006), postulating that activity within reverberating frontoparietal networks, as colocalized with spatial-orienting systems, is the brain correlate of consciously processed information.
- Published
- 2011
204. Phasic auditory alerting improves visual conscious perception
- Author
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Kusnir, F, Chica, Ab, Mitsumasu, Ma, Bartolomeo, Paolo, Kusnir, F, Chica, Ab, Mitsumasu, Ma, and Bartolomeo, Paolo
- Abstract
Attention is often conceived as a gateway to consciousness (Posner, 1994). Although endogenous spatial attention may be independent of conscious perception (CP) (Koch Tsuchiya, 2007), exogenous spatial orienting seems instead to be an important modulator of CP (Chica, Lasaponara, Lupiáñez, Doricchi, & Bartolomeo, 2010; Chica, Lasaponara, et al., 2011). Here, we investigate the role of auditory alerting in CP in normal observers. We used a behavioral task in which phasic alerting tones were presented either at unpredictable or at predictable time intervals prior to the occurrence of a near-threshold visual target. We find, for the first time in neurologically intact observers, that phasic alertness increases CP, both objectively and subjectively. This result is consistent with evidence showing that phasic alerting can ameliorate the spatial bias exhibited by visual neglect patients (Robertson, Mattingley, Rorden, & Driver, 1998). The alerting network may increase the activity of fronto-parietal networks involved in top-down amplification required to bring a stimulus into consciousness (Dehaene, Changeux, Naccache, Sackur, & Sergent, 2006).
- Published
- 2011
205. Acquired prosopagnosia abolishes the face inversion effect
- Author
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UCL - SSS/IONS/COSY - Systems & cognitive Neuroscience, UCL - SSH/IPSY - Psychological Sciences Research Institute, Busigny, Thomas, Rossion, Bruno, UCL - SSS/IONS/COSY - Systems & cognitive Neuroscience, UCL - SSH/IPSY - Psychological Sciences Research Institute, Busigny, Thomas, and Rossion, Bruno
- Abstract
Individual faces are notoriously difficult to recognize when they are presented upside-down. Since acquired prosopagnosia (AP) has been associated with an impairment of expert face processes, a reduced or abolished face inversion effect (FIE) is expected in AP. However, previous studies have incongruently reported apparent normal effects of inversion, a decreased or abolished FIE, but also a surprisingly better performance for inverted faces for some patients. While these discrepant observations may be due to the variability of high-level processes impaired, a careful look at the literature rather suggests that the pattern of FIE in prosopagnosia has been obscured by a selection of patients with associated low-level defects and general visual recognition impairments, as well as trade-offs between accuracy and correct RT measures. Here we conducted an extensive investigation of upright and inverted face processing in a well-characterized case of face-selective AP, PS (Rossion et al., 2003). In 4 individual face discrimination experiments, PS did not present any inversion effect at all, taking into account all dependent measures of performance. However, she showed a small inversion cost for individualizing members of a category of non-face objects (cars), just like normal observers. A fifth experiment with personally familiar faces to recognize confirmed the lack of inversion effect for PS. Following the present report and a survey of the literature, we conclude that the FIE is generally absent, or at least clearly reduced following AP. We also suggest that the paradoxical superior performance for inverted faces observed in rare cases may be due to additional upper visual field defects rather than to high-level competing visual processes. These observations are entirely compatible with the view that AP is associated with a disruption of a process that is also abolished following inversion: the holistic representation of individual exemplars of the face class.
- Published
- 2010
206. Acquired prosopagnosia as a face-specific disorder : ruling out the general visual similarity account
- Author
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UCL - SSH/IPSY - Psychological Sciences Research Institute, UCL - SSS/IONS - Institute of NeuroScience, Busigny, Thomas, Graf, Markus, Mayer, Eugene, Rossion, Bruno, UCL - SSH/IPSY - Psychological Sciences Research Institute, UCL - SSS/IONS - Institute of NeuroScience, Busigny, Thomas, Graf, Markus, Mayer, Eugene, and Rossion, Bruno
- Abstract
Prosopagnosia is classically defined as a disorder of visual recognition specific to faces, following brain damage. However, according to a long-standing alternative view, these patients would rather be generally impaired in recognizing objects belonging to visually homogenous categories, including faces. We tested this alternative hypothesis stringently with a well-documented brain-damaged prosopagnosic patient (PS) in three delayed forced-choice recognition experiments in which visual similarity between a target and its distractor was manipulated parametrically: novel 3D geometric shapes, morphed pictures of common objects, and morphed photographs of a highly homogenous familiar category (cars). In all experiments, PS showed normal performance and speed, and there was no evidence of a steeper increase of error rates and RTs with increasing levels of visual similarity, compared to controls. These data rule out an account of acquired prosopagnosia in terms of a more general impairment in recognizing objects from visually homogenous categories. An additional experiment with morphed faces confirmed that PS was specifically impaired at individual face recognition. However, in stark contrast to the alternative view of prosopagnosia, PS was relatively more impaired at the easiest levels of discrimination, i.e. when individual faces differ clearly in global shape rather than when faces were highly similar and had to be discriminated based on fine-grained details. Overall, these observations as well as a review of previous evidence, lead us to conclude that this alternative view of prosopagnosia does not hold. Rather, it seems that brain damage in adulthood may lead to selective recognition impairment for faces, perhaps the only category of visual stimuli for which holistic/configural perception is not only potentially at play, but is strictly necessary to individualize members of the category efficiently.
- Published
- 2010
207. Holistic perception of the individual face is specific and necessary : evidence from an extensive case study of acquired prosopagnosia
- Author
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UCL - SSH/IPSY - Psychological Sciences Research Institute, UCL - SSS/IONS - Institute of NeuroScience, Busigny, Thomas, Joubert, Sven, Felician, Olivier, Ceccaldi, Mathieu, Rossion, Bruno, UCL - SSH/IPSY - Psychological Sciences Research Institute, UCL - SSS/IONS - Institute of NeuroScience, Busigny, Thomas, Joubert, Sven, Felician, Olivier, Ceccaldi, Mathieu, and Rossion, Bruno
- Abstract
We present an extensive investigation (24 experiments) of a new case of prosopagnosia following right unilateral damage, GG, with the aim of addressing two classical issues: 1) Can a visual recognition impairment truly be specific to faces? 2) What is the nature of acquired prosopagnosia? We show that GG recognizes nonface objects perfectly and quickly, even when it requires fine-grained analysis to individualize these objects. He is also capable of perceiving objects and faces as integrated wholes, as indicated by normal Navon effect, 3D-figures perception and perception of Mooney and Arcimboldo face stimuli. However, the patient could not perceive individual faces holistically, showing no inversion, composite, or whole-part advantage effects for faces. We conclude that an occipito-temporal right hemisphere lesion may lead to a specific impairment of holistic perception of individual items, a function that appears critical for normal face recognition but not for object recognition.
- Published
- 2010
208. Are coarse scales sufficient for fast detection of visual threat?
- Author
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UCL - SSH/IPSY - Psychological Sciences Research Institute, Mermillod, Martial, Droit-Volet, Sylvie, Devaux, Damien, Schaefer, Alexandre, Vermeulen, Nicolas, UCL - SSH/IPSY - Psychological Sciences Research Institute, Mermillod, Martial, Droit-Volet, Sylvie, Devaux, Damien, Schaefer, Alexandre, and Vermeulen, Nicolas
- Abstract
It has recently been suggested that low-spatial-frequency information would provide rapid visual cues to the amygdala for basic but ultrarapid behavioral responses to dangerous stimuli. The present behavioral study investigated the role of different spatial-frequency channels in visually detecting dangerous stimuli belonging to living or nonliving categories. Subjects were engaged in a visual detection task involving dangerous stimuli, and subjects' behavioral responses were assessed in association with their fear expectations (induced by an aversive 90-dB white noise). Our results showed that, despite its crudeness, low-spatial-frequency information could constitute a sufficient signal for fast recognition of visual danger in a context of fear expectation. In addition, we found that this effect tended to be specific for living entities. These results were obtained despite a strong perceptual bias toward faster recognition of high-spatial-frequency stimuli under supraliminal perception durations. © 2010 The Author(s).
- Published
- 2010
209. Anisotropies in judging the direction of moving natural scenes
- Author
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Dakin, Steven C, Apthorp, Deborah, Alais, David, Dakin, Steven C, Apthorp, Deborah, and Alais, David
- Abstract
Although visual systems are optimized to deal with the natural visual environment, our understanding of human motion perception is in large part based on the use of artificial stimuli. Here, we assessed observers' ability to estimate the direction of translating natural images and fractals by having them adjust the orientation of a subsequently viewed line. A system of interleaved staircases, driven by observers' direction estimates, ensured that stimuli were presented near one of 16 reference directions. The resulting error distributions (i.e., the differences between reported and true directions) reveal several anisotropies in global motion processing. First, observers' estimates are biased away from cardinal directions (reference repulsion). Second, the standard deviations of estimates show an "oblique effect" being ∼45% lower around cardinal directions. Third, errors around cardinal directions are more likely (∼22%) to approach zero than would be consistent with Gaussian-distributed errors, suggesting that motion processing minimizes the number as well as magnitude of errors. Fourth, errors are similar for natural scenes and fractals, indicating that observers do not use top-down information to improve performance. Finally, adaptation to unidirectional motion modifies observers' bias by amplifying existing repulsion (e.g., around cardinal directions). This bias change can improve direction discrimination but is not due to a reduction in variability.
- Published
- 2010
210. Recessively inherited parkinsonism:effect of ATP13A2 mutations on the clinical and neuroimaging phenotype
- Author
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Brüggemann, Norbert, Hagenah, Johann, Reetz, Kathrin, Schmidt, Alexander, Kasten, Meike, Buchmann, Inga, Eckerle, Susanne, Bähre, Manfred, Münchau, Alexander, Djarmati, Ana, van der Vegt, Joyce, Siebner, Hartwig, Binkofski, Ferdinand, Ramirez, Alfredo, Behrens, Maria I, Klein, Christine, Brüggemann, Norbert, Hagenah, Johann, Reetz, Kathrin, Schmidt, Alexander, Kasten, Meike, Buchmann, Inga, Eckerle, Susanne, Bähre, Manfred, Münchau, Alexander, Djarmati, Ana, van der Vegt, Joyce, Siebner, Hartwig, Binkofski, Ferdinand, Ramirez, Alfredo, Behrens, Maria I, and Klein, Christine
- Abstract
To determine clinical features and to identify changes in brain structure and function in compound heterozygous and heterozygous ATP13A2 mutation carriers.
- Published
- 2010
211. Unconscious strategies? Commentary on Risko and Stolz (2010): 'the proportion valid effect in covert orienting: strategic control or implicit learning?'
- Author
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Chica, Ab, Bartolomeo, Paolo, Chica, Ab, and Bartolomeo, Paolo
- Abstract
Unconscious strategies? Commentary on Risko and Stolz (2010): "the proportion valid effect in covert orienting: strategic control or implicit learning?"
- Published
- 2010
212. Impaired sense of smell and color discrimination in monogenic and idiopathic Parkinson's disease
- Author
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Kertelge, Lena, Brüggemann, Norbert, Schmidt, Alexander, Tadic, Vera, Wisse, Claudia, Dankert, Sylwia, Drude, Laura, van der Vegt, Joyce, Siebner, Hartwig, Pawlack, Heike, Pramstaller, Peter P, Behrens, Maria Isabel, Ramirez, Alfredo, Reichel, Dirk, Buhmann, Carsten, Hagenah, Johann, Klein, Christine, Lohmann, Katja, Kasten, Meike, Kertelge, Lena, Brüggemann, Norbert, Schmidt, Alexander, Tadic, Vera, Wisse, Claudia, Dankert, Sylwia, Drude, Laura, van der Vegt, Joyce, Siebner, Hartwig, Pawlack, Heike, Pramstaller, Peter P, Behrens, Maria Isabel, Ramirez, Alfredo, Reichel, Dirk, Buhmann, Carsten, Hagenah, Johann, Klein, Christine, Lohmann, Katja, and Kasten, Meike
- Abstract
Olfaction is typically impaired in idiopathic Parkinson's disease (IPD), but its role is uncertain in monogenic PD. Diminished color discrimination has been suggested as another early sign of dopaminergic dysfunction but not been systematically studied. Furthermore, it is unknown whether both deficits are linked. We examined 100 patients with IPD, 27 manifesting mutation carriers (MC), 20 nonmanifesting mutation carriers (NMC), and 110 controls. Participants underwent a standardized neurological examination, the University of Pennsylvania Smell Identification Test (UPSIT), the Farnsworth-Munsell (FM) color discrimination test, and mutation testing in known PD genes. The monogenic group consisted of 15 Parkin (6MC/9NMC), 17 PINK1 (10MC/7NMC), 8 LRRK2 (4MC/4NMC), 3 SNCA (MC), and 4 ATP13A2 (MC) carriers. Olfaction was most impaired in IPD (UPSIT percentiles 10.1 ± 13.5) compared with all other groups (MC 13.8 ± 11.9, NMC 19.6 ± 13.0, controls 33.8 ± 22.4). Within MC, carriers of two mutations in Parkin and PINK1 showed higher UPSIT percentiles than LRRK2 and SNCA carriers. Color discrimination was reduced in IPD (FM total error score 134.8 ± 92.7). In MC (122.4 ± 142.4), the reduction was most pronounced in LRRK2, NMC (80.0 ± 38.8) were comparable with controls (97.2 ± 61.1). UPSIT and FM scores were correlated in the control (r = -0.305; P = 0.002) and the IPD group (r = -0.303; P = 0.006) but not among mutation carriers. First, we confirmed olfaction and color discrimination to be impaired in IPD and suggest olfaction to be a premotor sign. Second, olfaction differed between carriers with one and two mutations in Parkin/PINK1-associated PD. Third, olfaction and color discrimination impairment do not necessarily evolve in parallel., Olfaction is typically impaired in idiopathic Parkinson's disease (IPD), but its role is uncertain in monogenic PD. Diminished color discrimination has been suggested as another early sign of dopaminergic dysfunction but not been systematically studied. Furthermore, it is unknown whether both deficits are linked. We examined 100 patients with IPD, 27 manifesting mutation carriers (MC), 20 nonmanifesting mutation carriers (NMC), and 110 controls. Participants underwent a standardized neurological examination, the University of Pennsylvania Smell Identification Test (UPSIT), the Farnsworth-Munsell (FM) color discrimination test, and mutation testing in known PD genes. The monogenic group consisted of 15 Parkin (6MC/9NMC), 17 PINK1 (10MC/7NMC), 8 LRRK2 (4MC/4NMC), 3 SNCA (MC), and 4 ATP13A2 (MC) carriers. Olfaction was most impaired in IPD (UPSIT percentiles 10.1 ± 13.5) compared with all other groups (MC 13.8 ± 11.9, NMC 19.6 ± 13.0, controls 33.8 ± 22.4). Within MC, carriers of two mutations in Parkin and PINK1 showed higher UPSIT percentiles than LRRK2 and SNCA carriers. Color discrimination was reduced in IPD (FM total error score 134.8 ± 92.7). In MC (122.4 ± 142.4), the reduction was most pronounced in LRRK2, NMC (80.0 ± 38.8) were comparable with controls (97.2 ± 61.1). UPSIT and FM scores were correlated in the control (r = -0.305; P = 0.002) and the IPD group (r = -0.303; P = 0.006) but not among mutation carriers. First, we confirmed olfaction and color discrimination to be impaired in IPD and suggest olfaction to be a premotor sign. Second, olfaction differed between carriers with one and two mutations in Parkin/PINK1-associated PD. Third, olfaction and color discrimination impairment do not necessarily evolve in parallel.
- Published
- 2010
213. Region- and edge-based configurational effects in texture segmentation
- Author
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Enrico Giora, Clara Casco, Giora, E, Casco, C, Giora, Enrico, and Casco, C.
- Subjects
Adult ,REPRESENTATION ,Similarity (geometry) ,Time Factors ,Time Factor ,FIGURE-GROUND SEGMENTATION ,Poison control ,Geometry ,Orientation (graph theory) ,Edge (geometry) ,Models, Psychological ,Texture (geology) ,Contrast Sensitivity ,Optics ,Discrimination, Psychological ,PRIMARY VISUAL-CORTEX ,SPATIAL FILTERS ,VISION ,SEGREGATION ,DISCRIMINATION ,ARCHITECTURE ,SIMILARITY ,MODULATION ,Orientation ,Modulation (music) ,Humans ,Segmentation ,Discrimination (Psychology) ,Physics ,business.industry ,Sensory Systems ,Ophthalmology ,Edge based ,Visual Perception ,business ,Photic Stimulation - Abstract
We have found a new configurational effect in texture segmentation. In addition to collinear facilitation at the edge, this effect results from contextual modulation within the texture-region, i.e. from texels not abutting the segmented edge. The largest facilitation was found when two conditions were fulfilled: (i) elements along the edge were parallel to the edge and collinear, (ii) elements in the texture-region were also collinear but non-parallel to the edge. We show that this facilitation occurs when there are groups of different orientation from the edge in the texture-region. We suggest two possible underlying mechanisms: either a region-based process that links collinear iso-oriented elements and locates the edge when the orientation changes, or else second-order filters tuned to orientation differences rather than orientation per se.
- Published
- 2006
214. Rapid Brain Discrimination of Sounds of Objects
- Author
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Stephanie Clarke, Christian Camen, Micah M. Murray, Pierre Bovet, and Sara L. Gonzalez Andino
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Audiology ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Discrimination, Psychological ,Electromagnetic Fields ,Neuroimaging ,Event-related potential ,medicine ,Reaction Time ,Humans ,Auditory Cortex ,Auditory Perception ,Brain Mapping ,Discrimination (Psychology) ,Electroencephalography ,Evoked Potentials, Auditory ,Female ,Pattern Recognition, Physiological ,Semantics ,Sound ,Temporal Lobe ,Brain network ,Communication ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,Cognitive neuroscience of visual object recognition ,Articles ,Frontal Cortices ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Scalp ,Spectrogram ,business ,Psychology - Abstract
Electrical neuroimaging in humans identified the speed and spatiotemporal brain mechanism whereby sounds of living and man-made objects are discriminated. Subjects performed an "oddball" target detection task, selectively responding to sounds of either living or man-made objects on alternating blocks, which were controlled for in their spectrogram and harmonics-to-noise ratios between categories. Analyses were conducted on 64-channel auditory evoked potentials (AEPs) from nontarget trials. Comparing responses to sounds of living versus man-made objects, these analyses tested for modulations in local AEP waveforms, global response strength, and the topography of the electric field at the scalp. In addition, the local autoregressive average distributed linear inverse solution was applied to periods of observed modulations. Just 70 ms after stimulus onset, a common network of brain regions within the auditory "what" processing stream responded more strongly to sounds of man-made versus living objects, with differential activity within the right temporal and left inferior frontal cortices. Over the 155-257 ms period, the duration of activity of a brain network, including bilateral temporal and premotor cortices, differed between categories of sounds. Responses to sounds of living objects peaked approximately 12 ms later and the activity of the brain network active over this period was prolonged relative to that in response to sounds of man-made objects. The earliest task-related effects were observed at approximately 100 ms poststimulus onset, placing an upper limit on the speed of cortical auditory object discrimination. These results provide critical temporal constraints on human auditory object recognition and semantic discrimination processes.
- Published
- 2006
215. Model studies for evaluating the acute neurobehavioral effects of complex hydrocarbon solvents. I. Validation of methods with ethanol
- Subjects
Male ,Time Factors ,Wistar ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Nervous System ,human experiment ,memory ,hydrocarbon ,Mental Processes ,Models ,alcohol blood level ,toxicokinetics ,rat ,statistical significance ,learning ,alcohol ,adult ,article ,priority journal ,validation study ,Visual Perception ,Drug ,Human ,species comparison ,alcohol consumption ,animal experiment ,Motor Activity ,solvent ,observational method ,Dose-Response Relationship ,Animals ,Humans ,Animalia ,controlled study ,normal human ,neuromuscular function ,Biology ,Discrimination (Psychology) ,Behavior ,visual discrimination ,Acute CNS effects ,nonhuman ,Ethanol ,Animal ,Verbal Behavior ,Body Weight ,Reproducibility of Results ,central nervous system ,sensorimotor function ,attention ,Rats ,Affect ,Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology ,psychomotor performance ,Solvents - Abstract
As a preliminary step to evaluating the acute neurobehavioral effects of hydrocarbon solvents and to establish a working model for extrapolating animal test data to humans, joint neurobehavioral/toxicokinetic studies were conducted which involved administering ethanol to rats and volunteers. The specific objectives of the present studies were to evaluate the acute central nervous system (CNS) effects of ethanol in rats and humans and to assess relationships between internal levels of exposure and behavioral effects. A more general objective was to validate a battery of neurobehavioral tests that could be used to carry out comparative studies in both species. Accordingly, a range of tests including standardized observational measures, spontaneous motor activity assessments and learned visual discrimination performance was utilized in rat studies to evaluate acute CNS effects. Groups of rats were given ethanol at levels of approximately 0.5, 1.0 or 2.0 g/kg, with blood level measurements to verify internal doses. In a volunteer study, 12 healthy male subjects were given 0.65 g/kg ethanol, a level approximating the limit for motor vehicle operation in The Netherlands, and neurobehavioral effects were measured prior to and 1 and 3 h after ethanol administration, with a computerized neurobehavioral test battery. Blood and air measurements were made to quantify internal doses. Results of the behavioral tests in rats provided evidence of ethanol-induced changes in neuromuscular, sensori-motor, and activity domains. There were also significant changes in visual discrimination, particularly in the areas of general measures of responding and psychomotor speed. In humans there were small but statistically significant effects on learning and memory, psychomotor skills and attention. However, the effects were subtle and not all parameters within given domains were affected. These studies demonstrated a qualitative similarity in response between rats and humans. © 2006 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2006
216. Model studies for evaluating the acute neurobehavioral effects of complex hydrocarbon solvents. I. Validation of methods with ethanol
- Author
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McKee, R.H., Lammers, J.H.C.M., Hoogendijk, E.M.G., Emmen, H.H., Muijser, H., Barsotti, D.A., Owen, D.E., Kulig, B.M., and TNO Kwaliteit van Leven
- Subjects
Male ,Time Factors ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Nervous System ,human experiment ,memory ,hydrocarbon ,Mental Processes ,alcohol blood level ,toxicokinetics ,rat ,statistical significance ,learning ,Behavior, Animal ,alcohol ,adult ,article ,priority journal ,validation study ,Models, Animal ,Visual Perception ,Human ,species comparison ,alcohol consumption ,animal experiment ,Motor Activity ,solvent ,observational method ,Animals ,Humans ,Animalia ,controlled study ,normal human ,neuromuscular function ,Rats, Wistar ,Biology ,Discrimination (Psychology) ,Behavior ,visual discrimination ,Acute CNS effects ,nonhuman ,Ethanol ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Verbal Behavior ,Body Weight ,Reproducibility of Results ,central nervous system ,sensorimotor function ,attention ,Rats ,Affect ,Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology ,psychomotor performance ,Solvents - Abstract
As a preliminary step to evaluating the acute neurobehavioral effects of hydrocarbon solvents and to establish a working model for extrapolating animal test data to humans, joint neurobehavioral/toxicokinetic studies were conducted which involved administering ethanol to rats and volunteers. The specific objectives of the present studies were to evaluate the acute central nervous system (CNS) effects of ethanol in rats and humans and to assess relationships between internal levels of exposure and behavioral effects. A more general objective was to validate a battery of neurobehavioral tests that could be used to carry out comparative studies in both species. Accordingly, a range of tests including standardized observational measures, spontaneous motor activity assessments and learned visual discrimination performance was utilized in rat studies to evaluate acute CNS effects. Groups of rats were given ethanol at levels of approximately 0.5, 1.0 or 2.0 g/kg, with blood level measurements to verify internal doses. In a volunteer study, 12 healthy male subjects were given 0.65 g/kg ethanol, a level approximating the limit for motor vehicle operation in The Netherlands, and neurobehavioral effects were measured prior to and 1 and 3 h after ethanol administration, with a computerized neurobehavioral test battery. Blood and air measurements were made to quantify internal doses. Results of the behavioral tests in rats provided evidence of ethanol-induced changes in neuromuscular, sensori-motor, and activity domains. There were also significant changes in visual discrimination, particularly in the areas of general measures of responding and psychomotor speed. In humans there were small but statistically significant effects on learning and memory, psychomotor skills and attention. However, the effects were subtle and not all parameters within given domains were affected. These studies demonstrated a qualitative similarity in response between rats and humans. © 2006 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2006
217. Is the loss of diagnosticity of the eye region of the face a common aspect of acquired prosopagnosia?
- Author
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UCL - MD/FSIO - Département de physiologie et pharmacologie, UCL - PSP/PSP - Faculté de psychologie et des sciences de l'éducation, Rossion, Bruno, Kaiser, Martha D, Bub, Daniel, Tanaka, James W, UCL - MD/FSIO - Département de physiologie et pharmacologie, UCL - PSP/PSP - Faculté de psychologie et des sciences de l'éducation, Rossion, Bruno, Kaiser, Martha D, Bub, Daniel, and Tanaka, James W
- Abstract
A recent study published in this journal has shown an abnormal performance at discriminating differences with respect to the eyes of unfamiliar faces in two acquired prosopagnosic patients, but preserved processing of the mouth region. Here we extend these findings by showing a similar lack of sensitivity to the eyes in the very same face matching experiment for the prosopagnosic patient PS, who also showed normal performance for detecting differences in the mouth region. These results complement previously published evidence that the patient PS presents a lack of sensitivity to diagnostic information located on the eyes of familiar faces during individual face recognition tasks. More generally, they indicate that the impaired processing of the eyes of faces is a fundamental aspect of acquired prosopagnosia that can arise following damage to different brain localizations.
- Published
- 2009
218. Odour discrimination and identification are improved in early blindness.
- Author
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UCL - (SLuc) Service d'oto-rhino-laryngologie, UCL - MD/NOPS - Département de neurologie et de psychiatrie, UCL - (SLuc) Service de neurologie pédiatrique, Cuevas Quezada, Isabel, Plaza, Paula, Rombaux, Philippe, De Volder, Anne, Renier, Laurent, UCL - (SLuc) Service d'oto-rhino-laryngologie, UCL - MD/NOPS - Département de neurologie et de psychiatrie, UCL - (SLuc) Service de neurologie pédiatrique, Cuevas Quezada, Isabel, Plaza, Paula, Rombaux, Philippe, De Volder, Anne, and Renier, Laurent
- Abstract
Previous studies showed that early blind humans develop superior abilities in the use of their remaining senses, hypothetically due to a functional reorganization of the deprived visual brain areas. While auditory and tactile functions have been investigated for long, little is known about the effects of early visual deprivation on olfactory processing. However, blind humans make an extensive use of olfactory information in their daily life. Here we investigated olfactory discrimination and identification abilities in early blind subjects and age-matched sighted controls. Three levels of cuing were used in the identification task, i.e. free-identification (no cue), categorization (semantic cues) and multiple choice (semantic and phonological cues). Early blind subjects significantly outperformed the controls in odour discrimination, free-identification and categorization. In addition, the larger group difference was observed in the free-identification as compared to the categorization and the multiple choice conditions. This indicated that a better access to the semantic information from odour perception accounted for part of the improved olfactory performances in odour identification in the blind. We concluded that early blind subjects have both improved perceptual abilities and a better access to the information stored in semantic memory than sighted subjects.
- Published
- 2009
219. Increasing olfactory bulb volume due to treatment of chronic rhinosinusitis--a longitudinal study.
- Author
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UCL - (SLuc) Service d'oto-rhino-laryngologie, UCL - MD/NOPS - Département de neurologie et de psychiatrie, Gudziol, V, Buschhüter, D, Abolmaali, N., Gerber, J, Rombaux, Philippe, Hummel, T, UCL - (SLuc) Service d'oto-rhino-laryngologie, UCL - MD/NOPS - Département de neurologie et de psychiatrie, Gudziol, V, Buschhüter, D, Abolmaali, N., Gerber, J, Rombaux, Philippe, and Hummel, T
- Abstract
Differentiation of progenitor cells into neurons in the olfactory bulb depends on olfactory stimulation that can lead to an increase in olfactory bulb volume. In this study, we investigated whether the human olfactory bulb volume increases with increasing olfactory function due to treatment of chronic rhinosinusitis. Nineteen patients with chronic rhinosinusitis were investigated before and after treatment. For comparison, additional measurements were performed in 18 healthy volunteers. Volumetric measurements of the olfactory bulb were based on planimetric manual contouring of magnetic resonance scans. Olfactory function was evaluated separately for each nostril using tests for odour threshold, odour discrimination and odour identification. Measurements were performed on two occasions, 3 months apart. In healthy controls, the olfactory bulb volume did not change significantly between the two measurements. In contrast, the olfactory bulb volume in patients increased significantly from the initial 64.5 +/- 3.2 to 70.0 +/- 3.5 mm(3) on the left side (P = 0.02) and from 60.9 +/- 3.5 to 72.4 +/- 2.8 mm(3) on the right side (P < 0.001). The increase in olfactory bulb volume correlated significantly with an increase in odour thresholds (r = 0.60, P = 0.006, left side; r = 0.49, P = 0.03, right side), but not with changes in odour discrimination or odour identification. Results of this study support the idea that stimulation of olfactory receptor neurons impacts on the cell death in the olfactory bulb, not only in rodents but also in humans. To our knowledge, this is the first longitudinal study that describes an enlargement of the human olfactory bulb due to improvement of peripheral olfactory function.
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- 2009
220. Age-Related Differences in Reaction Time Task Performance in Young Children
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Kiselev, S., Espy, K. A., Sheffield, T., Kiselev, S., Espy, K. A., and Sheffield, T.
- Abstract
Performance of reaction time (RT) tasks was investigated in young children and adults to test the hypothesis that age-related differences in processing speed supersede a "global" mechanism and are a function of specific differences in task demands and processing requirements. The sample consisted of 54 4-year-olds, 53 5-year-olds, 59 6-year-olds, and 35 adults from Russia. Using the regression approach pioneered by Brinley and the transformation method proposed by Madden and colleagues and Ridderinkhoff and van der Molen, age-related differences in processing speed differed among RT tasks with varying demands. In particular, RTs differed between children and adults on tasks that required response suppression, discrimination of color or spatial orientation, reversal of contingencies of previously learned stimulus-response rules, and greater stimulus-response complexity. Relative costs of these RT task differences were larger than predicted by the global difference hypothesis except for response suppression. Among young children, age-related differences larger than predicted by the global difference hypothesis were evident when tasks required color or spatial orientation discrimination and stimulus-response rule complexity, but not for response suppression or reversal of stimulus-response contingencies. Process-specific, age-related differences in processing speed that support heterochronicity of brain development during childhood were revealed. © 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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- 2009
221. Somatosensory mismatch negativity in healthy children
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Restuccia, Domenico, Zanini, S, Cazzagon, M, Del Piero, I, Martucci, L, Della Marca, Giacomo, Restuccia, Domenico (ORCID:0000-0002-7273-7162), Della Marca, Giacomo (ORCID:0000-0001-6914-799X), Restuccia, Domenico, Zanini, S, Cazzagon, M, Del Piero, I, Martucci, L, Della Marca, Giacomo, Restuccia, Domenico (ORCID:0000-0002-7273-7162), and Della Marca, Giacomo (ORCID:0000-0001-6914-799X)
- Abstract
Event-related potentials (ERPs) obtained when focused attention is kept away from the stimulus (unnoticed stimulation) are possibly linked to automatic mismatch-detection mechanisms, and could be a useful tool to investigate sensory discrimination ability. By considering the high impact of impaired somatosensory integration on many neurological disturbances in children, we aimed to verify whether mismatch-related responses to somatosensory stimulation could be obtained in healthy children.
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- 2009
222. Frequency and phase contributions to the detection of temporal luminance modulation
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Kenneth Knoblauch, James P. Thomas, Knoblauch, Kenneth, Department of Psychology, University of California [Los Angeles] (UCLA), University of California (UC)-University of California (UC), Cerveau et vision, Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-IFR19-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), and University of California-University of California
- Subjects
MESH: Adaptation, Ocular ,Brightness ,Fast Fourier transform ,MESH: Pattern Recognition, Visual ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Pattern Recognition ,Luminance ,Article ,Contrast Sensitivity ,Optics ,Discrimination, Psychological ,Sensory threshold ,Ocular ,Humans ,MESH: Discrimination (Psychology) ,Time domain ,Adaptation ,[SDV.MHEP.OS]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology/Sensory Organs ,MESH: Contrast Sensitivity ,Physics ,Discrimination (Psychology) ,MESH: Humans ,MESH: Visual Perception ,business.industry ,Adaptation, Ocular ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Amplitude ,MESH: Photic Stimulation ,Pattern Recognition, Visual ,[SDV.MHEP.OS] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology/Sensory Organs ,Sensory Thresholds ,Visual Perception ,Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Spatial frequency ,MESH: Sensory Thresholds ,MESH: Visual Fields ,Visual Fields ,business ,Visual ,Photic Stimulation - Abstract
Observers detected a temporally modulated luminance pattern embedded in dynamic noise. A Gabor function with a carrier frequency, in separate conditions of 0, 1.56, or 3.12 Hz, modulated signal contrast. Classification images were constructed in the time, temporal frequency, and temporal phase domains. As stimulus frequency increased, amplitudes of the phase images decreased and amplitudes of the frequency images increased, indicating a corresponding shift in the observers' criteria. The reduced use of phase attenuated time-domain images from signal-absent trials, but physical interactions between signal and noise components tended to preserve time-domain images from signal-present trials. The results illustrate a frequency-dependent strategy shift in detection that may reflect a degree of stimulus uncertainty in the time domain.
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- 2005
223. A representation of the hazard rate of elapsed time in macaque area LIP
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Michael N. Shadlen and Peter Janssen
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Time Factors ,Eye Movements ,Models, Neurological ,Posterior parietal cortex ,Action Potentials ,Sensory system ,Discrimination, Psychological ,Parietal Lobe ,Reaction Time ,Animals ,Sensory cue ,Event (probability theory) ,Probability ,Discrimination (Psychology) ,Neurons ,General Neuroscience ,Parietal lobe ,Eye movement ,Time perception ,Anticipation ,Macaca mulatta ,Time Perception ,Cues ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,Photic Stimulation - Abstract
The capacity to anticipate the timing of environmental cues allows us to allocate sensory resources at the right time and prepare actions. Such anticipation requires knowledge of elapsed time and of the probability that an event will occur. Here we show that neurons in the parietal cortex represent the probability, as a function of time, that a salient event is likely to occur. Rhesus monkeys were trained to make eye movements to peripheral targets after a light dimmed. Within a block of trials, the 'go' times were drawn from either a bimodal or unimodal distribution of random numbers. Neurons in the lateral intraparietal area showed anticipatory activity that revealed an internal representation of both elapsed time and the probability that the 'go' signal was about to occur (termed the hazard rate). The results indicate that the parietal cortex contains circuitry for representing the time structure of environmental cues over a range of seconds. ispartof: Nature Neuroscience vol:8 issue:2 pages:234-241 ispartof: location:United States status: published
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- 2005
224. Cross-modal plasticity revealed by electrotactile stimulation of the tongue in the congenitally blind
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R. Kupers, Albert Gjedde, Maurice Ptito, and Solvej M Moesgaard
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Adult ,Male ,genetic structures ,Posterior parietal cortex ,Blindness ,Discrimination Learning ,Discrimination, Psychological ,Tongue ,Cortex (anatomy) ,Orientation ,Parietal Lobe ,medicine ,Humans ,Visual Cortex ,Discrimination (Psychology) ,Neuronal Plasticity ,Tactile discrimination ,Parietal lobe ,Brain ,Electric Stimulation ,Cross modal plasticity ,Visual cortex ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Sensory substitution ,Touch ,Cerebrovascular Circulation ,Positron-Emission Tomography ,Sensory Aids ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Nerve Net ,Psychology ,Occipital lobe ,Neuroscience ,psychological phenomena and processes - Abstract
Udgivelsesdato: 2005-Mar In sensory substitution, information acquired with one sensory modality is used to accomplish a task which is normally subserved primarily by another sensory modality. We used PET to study cross-modal plasticity in the congenitally blind, using electrotactile stimulation of the tongue. Blind (n = 6) and sighted blindfolded controls (n = 5) were scanned before and after they were trained to use their tongue in a Snellen orientation detection task. Results showed that both groups of subjects learned the discrimination orientation task after seven 1 h training sessions. Before training, no significant changes in regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) were observed in the occipital cortex in either group. In sharp contrast, activity in the occipital cortex increased after practice for the blind, but not for the sighted, providing evidence for training-induced plasticity in the blind. An inter-regional correlation analysis showed that task-related rCBF changes in left posterior parietal cortex were positively correlated with rCBF changes in the occipital area of the trained blind. These data reveal that cross-modal plasticity in the blind develops rapidly and that the occipital cortex is part of a functional neural network for tactile discrimination in conjunction with the posterior parietal cortex. Our data further show that the tongue can act as a portal to convey somatosensory information to visual cortex.
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- 2005
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225. Alcoholism leads to early perceptive alterations, independently of comorbid depressed state: An ERP study.
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UCL - (SLuc) Service de psychiatrie adulte, UCL - MD/NOPS - Département de neurologie et de psychiatrie, UCL - PSP/PSP - Faculté de psychologie et des sciences de l'éducation, Maurage, Pierre, Campanella, Salvatore, Philippot, Pierre, de Timary, Philippe, Constant, Eric, Gauthier, S, Miccichè, M-L, Kornreich, C, Hanak, C, Noel, X, Verbanck, P., UCL - (SLuc) Service de psychiatrie adulte, UCL - MD/NOPS - Département de neurologie et de psychiatrie, UCL - PSP/PSP - Faculté de psychologie et des sciences de l'éducation, Maurage, Pierre, Campanella, Salvatore, Philippot, Pierre, de Timary, Philippe, Constant, Eric, Gauthier, S, Miccichè, M-L, Kornreich, C, Hanak, C, Noel, X, and Verbanck, P.
- Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Alcoholism is associated with a deficit in the processing of emotional facial expressions (EFE) and with a delayed P3b component, partially mediated by earlier perceptive deficits (P100, N170). Since alcohol dependence often occurs with depression, we aim at investigating whether classical event-related potentials (ERP) alterations observed in alcoholism are modulated or not by depression. METHODS: Four groups (controls; alcoholics; depressed; alcoholics-depressed) of 12 participants performed two different discrimination tasks, a gender and an emotional one. They had to decide as quickly as possible about the gender or the emotion displayed by facial stimuli during an ERP recording session (32 channels). Reaction times (RTs), P100, N100, N170 and P3b were recorded. RESULTS: At the behavioural level, control participants discriminated EFE (but not gender) more rapidly than the three other groups. At the ERP level, the differences observed on RTs for emotional task were neurophysiologically indexed by a delayed P3b component. This delay was associated with earlier ERP alterations (P100, N100, N170), but only in participants suffering from alcohol dependence, in association or not with depression. DISCUSSION: On the one hand, individuals with alcoholism, associated or not with a comorbid depression, were impaired in the processing of EFE. This deficit was neurophysiologically indexed by early perceptive (P100, N100, N170) and decisional (P3b) alterations. On the other hand, non-alcoholic patients with depression only exhibited P3b impairment. These results lead to potential implications concerning the usefulness of the ERP for the differential diagnosis in psychiatry, notably concerning the comorbidities in alcoholism.
- Published
- 2008
226. Dissociation of numerosity and duration processing in the left intraparietal sulcus: A transcranial magnetic stimulation study.
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UCL, Dormal, Valérie, Andres, Michael, Pesenti, Mauro, UCL, Dormal, Valérie, Andres, Michael, and Pesenti, Mauro
- Abstract
A possible dissociation of duration and numerosity processing was tested in an off-line repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) design. Participants had to compare the numerosity of flashed dot sequences or the duration of single dot displays before and after 15min of 1Hz rTMS over one of three sites (the left or right intraparietal sulcus (IPS), or the vertex chosen as a control site). Compared to the control site, performance was only slowed down for the numerosity comparison task after the left IPS stimulation, whereas it was not affected for the duration comparison task for any of the parietal sites. These results show that the parietal area critically involved in numerosity processing is not involved in duration processing, revealing at least one cerebral site where duration and numerosity comparison processes dissociate.
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- 2008
227. Evidence for individual face discrimination in non-face selective areas of the visual cortex in acquired prosopagnosia
- Author
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UCL - MD/FSIO - Département de physiologie et pharmacologie, Dricot, Laurence, Sorger, Bettina, Schiltz, Christine, Goebel, Rainer, Rossion, Bruno, UCL - MD/FSIO - Département de physiologie et pharmacologie, Dricot, Laurence, Sorger, Bettina, Schiltz, Christine, Goebel, Rainer, and Rossion, Bruno
- Abstract
Two areas in the human occipito-temporal cortex respond preferentially to faces: 'the fusiform face area' ('FFA') and the 'occipital face area' ('OFA'). However, it is unclear whether these areas have an exclusive role in processing faces, or if sub-maximal responses in other visual areas such as the lateral occipital complex (LOC) are also involved. To clarify this issue, we tested a brain-damaged patient (PS) presenting a face-selective impairment with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). The right hemisphere lesion of the prosopagnosic patient encompasses the 'OFA' but preserves the 'FFA' and LOC. Using fMRI-adaptation, we found a larger response to different faces than repeated faces in the ventral part of the LOC both for normals and the patient, next to her right hemisphere lesion. This observation indicates that following prosopagnosia, areas that do not respond preferentially to faces such as the ventral part of the LOC (vLOC) may still be recruited to subtend residual perception of individual faces.
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- 2008
228. The speed of orthographic processing during lexical decision : electrophysiological evidence for independent coding of letter identity and letter position in visual word recognition
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UCL - MD/FSIO - Département de physiologie et pharmacologie, UCL - PSP/PSP - Faculté de psychologie et des sciences de l'éducation, Mariol, Marina, Jacques, Corentin, Schelstraete, Marie-Anne, Rossion, Bruno, UCL - MD/FSIO - Département de physiologie et pharmacologie, UCL - PSP/PSP - Faculté de psychologie et des sciences de l'éducation, Mariol, Marina, Jacques, Corentin, Schelstraete, Marie-Anne, and Rossion, Bruno
- Abstract
Adults can decide rapidly if a string of letters is a word or not. However, the exact time course of this discrimination is still an open question. Here we sought to track the time course of this discrimination and to determine how orthographic information -- letter position and letter identity -- is computed during reading. We used a go/no-go lexical decision task while recording event-related potentials (ERPs). Subjects were presented with single words (go trials) and pseudowords (no-go trials), which varied in orthographic conformation, presenting either a double consonant frequently doubled (i.e., "ss") or never doubled (i.e., "zz") (identity factor); and a position of the double consonant was which either legal or illegal (position factor), in a 2 x 2 factorial design. Words and pseudowords clearly differed as early as 230 msec. At this latency, ERP waveforms were modulated both by the identity and by the position of letters: The fronto-central no-go N2 was the smallest in amplitude and peaked the earliest to pseudowords presenting both an illegal double-letter position and an identity never encountered. At this stage, the two factors showed additive effects, suggesting an independent coding. The factors of identity and position of double letters interacted much later in the process, at the P3 level, around 300-400 msec on frontal and central sites, in line with the lexical decision data obtained in the behavioral study. Overall, these results show that the speed of lexical decision may depend on orthographic information coded independently by the identity and position of letters in a word.
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- 2008
229. Glutathione precursor, N-acetyl-cysteine, improves mismatch negativity in schizophrenia patients
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Lavoie, Suzie, Murray, Micah M., Deppen, Patricia, Knyazeva, Maria G., Berk, Michael, Boulat, Olivier, Bovet, Pierre, Bush, Ashley I., Conus, Philippe, Copolov, David, Fornari, Eleonora, Meuli, Reto, Solida, Alessandra, Vianin, Pascal, Cuénod, Michel, Buclin, Thierry, Do, Kim Q., Lavoie, Suzie, Murray, Micah M., Deppen, Patricia, Knyazeva, Maria G., Berk, Michael, Boulat, Olivier, Bovet, Pierre, Bush, Ashley I., Conus, Philippe, Copolov, David, Fornari, Eleonora, Meuli, Reto, Solida, Alessandra, Vianin, Pascal, Cuénod, Michel, Buclin, Thierry, and Do, Kim Q.
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- 2008
230. When vision 'extinguishes' touch in neurologically-normal people: extending the Colavita visual dominance effect
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Hartcher O'Brien, J, Gallace, A, Krings, B, Koppen, C, Spence, C, Spence, C., GALLACE, ALBERTO, Hartcher O'Brien, J, Gallace, A, Krings, B, Koppen, C, Spence, C, Spence, C., and GALLACE, ALBERTO
- Abstract
Research has shown that people fail to report the presence of the auditory component of suprathreshold audiovisual targets significantly more often than they fail to detect the visual component in speeded response tasks. Here, we investigated whether this phenomenon, known as the "Colavita effect", also affects people's perception of visuotactile stimuli as well. In Experiments 1 and 2, participants made speeded detection/discrimination responses to unimodal visual, unimodal tactile, and bimodal (visual and tactile) stimuli. A significant Colavita visual dominance effect was observed (i.e., participants failed to respond to touch far more often than they failed to respond to vision on the bimodal trials). This dominance of vision over touch was significantly larger when the stimuli were presented from the same position than when they were presented from different positions (Experiment 3), and still occurred even when the subjective intensities of the visual and tactile stimuli had been matched (Experiment 4), thus ruling out a simple intensity-based account of the results. These results suggest that the Colavita visual dominance effect (over touch) may result from a competition between the neural representations of the two stimuli for access to consciousness and/or the recruitment of attentional resources.
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- 2008
231. Tactile and visual distractors induce change blindness for tactile stimuli presented on the fingertips
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Auvray, M, Gallace, A, Hartcher O'Brien, J, Tan, H, Spence, C, Tan, HZ, Spence, C., GALLACE, ALBERTO, Auvray, M, Gallace, A, Hartcher O'Brien, J, Tan, H, Spence, C, Tan, HZ, Spence, C., and GALLACE, ALBERTO
- Abstract
Recent studies of change detection have revealed that people are surprisingly poor at detecting changes between two consecutively-presented scenes, when they are separated by a distractor that masks the transients typically associated with change. This failure, known as 'change blindness', has been reported within vision, audition, and touch. In the three experiments reported here, we investigated people's ability to detect the change between two patterns of tactile stimuli presented to their fingertips. The two to-be-compared patterns were presented either consecutively, separated by an empty interval or else by a tactile, visual, or auditory mask. Participants' performance was impaired when an empty interval was inserted between the two consecutively-presented patterns as compared with the consecutive stimulus presentation. Participants' performance was further impaired not only when a tactile mask was introduced between the two to-be-compared displays, but also when a visual mask was used instead. Interestingly, however, the addition of an auditory mask to an empty interval did not have any effect on participants' performance. These results are discussed in relation to the multisensory/amodal nature of spatial attention.
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- 2008
232. A single 'stopwatch' for duration estimation, a single 'ruler' for size
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Morgan, M, Giora, E, Solomon, J, Morgan, MJ, Solomon, JA, GIORA, ENRICO, Morgan, M, Giora, E, Solomon, J, Morgan, MJ, Solomon, JA, and GIORA, ENRICO
- Abstract
Although observers can discriminate visual targets with long exposures from otherwise-identical targets with shorter exposures, temporally overlapping distracters with an intermediate exposure can produce a striking degradation in performance. This new finding suggests that observers can only estimate one duration at a time. Discrimination on the basis of size, rather than duration, did not degrade as rapidly with the number of distracters but was still worse than predicted by unlimited-capacity models. The critical difference between estimates of temporal length and estimates of spatial length seems to be that the former can only be made at the end of an exposure, while the latter can be made at any time during an exposure. When sizes varied throughout the trial and decisions were based on terminal sizes, the set-size effect was as large as that obtained for duration discrimination. We conclude that when textural filters are not available for segregating a target from distracters, efficient estimates of size or duration require the serial examination of individual display items
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- 2008
233. NPY gene transfer in the hippocampus attenuates synaptic plasticity and learning
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Sørensen, Andreas T, Kanter-Schlifke, Irene, Carli, Mirjana, Balducci, Claudia, Noe, Francesco, During, Matthew J, Vezzani, Annamaria, Kokaia, Merab, Sørensen, Andreas T, Kanter-Schlifke, Irene, Carli, Mirjana, Balducci, Claudia, Noe, Francesco, During, Matthew J, Vezzani, Annamaria, and Kokaia, Merab
- Abstract
Recombinant adeno-associated viral (rAAV) vector-induced neuropeptide Y (NPY) overexpression in the hippocampus exerts powerful antiepileptic and antiepileptogenic effects in rats. Such gene therapy approach could be a valuable alternative for developing new antiepileptic treatment strategies. Future clinical progress, however, requires more detailed evaluation of possible side effects of this treatment. Until now it has been unknown whether rAAV vector-based NPY overexpression in the hippocampus alters normal synaptic transmission and plasticity, which could disturb learning and memory processing. Here we show, by electrophysiological recordings in CA1 of the hippocampal formation of rats, that hippocampal NPY gene transfer into the intact brain does not affect basal synaptic transmission, but slightly alters short-term synaptic plasticity, most likely via NPY Y2 receptor-mediated mechanisms. In addition, transgene NPY seems to be released during high frequency neuronal activity, leading to decreased glutamate release in excitatory synapses. Importantly, memory consolidation appears to be affected by the treatment. We found that long-term potentiation (LTP) in the CA1 area is partially impaired and animals have a slower rate of hippocampal-based spatial discrimination learning. These data provide the first evidence that rAAV-based gene therapy using NPY exerts relative limited effect on synaptic plasticity and learning in the hippocampus, and therefore this approach could be considered as a viable alternative for epilepsy treatment.
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- 2008
234. Subclinical sensory abnormalities in unaffected PINK1 heterozygotes
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Fiorio, Mirta, Valente, Em, Gambarin, M, Bentivoglio, Anna Rita, Ialongo, Tamara, Albanese, Alberto, Barone, Paolo, Pellecchia, Mt, Brancati, F, Moretto, G, Fiaschi, A, Tinazzi, Michele, Bentivoglio, Anna Rita (ORCID:0000-0002-9663-095X), Albanese, Alberto (ORCID:0000-0002-5864-0006), Fiorio, Mirta, Valente, Em, Gambarin, M, Bentivoglio, Anna Rita, Ialongo, Tamara, Albanese, Alberto, Barone, Paolo, Pellecchia, Mt, Brancati, F, Moretto, G, Fiaschi, A, Tinazzi, Michele, Bentivoglio, Anna Rita (ORCID:0000-0002-9663-095X), and Albanese, Alberto (ORCID:0000-0002-5864-0006)
- Abstract
Mutations in the PINK1 gene, encoding a mitochondrial protein kinase, represent the second cause of autosomal recessive parkinsonism (ARP) after Parkin. While homozygous or compound heterozygous mutations in these genes are unequivocally causative of ARP, the role of single heterozygous mutations is still largely debated. An intriguing hypothesis suggests that these mutations could represent a risk factor to develop parkinsonism, by contributing to nigral cell degeneration. Since the substantia nigra plays an important role in temporal processing of sensory stimuli, as revealed from studies in idiopathic PD, we sought to investigate whether any subclinical sensory abnormalities could be detected in patients with PINK1- related parkinsonism and in unaffected PINK1 heterozygous carriers.
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- 2008
235. Long-term renormalization of chromatic mechanisms following cataract surgery
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John S. Werner, Michael A. Webster, Peter B. Delahunt, and Lei Ma
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,genetic structures ,Physiology ,Color vision ,medicine.medical_treatment ,color appearance ,Adaptation (eye) ,Cataract Extraction ,adaptation ,Color space ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Article ,law.invention ,Lens ,Discrimination, Psychological ,law ,Ophthalmology ,Ocular ,Lens, Crystalline ,Discrimination ,medicine ,Humans ,Scotopic vision ,Postoperative Period ,Chromaticity ,Physics ,Discrimination (Psychology) ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Crystalline ,Adaptation, Ocular ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,achromatic settings ,Cataract surgery ,Sensory Systems ,eye diseases ,Spectral sensitivity ,Achromatic lens ,cataract ,Visual Perception ,Psychological ,sense organs ,color constancy ,Color Perception - Abstract
The optical density of the human crystalline lens progressively increases with age, the greatest increase in the visible spectrum being at short wavelengths. This produces a gradual shift in the spectral distribution of the light reaching the retina, yet color appearance remains relatively stable across the life span, implying that the visual system adapts to compensate for changes in spectral sensitivity. We explored properties of this adaptive renormalization by measuring changes in color appearance following cataract surgery. When the lens is removed, cataract patients often report a large perceptual shift in color appearance that can last for months. This change in color appearance was quantified for four cataract patients (63–84 years) by determining the chromaticity of stimuli that appeared achromatic before surgery, and at various intervals after surgery for up to 1 year. Stimuli were presented on a calibrated CRT as 9.5-deg spots, with 3-s duration and 3-s interstimulus intervals (ISIs). Chromaticity was adjusted by the subjects in CIE L*a*b* color space with luminance fixed at 32 cd/m2, on a dark background. We also estimated the optical density of the cataractous lens by comparing absolute scotopic thresholds from 410 nm to 600 nm before and after surgery. The results demonstrated that immediately following surgery there is a large increase in the short-wave light reaching the retina, mainly below 500 nm. The achromatic settings generally showed an initial large shift in the “yellow” direction after surgery that gradually (but never fully) returned to the original achromatic point before surgery. The shifts in the achromatic point occur over a number of months and appear to occur independently of the fellow eye.
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- 2004
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236. Minimum audible angle, just noticeable interaural differences and speech intelligibility with bilateral cochlear implants using clinical speech processors
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Mattheus Vischer, Martin Kompis, Pascal Senn, and Rudolf Haeusler
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Sound localization ,Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Physiology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Intelligibility (communication) ,Audiology ,Deafness ,Speech and Hearing ,Discrimination, Psychological ,Deafness/therapy ,Cochlear implant ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,Sound Localization ,Discrimination (Psychology) ,business.industry ,Speech Intelligibility/physiology ,Speech Intelligibility ,White noise ,Horizontal plane ,Sensory Systems ,Cochlear Implants ,Otorhinolaryngology ,QUIET ,Case-Control Studies ,Head shadow ,Female ,Sound Localization/physiology ,Just noticeable ,business - Abstract
Sound localization and speech intelligibility were assessed in 5 patients implanted bilaterally with Medel C40+ or Medel C40 cochlear implant (CI) systems. The minimum audible angle (MAA) around the head in the horizontal plane was assessed in patients with bilateral CI using white noise bursts of 1000 ms duration presented from a loudspeaker mounted on a rotating boom and compared with the MAA of age-matched normal hearing controls. Spatial discrimination was found to be good in front and in the back of the head with near-normal MAA values (patients: 3-8 degrees , controls: 1-4 degrees ). In contrast, poor performance on the sides was found (patients: 30 to over 45 degrees , controls 7-10 degrees ). Bilateral CI significantly improved spatial discrimination in front for all patients, when compared with the use of either CI alone. Just noticeable differences (JNDs) in interaural intensity and time were assessed using white noise bursts (1000 ms duration; 50 ms linear ramp). In addition, interaural time JNDs were assessed using click trains (800 ms duration, 40 mus clicks, 50 Hz) and noise bursts in which either only the envelope or only the fine structure was shifted in time. In comparison with normal hearing controls, patients with bilateral CI showed near-normal interaural intensity JNDs but substantially poorer interaural time JNDs depending on the type of stimulus. In contrast to envelope onset/offset cues, interaural fine structure time differences were not perceived by the patients using CI systems employing the continuous interleaved sampling strategy without synchronization between their pulse stimulation times. Speech intelligibility in quiet and CCITT noise from the side (+/-90 degrees ) was assessed using the German HSM sentence test and was significantly better when using bilateral CI in comparison with either unilateral CI, mainly due to a head shadow effect. These favorable results are in agreement with the patients' subjective experiences assessed with a questionnaire and support the use of bilateral CI.
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- 2004
237. Autonomic responding to aversive words without conscious valence discrimination
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Henrique Sequeira, Sylvain Delplanque, Laetitia Silvert, Hanunou Bouwalerh, Charlotte Verpoort, Laboratoire de psychologie sociale et de psychologie cognitive (LAPSCO), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université Blaise Pascal - Clermont-Ferrand 2 (UBP), Laboratoire de Neurosciences Fonctionnelles et Pathologies (LNFP), Université de Lille, Droit et Santé-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), and Université Blaise Pascal - Clermont-Ferrand 2 (UBP)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
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Male ,Emotions ,Perceptual Masking ,Choice Behavior ,MESH: Autonomic Nervous System ,0302 clinical medicine ,Discrimination, Psychological ,Mental Processes ,Reference Values ,Arousal/physiology ,MESH: Discrimination (Psychology) ,MESH: Mental Processes ,media_common ,Language ,General Neuroscience ,05 social sciences ,MESH: Reference Values ,Autonomic Nervous System/physiology ,Cognition ,Galvanic Skin Response ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,MESH: Language ,MESH: Galvanic Skin Response ,[SDV.NEU]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC] ,Female ,Psychology ,Arousal ,Cognitive psychology ,Adult ,Mental Processes/physiology ,Consciousness ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Autonomic Nervous System ,MESH: Choice Behavior ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,MESH: Consciousness ,Physiology (medical) ,Perception ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Valence (psychology) ,MESH: Emotions ,Discrimination (Psychology) ,MESH: Humans ,MESH: Arousal ,MESH: Adult ,MESH: Male ,Autonomic nervous system ,MESH: Perceptual Masking ,MESH: Female ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
International audience; A growing body of data suggests that the emotional dimension of a stimulus can be processed without conscious identification of the stimulus. The arousal system could be activated by unrecognised biologically significant stimuli through simple physical stimulus features related to threat, without any evaluation of the meaning of the stimulus. However, unconscious processing of emotionally laden words cannot rely only on perceptual features but must include some analysis of symbolic meaning. The first aim of the present study was to assess whether masked (unrecognised) aversive words can elicit enhanced skin conductance responses (SCRs), a major autonomic index of emotional arousal, in normal participants. Our second aim was to determine whether any autonomic activation related to affective value of words is independent from access of this value to consciousness. Thus, the presentation duration of masked aversive and neutral words was determined, for each participant, in such a way that (1) identification was precluded, (2) valence discrimination was at chance, as indicated by performance in a forced-choice two-alternative task and by confidence ratings of the responses, and (3) emotional and neutral words were not detected differentially. SCRs were recorded during masked and unmasked presentations of both types of word. SCRs elicited by unmasked words, and also by masked words, were of greater magnitude when the words were emotional than when they were neutral. Consequently, in normal participants, autonomic activation can be a discriminative marker of the affective dimension of unrecognised verbal material in the absence of conscious valence identification.
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- 2004
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238. Vibro-tactile and visual asynchronies : sensitivity and consistency
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Erp, J.B.F. van, Werkhoven, P.J., and TNO Technische Menskunde
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Perceptive discrimination ,Discrimination (Psychology) ,Tactile displays ,Analysis of Variance ,Psychological Tests ,genetic structures ,Physiology ,Vision ,Touch ,Time Perception ,Visual Perception ,Perception ,psychological phenomena and processes - Published
- 2004
239. Vibro-tactile and visual asynchronies : sensitivity and consistency
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Perceptive discrimination ,Discrimination (Psychology) ,Tactile displays ,Analysis of Variance ,Psychological Tests ,Physiology ,Vision ,Touch ,Time Perception ,Visual Perception ,Perception - Published
- 2004
240. Tactile spatial resolution measured manually: a validation study.
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UCL - MD/IEPR - Institut d'éducation physique et de réadaptation, UCL - (SLuc) Service de médecine physique et de réadaptation motrice, Bleyenheuft, Yannick, Thonnard, Jean-Louis, UCL - MD/IEPR - Institut d'éducation physique et de réadaptation, UCL - (SLuc) Service de médecine physique et de réadaptation motrice, Bleyenheuft, Yannick, and Thonnard, Jean-Louis
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The purpose of this study was to investigate the validity of manual application of the grating orientation task (GOT), as currently used in fundamental and clinical research. Six examiners tested 12 subjects following recommendations of the literature. The results show that the normal force applied with the domes on the skin varied from one examiner to the next. Nevertheless, it did not affect the performance of the subjects, whose thresholds were consistent with those reported in the literature. This study highlights the inter-examiner reliability in the manual application of this test and validates this procedure.
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- 2007
241. Early electrophysiological responses to multiple face orientations correlate with individual discrimination performance in humans
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UCL - PSP/PSP - Faculté de psychologie et des sciences de l'éducation, UCL - MD/FSIO - Département de physiologie et pharmacologie, Jacques, Corentin, Rossion, Bruno, UCL - PSP/PSP - Faculté de psychologie et des sciences de l'éducation, UCL - MD/FSIO - Département de physiologie et pharmacologie, Jacques, Corentin, and Rossion, Bruno
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Picture-plane inversion dramatically impairs face recognition. Behavioral and event-related potential (ERP) studies suggest that this effect takes place during perceptual encoding of the face stimulus. However, the relationship between early electrophysiological responses to upright and inverted faces and the behavioral face inversion effect remains unclear. To address this question, we recorded ERPs while presenting 10 subjects with face photographs at 12 different orientations around the clock (30 degrees steps) during an individual face matching task. Using the variability in the electrophysiological responses introduced by the multiple orientations of the target face, we found a correlation between the ERP signal at 130-170 ms on occipito-temporal channels, and the behavioral performance measured on the probe stimulus. Correlations between ERP signal and behavioral performance started about 10 ms earlier in the right hemisphere. Significant effects of orientation were observed already at the level of the visual P1 (peaking at 100 ms), but the ERP signal was not correlated with behavior until the face-sensitive N170 time window. Overall, these observations indicate that plane-inversion affects the perceptual encoding of faces as early as 130 ms in occipito-temporal regions, leading directly to an increase in error rates and RTs during individual face recognition.
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- 2007
242. The time course of the inversion effect during individual face discrimination
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UCL - MD/FSIO - Département de physiologie et pharmacologie, UCL - PSP/PSP - Faculté de psychologie et des sciences de l'éducation, Jacques, Corentin, d'Arripe, Olivier, Rossion, Bruno, UCL - MD/FSIO - Département de physiologie et pharmacologie, UCL - PSP/PSP - Faculté de psychologie et des sciences de l'éducation, Jacques, Corentin, d'Arripe, Olivier, and Rossion, Bruno
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Human faces look more similar to each other when they are presented upside down, leading to an increase in error rate and response time during individual face discrimination tasks. This face inversion effect (FIE) is one of the most robust findings in the face processing literature. Recent neuroimaging studies using adaptation to face identity have shown that the "fusiform face area" was the primary neural source of the behavioral FIE. However, the time course of the FIE, that is, when inversion affects the coding of facial identity in the human brain, remains unclear. Here, we addressed this question by recording event-related potentials (ERPs) on the scalp during an adaptation paradigm with upright and inverted faces. Subjects were presented first with an adapting face stimulus for 3,000 ms, followed by a second face of either the same identity or a different identity. Starting at about 160 ms after stimulus onset, the ERP response to the second face stimulus was markedly reduced over occipitotemporal electrode sites when it was identical to the adapting face, during the N170 time window. When the exact same stimuli were presented upside down, the reduction of signal was smaller and took place about 30 ms later, in line with the behavioral effect of inversion. This result shows that face inversion affects the early encoding of face identity in the occipitotemporal cortex at about 160 ms. Because inversion is known to disrupt massively the integration of facial features, these observations provide indirect evidence that individual faces are processed holistically as early as 160 ms after stimulus onset.
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- 2007
243. Alcohol cues increase cognitive impulsivity in individuals with alcoholism.
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Noël, Xavier, Van der Linden, Martial, d'Acremont, Mathieu, Bechara, Antoine, Dan, Bernard, Hanak, Catherine, Verbanck, Paul, Noël, Xavier, Van der Linden, Martial, d'Acremont, Mathieu, Bechara, Antoine, Dan, Bernard, Hanak, Catherine, and Verbanck, Paul
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BACKGROUND: Individuals with alcoholism are characterized by both attentional bias for alcohol cues and prepotent response inhibition deficit. We tested the hypothesis that alcoholics exhibit greater cognitive disinhibition when the response to be suppressed is associated with alcohol-related information. METHODS: Forty recently detoxified individuals with alcoholism were compared with 40 healthy non-substance abusers on the "Alcohol-Shifting Task", a variant of the go/no-go paradigm requiring a motor response to targets and no response to distracters. The aim was to test the ability of alcoholics to discriminate between alcohol-related and neutral words. Sometimes, the alcohol-related words were the targets for the "go" response, with neutral words as distracters, sometimes the reverse. Several shifts in target type occurred during the task. RESULTS: Alcoholics made significantly more commission errors (i.e. press a key when a distracter displayed) and more omission errors (i.e. not press a key when a target displayed) than controls. Moreover, the number of commission errors was greater in alcoholics when alcohol-related stimuli had to be detected. CONCLUSIONS: These results demonstrate that alcoholics exhibit a basic prepotent response inhibition deficit, which is enhanced when the response to be suppressed is related to alcohol. We discuss clinical and theoretical implications of these findings., Journal Article, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
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- 2007
244. Region- and edge-based configurational effects in texture segmentation
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Giora, E, Casco, C, GIORA, ENRICO, Casco, C., Giora, E, Casco, C, GIORA, ENRICO, and Casco, C.
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We have found a new configurational effect in texture segmentation. In addition to collinear facilitation at the edge, this effect results from contextual modulation within the texture-region, i.e. from texels not abutting the segmented edge. The largest facilitation was found when two conditions were fulfilled: (i) elements along the edge were parallel to the edge and collinear, (ii) elements in the texture-region were also collinear but non-parallel to the edge. We show that this facilitation occurs when there are groups of different orientation from the edge in the texture-region. We suggest two possible underlying mechanisms: either a region-based process that links collinear iso-oriented elements and locates the edge when the orientation changes, or else second-order filters tuned to orientation differences rather than orientation per se
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- 2007
245. The effect of category learning on the representation of shape: dimensions can be biased but not differentiated
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Johan Wagemans, Hans Op de Beeck, and Rufin Vogels
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Discrimination (Psychology) ,Pure mathematics ,Visual perception ,Aspect ratio ,Cognitive neuroscience of visual object recognition ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Curvature ,Separable space ,Form Perception ,Discrimination, Psychological ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Form perception ,Categorization ,Visual Perception ,Humans ,Learning ,Dimension (data warehouse) ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,General Psychology - Abstract
Recent studies have suggested a profound influence of category learning on visual perception, resulting in independent processing of previously integral dimensions. The authors reinvestigate this issue for shape dimensions. They first extend previous findings that some shape dimensions (aspect ratio and curvature) are processed in a separable way, whereas others (radial frequency components) are not. They then show that a category-learning phase improved the discrimination of a relevant with respect to an irrelevant dimension, but only for separable dimensions. No similar effect was found on the relative sensitivity for integral shape dimensions. Thus, category learning is capable of biasing separable shape dimensions but does not alter the status of dimensions in the visual system as either separable or integral. ispartof: Journal of experimental psychology. General vol:132 issue:4 pages:491-511 ispartof: location:United States status: published
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- 2003
246. Minipig negative slow wave demonstrates target/nontarget differences in P300 paradigm
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Anette Moustgaard, Axel Kornerup Hansen, Albert Gjedde, Nanna Marie Lind, and Sidse M. Arnfred
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Discrimination (Psychology) ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Swine ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Electroencephalography ,Audiology ,Stimulus (physiology) ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Event-Related Potentials, P300 ,Discrimination Learning ,Discrimination, Psychological ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neurology ,Acoustic Stimulation ,Scalp ,medicine ,Evoked Potentials, Auditory ,Animals ,Swine, Miniature ,Discrimination learning ,Psychology - Abstract
Udgivelsesdato: 2003-Sep The negative slow wave (NSW) is a late component of the event-related potential (ERP) in man modulated like the P300 by the stimulus, the task, and the response demand. Aiming at the development of a minipig model of schizophrenia, we investigated scalp ERPs in an auditory P300 paradigm in six Göttingen minipigs. Before training, we observed no difference between target and nontarget NSW. After training, target NSW amplitude was increased 50% compared to nontarget. A P350 was recognized, but the finding of a lack of target/nontarget difference is not conclusive.
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- 2003
247. Selective attention, inhibition for repeated events and hemispheric specialization
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Adam M. Brickman, Tsechung Wei, Paolo Bartolomeo, Sylvie Chokron, Matthias H. Tabert, Pascale Colliot, and Monte S. Buchsbaum
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Adult ,Male ,Periodicity ,Visual perception ,Inhibition (Psychology) ,Settore M-PSI/02 - PSICOBIOLOGIA E PSICOLOGIA FISIOLOGICA ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Visual space ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Fixation, Ocular ,Affect (psychology) ,Lateralization of brain function ,Functional Laterality ,Developmental psychology ,Task (project management) ,Discrimination, Psychological ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Ocular ,Specialization (functional) ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Reaction Time ,Humans ,Attention ,Discrimination (Psychology) ,Brain ,Fixation ,Visual field ,Inhibition, Psychological ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Visual Perception ,Female ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,N2pc - Abstract
When two visual events appear consecutively in the same spatial location, our response to the second event is slower than to the first. This inhibition for repeated events may reflect a bias toward sampling novel locations, a bias useful for exploring visual space. It has been shown that the left hemisphere is more specialized in selective attentional processes than the right one. The aim of the present experiment was to test if this hemispheric specialization for selective attention may also affect the inhibition for repeated events. For this purpose, we asked 11 normal subjects to perform an identity-based discrimination task in which the target to be detected could appear alone or surrounded by flanking letters, in the left or in the right visual field. Results show that inhibition for repeated events is present only when selective attention is required and when the task is performed in the right specialized visual field.
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- 2003
248. Object localization, discrimination, and grasping with the optic nerve visual prosthesis.
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UCL - MD/FSIO - Département de physiologie et pharmacologie, Duret, Florence, Brelén, Måten E, Lambert, Valerie, Gérard, Benoît, Delbeke, Jean, Veraart, Claude, UCL - MD/FSIO - Département de physiologie et pharmacologie, Duret, Florence, Brelén, Måten E, Lambert, Valerie, Gérard, Benoît, Delbeke, Jean, and Veraart, Claude
- Abstract
PURPOSE: This study involved a volunteer completely blind from retinis pigmentosa who had previously been implanted with an optic nerve visual prosthesis. The aim of this two-year study was to train the volunteer to localize a given object in nine different positions, to discriminate the object within a choice of six, and then to grasp it. METHODS: In a closed-loop protocol including a head worn video camera, the nerve was stimulated whenever a part of the processed image of the object being scrutinized matched the center of an elicitable phosphene. The accessible visual field included 109 phosphenes in a 14 degrees x 41 degrees area. RESULTS: Results showed that training was required to succeed in the localization and discrimination tasks, but practically no training was required for grasping the object. The volunteer was able to successfully complete all tasks after training. The volunteer systematically performed several left-right and bottom-up scanning movements during the discrimination task. Discrimination strategies included stimulation phases and no-stimulation phases of roughly similar duration. CONCLUSION: This study provides a step towards the practical use of the optic nerve visual prosthesis in current daily life.
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- 2006
249. Asymmetries in categorization, perceptual discrimination, and visual search for reference and nonreference exemplars.
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UCL - Autre, Corneille, Olivier, Goldstone, Robert L, Queller, Sarah, Potter, Timothy, UCL - Autre, Corneille, Olivier, Goldstone, Robert L, Queller, Sarah, and Potter, Timothy
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In two experiments, we examined the representation, treatment, and attention devoted to the members of reference (i.e., club members) and nonreference (i.e., not club members) categories. Consistent with prior work on category interrelatedness (e.g., Goldstone, 1996; Goldstone, Steyvers, and Rogosky, 2003), the findings reveal the existence of asymmetric representations for reference and nonreference categories, which, however, decreased as expertise and familiarity with the categories increased (Experiments 1 and 2). Participants also more readily judged two reference exemplars as being the same than they did two nonreference exemplars (Experiment 1) and were better at detecting reference than nonreference exemplars in a set of novel, category-unspecified exemplars (Experiment 2). These findings provide evidence for the existence of a feature asymmetry in the representation and treatment of exemplars from reference and nonreference categories. Membership in a reference category acts as a salient feature, thereby increasing the perceived similarity and detection of faces that belong in the reference, in comparison with the nonreference, category.
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- 2006
250. Implicit change identification: a replication of Fernandez-Duque and Thornton (2003).
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Laloyaux, Cédric, Destrebecqz, Arnaud, Cleeremans, Axel, Laloyaux, Cédric, Destrebecqz, Arnaud, and Cleeremans, Axel
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Using a simple change detection task involving vertical and horizontal stimuli, I. M. Thornton and D. Fernandez-Duque (2000) showed that the implicit detection of a change in the orientation of an item influences performance in a subsequent orientation judgment task. However, S. R. Mitroff, D. J. Simons, and S. L. Franconeri (2002) were not able to replicate this finding after correcting for confounds and thus attributed Thornton and Fernandez-Duque's results to methodological artifacts. Because Mitroff et al.'s failure to replicate might in turn have stemmed from several methodological differences between their study and those of Thornton and Fernandez-Duque (2000) and Fernandez-Duque and Thornton, the current authors set out to conduct a further replication in which they corrected all known methodological biases identified so far. The results suggest that implicit change detection indeed occurs: People's conscious decisions about the orientation of an item appear to be influenced by previous undetected changes in the orientation of other items in the display. Implications of this finding in light of current theories of visual awareness are discussed., Journal Article, Randomized Controlled Trial, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't, SCOPUS: ar.j, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
- Published
- 2006
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