14 results on '"Wauthia E"'
Search Results
2. Differences related to aging in sensorimotor knowledge: Investigation of perceptual strength and body object interaction
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Miceli, A., Wauthia, E., Lefebvre, L., Vallet, G.T., Ris, L., and Loureiro, I. Simoes
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- 2022
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3. Attachment behaviours in adults with intellectual disabilities in assisted living facilities: representations from direct‐care staff
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Rinaldi, R., primary, Duplat, J., additional, Kahwaji, C., additional, Wauthia, E., additional, Willaye, E., additional, and Batselé, E., additional
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- 2023
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4. Electrophysiological correlates of attentional engagement and disengagement from threat in anxious children
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Wauthia, E., primary and Rossignol, M., additional
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- 2018
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5. Exploring professionals' practices and perspectives on supporting parents with intellectual disabilities: a qualitative study.
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Rinaldi R, Legierski M, Wauthia E, Mazza E, and Batselé E
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Introduction: Evidence suggests that parents with intellectual disabilities require appropriate parenting support. However, professional practices vary widely, and several barriers and challenges persist in supporting parents with intellectual disabilities. To identify effective and collaborative practices, this study investigated practices reported by professionals and their roles in providing services to parents with intellectual disabilities., Methods: Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 22 professionals from three sectors (disability, early childhood, and healthcare), and the content was analysed using inductive thematic analysis., Results: Thematic analyses yielded four main themes: (1) Perceived professional practices, (2) professional stances, (3) the frame of reference and the ethics of support, (4) the experience of providing support. They are described in terms of content and distribution across sectors to provide an overview of practices as well as potential discrepancies., Conclusions: This study concludes by developing recommendations on good practices for support professionals to respond as adequately as possible to meet the needs of parents and future parents with intellectual disabilities, which include structural support and guidelines for professionals to provide sensitive, family-centred, and enabling support., Competing Interests: The data collection was conducted as part of a research project funded by the Office de la Naissance et de l’Enfance. The data was collected and processed independently. RR and ML were involved in the project. The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (© 2023 Rinaldi, Legierski, Wauthia, Mazza and Batselé.)
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- 2023
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6. Electrophysiological correlates of attentional bias towards threat in children with high levels of social anxiety.
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Wauthia E, Rossignol M, Blekic W, Lefebvre L, and D'Hondt F
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- Humans, Child, Fear, Anxiety, Attention physiology, Evoked Potentials physiology, Facial Expression, Attentional Bias physiology
- Abstract
Pediatric social anxiety is characterized by attentional biases (AB) towards social threats. This study used a new response-based calculation method to assess AB from response times (RT) in a visual dot-probe task and electroencephalography (EEG) to explore its electrophysiological correlates. Twenty, high socially anxious children (HSA) (mean [M ] = 10.1 years; standard deviation [SD] = 1.01) were compared with 22 healthy control children (HC) (M = 10.20 years; SD = 1.30) matched in age and gender. Participants had to identify targets preceded by disgust-neutral, happy-neutral, or neutral-neutral pairs of faces. RT and electroencephalograms were recorded throughout the task. While no significant group difference was found at the behavioral level, principal component analyses performed on EEG data revealed that event-related potentials for threat-related stimuli were impacted by social anxiety. Analyses indicated a larger N170 amplitude in response to all facial stimuli in HC when compared to the HSA. However, we found increased P2 amplitudes for disgust-neutral pairs compared with happy-neutral pairs in has only. Then, thasHSA group showed increased P2 amplitudes for targets following disgusted faces on the opposite side of the screen compared with targets appearing on the same side of the screen. These results suggest that HSA may display an increased anchorage of attention on threatening stimuli and need more effort to disengage their attentional focus from threats and to perform the task correctly. Taken together, our data confirmed the presence of AB in children with high levels of social anxiety, which are reflected by increased neural processing during the confrontation to faces depicting a potential threatening expression., (© 2022. The Psychonomic Society, Inc.)
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- 2023
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7. Biases in BCI experiments: Do we really need to balance stimulus properties across categories?
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La Fisca L, Vandenbulcke V, Wauthia E, Miceli A, Simoes Loureiro I, Ris L, Lefebvre L, Gosselin B, and Pernet CR
- Abstract
Brain Computer Interfaces (BCIs) consist of an interaction between humans and computers with a specific mean of communication, such as voice, gestures, or even brain signals that are usually recorded by an Electroencephalogram (EEG). To ensure an optimal interaction, the BCI algorithm typically involves the classification of the input signals into predefined task-specific categories. However, a recurrent problem is that the classifier can easily be biased by uncontrolled experimental conditions, namely covariates, that are unbalanced across the categories. This issue led to the current solution of forcing the balance of these covariates across the different categories which is time consuming and drastically decreases the dataset diversity. The purpose of this research is to evaluate the need for this forced balance in BCI experiments involving EEG data. A typical design of neural BCIs involves repeated experimental trials using visual stimuli to trigger the so-called Event-Related Potential (ERP). The classifier is expected to learn spatio-temporal patterns specific to categories rather than patterns related to uncontrolled stimulus properties, such as psycho-linguistic variables (e.g., phoneme number, familiarity, and age of acquisition) and image properties (e.g., contrast, compactness, and homogeneity). The challenges are then to know how biased the decision is, which features affect the classification the most, which part of the signal is impacted, and what is the probability to perform neural categorization per se . To address these problems, this research has two main objectives: (1) modeling and quantifying the covariate effects to identify spatio-temporal regions of the EEG allowing maximal classification performance while minimizing the biasing effect, and (2) evaluating the need to balance the covariates across categories when studying brain mechanisms. To solve the modeling problem, we propose using a linear parametric analysis applied to some observable and commonly studied covariates to them. The biasing effect is quantified by comparing the regions highly influenced by the covariates with the regions of high categorical contrast, i.e., parts of the ERP allowing a reliable classification. The need to balance the stimulus's inner properties across categories is evaluated by assessing the separability between category-related and covariate-related evoked responses. The procedure is applied to a visual priming experiment where the images represent items belonging to living or non-living entities. The observed covariates are the commonly controlled psycho-linguistic variables and some visual features of the images. As a result, we identified that the category of the stimulus mostly affects the late evoked response. The covariates, when not modeled, have a biasing effect on the classification, essentially in the early evoked response. This effect increases with the diversity of the dataset and the complexity of the algorithm used. As the effects of both psycho-linguistic variables and image features appear outside of the spatio-temporal regions of significant categorical contrast, the proper selection of the region of interest makes the classification reliable. Having proved that the covariate effects can be separated from the categorical effect, our framework can be further used to isolate the category-dependent evoked response from the rest of the EEG to study neural processes involved when seeing living vs. non-living entities., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 La Fisca, Vandenbulcke, Wauthia, Miceli, Simoes Loureiro, Ris, Lefebvre, Gosselin and Pernet.)
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- 2022
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8. Neural responses associated with attentional engagement and disengagement from threat in high socially anxious children: Evidence from temporal-spatial PCA.
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Wauthia E, D'Hondt F, Blekic W, Lefebvre L, Ris L, and Rossignol M
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- Humans, Male, Child, Female, Reaction Time physiology, Electroencephalography, Anxiety physiopathology, Facial Expression, Phobia, Social physiopathology, Phobia, Social psychology, Emotions physiology, Cues, Attention physiology, Evoked Potentials physiology
- Abstract
Background: Cognitive models indicated that social anxiety disorder (SAD) would be caused and maintained by a biased attentional processing of threatening information. This study investigates whether socially anxious children may present impaired attentional engagement and disengagement from negative emotional faces, as well as their underlying event-related potential responses., Methods and Findings: Fifteen children with high levels of social anxiety (HSA; 9 boys; mean age = 9.99y; SD = 1.14) and twenty low socially anxious children (LSA; 16 boys; mean age = 10.47y; SD = 1.17) participated in a spatial cueing task in which they had to detect targets following neutral/disgusted faces in a valid or invalid location. No group effect was reported on reaction times [p>.05]. However, electrophysiological data showed lower P3a amplitude in HSA children compared with the LSA group when processing facial stimuli. They also reported larger N2 amplitudes for valid-disgusted targets and a larger P3a amplitude for the invalid-disgusted ones., Conclusion: In terms of electrophysiological data, our results validated, the hypothesis of attentional disengagement difficulties in SAD children. We also confirm the idea that high levels of social anxiety are associated with cognitive control impairments and have a greater impact on the processing efficiency than on the performance effectiveness., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
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- 2022
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9. Influence of acute stress on attentional bias toward threat: How a previous trauma exposure disrupts threat apprehension.
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Blekić W, Rossignol M, Wauthia E, and Felmingham KL
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- Anxiety, Attention, Evoked Potentials, Humans, Prospective Studies, Attentional Bias
- Abstract
While previous trauma exposure is known to be a risk factor for the development and maintenance of many psychological disorders, it remains unclear how it increases individual risk for prospective psychopathology in the aftermath of a new trauma exposure. The aim of this study was to investigate how a prior exposure to trauma affects attentional processing of threat before and after an acute stress task. Specifically, we assessed attentional biases to threat before and after a cold pressor task in 17 individuals who have been exposed to trauma (TE) compared to 18 individuals without trauma exposure (NTE). Behavioral results showed difficulties to disengage from threat in TE but not in the control group prior to stress induction, as well as a switch to an attentional bias toward threat after the cold pressor task in the TE group. For the ERPs, we highlighted (1) decreased N1 negativity in response to threatening stimuli after an acute stress in both groups, and (2) a parallel increase in P1 for such stimuli only in the TE group. Those results suggest a vulnerability presented by previously traumatized individuals when dealing with threats as well as an acute responsitity toward stress. Those results are interpreted in regards with the theorical models of stress and anxiety., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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10. Perceptual and Interoceptive Strength Norms for 270 French Words.
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Miceli A, Wauthia E, Lefebvre L, Ris L, and Simoes Loureiro I
- Abstract
Perceptual experience through the five modalities (i.e., vision, hearing, touch, taste, and smell) has demonstrated its key role in semantics. Researchers also highlighted the role of interoceptive information in the grounded representation of concepts. However, to this day, there is no available data across these modalities in the French language. Therefore, the aim of this study was to circumvent this caveat. Participants aged between 18 and 50 completed an online survey in which we recorded scores of perceptual strength (PS), interoceptive information, imageability, concreteness, conceptual familiarity, and age of acquisition of 270 words of the French language. We also analysed the relationships between perceptual modalities and psycholinguistic variables. Results showed that vast majority of concepts were visually-dominant. Correlation analyses revealed that the five PS variables were strongly correlated with imageability, concreteness, and conceptual familiarity and highlight that PS variables index one aspect of the semantic representations of a word. On the other hand, high interoceptive scores were highlighted only for the less imageable and less concrete words, emphasizing their importance for the grounding of abstract concepts. Future research could use these norms in the investigation of the role of perceptual experience in the representation of concepts and their impact on word processing., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Miceli, Wauthia, Lefebvre, Ris and Simoes Loureiro.)
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- 2021
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11. Eye-tracking exploration of inhibitory control in post-traumatic stress disorder: an emotional antisaccade paradigm.
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Blekic W, Wauthia E, Kornacka M, Kandana Arachchige K, Lefebvre L, and Rossignol M
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Background : Cognitive-behavioural studies among individuals suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) have highlighted attentional biases towards threats as a key factor in the maintenance of the disorder. Anxiety-related studies have hypothesized that attentional biases were due to attentional control difficulties in inhibition and flexibility of threatening information. Objective : Because it remains unclear how this theory could be applied to PTSD, this study aims to evaluate the inhibitory control and flexibility abilities of negative and threatening information in this population, using eye-tracking technology. Method : Fifteen adults with a history of physical assault and a current diagnosis of PTSD, and 15 healthy control participants, completed an original mixed antisaccade task. Results : We found enhanced overt attentional allocation towards every item of emotional information among PTSD participants, such as indexed by the latencies of the first saccade in prosaccade trials, followed by disengagement difficulties, such as indexed by increased reaction time to identify the target. Conclusion : Our results could represent empirical evidence of the general enhancement of attentional vigilance in people with PTSD in comparison with healthy controls, as well as specific inhibitory deficits. The results are interpreted through a fear-generalization hypothesis., Competing Interests: No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors., (© 2021 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.)
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- 2021
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12. Affective Ratings of Pictures Related to Interpersonal Situations.
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Blekić W, Kandana Arachchige K, Wauthia E, Simoes Loureiro I, Lefebvre L, and Rossignol M
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Many studies require standardized and replicable protocols composed of emotional stimuli. To this aim, several databases of emotional pictures are available. However, there are only few images directly depicting interpersonal violence, which is a specific emotion evocative stimulus for research on aggressive behavior or post-traumatic stress disorder. The objective of the current study is to provide a new set of standardized stimuli containing images depicting interpersonal situations (both positive and negative). This will allow a sensitive assessment of a wide range of cognitions linked to social interaction (empathy, perspective taking, traumatic experiences, etc.). To this aim, 240 participants rated the valence and arousal of 79 pictures collected from online sources in 2018. Results showed (1) a distinctive pattern of valence and arousal regarding the picture content and (2) specific associations between those two dimensions. Taken together, these results suggest a good reliability of the selected images. In conclusion, our study provides an open access set of recent pictures depicting interpersonal situations along with normative valence and arousal ratings, that are available for download from: https://osf.io/ak4m7/?view_only=None., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Blekić, Kandana Arachchige, Wauthia, Simoes Loureiro, Lefebvre and Rossignol.)
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- 2021
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13. Examining the Hierarchical Influences of the Big-Five Dimensions and Anxiety Sensitivity on Anxiety Symptoms in Children.
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Wauthia E, Lefebvre L, Huet K, Blekic W, El Bouragui K, and Rossignol M
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Anxiety sensitivity (AS), namely the fear of anxiety symptoms, has been described as a precursor of sub-threshold anxiety levels. Sexton et al. (2003) posited that increased AS would arise from an elevated neuroticism and that both would act as vulnerability factors for panic disorder (PD), obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), and generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) symptoms. Accordingly, this study aimed to (1) evaluate the applicability of this model to a pediatric population and (2) examine the influences of the other Big-Five personality dimensions on the four lower-order dimensions of AS (cognitive, physical, control, and physical) and on social phobia (SP), separation anxiety disorder (SAD) and depression symptoms. 200 children (104 girls) aged between 8 and 12 years old (mean age = 132.52 months, SD = 14.5) completed the Childhood Anxiety Sensitivity Index (Silverman et al., 1991), the Big Five Questionnaire for Children (Barbaranelli et al., 2003), and the Revised's Children Anxiety and Depression Scale (Chorpita et al., 2000). Regression analyses confirmed that AS and neuroticism together significantly predicted the presence of PD, OCD, and GAD symptoms but also SP, SAD, and depression symptoms. Moreover, neuroticism interacted with extraversion, conscientiousness and agreeableness to significantly predict SP, GAD, and depression. Surprisingly, the global AS score was only predicted by agreeableness, while AS dimensions also specifically related to openness. Finally, AS dimensions did not predict the presence of specific anxiety symptoms. To conclude, the predicting model of anxiety symptoms in children sets neuroticism and AS on the same level, with an unexpected influence of agreeableness on AS, raising the importance of other trait-like factors in the definition of such models. Moreover, AS should be considered as a unitary construct when predicting the presence of anxiety symptoms in children. Future interventions must consider these associations to help children detect and recognize the symptoms of their anxiety and help them to interpret them correctly.
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- 2019
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14. Emotional Processing and Attention Control Impairments in Children with Anxiety: An Integrative Review of Event-Related Potentials Findings.
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Wauthia E and Rossignol M
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Anxiety disorders in adults have been associated with biased processing of emotional information which may be due to a deficit in attentional control. This deficit leads to an hypervigilance and a selective attention toward threatening information. Event-related potentials (ERPs) have been used to study this topic in anxious adults. Similar biases have been reported in children with anxiety but researches investigating the ERPs components underpinning these biases are more scarce. However, the understanding of the neural correlates of attentional biases in anxious children seem quite important since they could play a role in the etiology and the maintenance of this disorder. This review summarizes the results of researches having used ERPs to index emotional processing and attention control in children suffering from anxiety. We will focus on the P1, indexing basic visual perceptual processing, the N2, thought to reflect cognitive control process, the P3 typically associated with response inhibition, and the late positive potential (LPP) that indicates sustained attention toward motivationally salient stimuli. We will also examine the error-related negativity (ERN) that indexes monitoring system for detecting errors. Electro-physiological studies generally reported increased amplitudes of these components in anxious children, even when they did not differ from typically developing children at a behavioral level. These results suggest diminished cognitive control that influences children's selective attention mechanisms toward threatening information. Theoretical perspectives and implications for future researches will be discussed in the framework of current models of childhood anxiety.
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- 2016
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