Search results for " function"

showing 10 items of 9395 documents

Contribution of executive functions to eating behaviours in obesity and eating disorders.

2020

AbstractBackground:Patients with eating disorders (ED) or obesity show difficulties in tasks assessing decision-making, set-shifting abilities and central coherence.Aims:The aim of this study was to explore executive functions in eating and weight-related problems, ranging from restricting types of ED to obesity.Method:Two hundred and eighty-eight female participants (75 with obesity; 149 with ED: 76 with restrictive eating, 73 with bingeing-purging symptoms; and 64 healthy controls) were administered the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test, the Iowa Gambling Task, and the Group Embedded Figures Test to assess set-shifting, decision-making and central coherence, respectively.Results:Participants wi…

Cognitive flexibilityGeneral MedicineFeeding BehaviorNeuropsychological TestsExecutive functionsmedicine.diseaseIowa gambling taskObesityFeeding and Eating DisordersClinical PsychologyEating disordersExecutive FunctionWisconsin Card Sorting TestmedicineHumansFemaleCognitive skillObesityPsychologyEating behaviourClinical psychologyBehavioural and cognitive psychotherapy
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More Support for More-Support

2009

This book provides the most comprehensive account so far of novel and hitherto unexplained factors operative in the choice between synthetic ( prouder ) and analytic ( more proud ) comparatives. It argues that the underlying motivation in using the analytic variant is to mitigate processing demands – a compensatory strategy referred to as more -support. The analytic variant is claimed to be better suited to environments of increased processing complexity – presumably owing to its ability to facilitate early phrase structure recognition, the more transparent one-to-one relation between form and function and possibly because the degree marker more can serve as a structural signal foreshadowin…

Cognitive scienceBridging (networking)Variation (linguistics)Relation (database)Computer scienceForm and functionPhrase structure rulesCognitive complexity
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Instrument transfer as knowledge transfer in neurophysiology: François Magendie's (1783-1855) early attempts to measure cerebrospinal fluid pressure.

2007

Francois Magendie's (1783-1855) experimental model for measuring blood pressure in animals, which he developed in 1838, had a major impact on French physiology in the nineteenth century, especially upon Etienne-Jules Marey (1830-1904) in Paris. In due course it was also adopted by other European investigators, such as the Leipzig physiologist Carl Ludwig (1816-1895), and by clinicians who developed it into a major measuring tool. Historians of science, however, have paid hardly any attention to Magendie's further laboratory investigations conducted with the assistance of Jean-Louis Marie Poiseuille's (1799-1869) sphygmometre (blood pressure meter). After having used the apparatus to conduct…

Cognitive scienceExperimental modelbusiness.industryGeneral NeuroscienceNeurophysiologyHistory 19th CenturyNeurophysiologyVentricular systemHistory 18th CenturyCsf flowKnowledgeHistory and Philosophy of ScienceCerebrospinal Fluid PressureMedicineHumansNeurology (clinical)Cerebrospinal fluid pressureDiffusion of InnovationbusinessNeuroscienceKnowledge transferBrain functionIntracranial pressureCerebrospinal FluidJournal of the history of the neurosciences
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The Prefrontal Cortex and Neurological Impairments of Active Thought

2018

This article reviews the effects of lesions to the frontal cortex on the ability to carry out active thought, namely, to reason, think flexibly, produce strategies, and formulate and realize plans. We discuss how and why relevant neuropsychological studies should be carried out. The relationships between active thought and both intelligence and language are considered. The following basic processes necessary for effective active thought are reviewed: concentration, set switching, inhibiting potentiated responses, and monitoring and checking. Different forms of active thought are then addressed: abstraction, deduction, reasoning in well-structured and ill-structured problem spaces, novel st…

Cognitive scienceSupervisory systemsFrontal cortexIntelligence05 social sciencesNeuropsychologyPrefrontal CortexFunctional Laterality050105 experimental psychologyLateralization of brain functionThinking03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineHumansAttention0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesLateral prefrontal cortexPsychologyPrefrontal cortexSet (psychology)030217 neurology & neurosurgeryGeneral PsychologyCognitive psychologyAnnual Review of Psychology
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Prefix Stripping Re-Re-Revisited: MEG Investigations of Morphological Decomposition and Recomposition

2019

We revisit a long-standing question in the psycholinguistic and neurolinguistic literature on comprehending morphologically complex words: are prefixes and suffixes processed using the same cognitive mechanisms? Recent work using Magnetoencephalography (MEG) to uncover the dynamic temporal and spatial responses evoked by visually presented complex suffixed single words provide us with a comprehensive picture of morphological processing in the brain, from early, form-based decomposition, through lexical access, grammatically constrained recomposition, and semantic interpretation. In the present study, we find that MEG responses to prefixed words reveal interesting early differences in the la…

Cognitive sciencemagnetoencephalographymedicine.diagnostic_testlexical accessSemantic interpretationlcsh:BF1-990derivational morphologymorphological recompositionOf the formCognitionMagnetoencephalographyprefixationPsycholinguisticsLateralization of brain functionmorphological decompositionPrefixlcsh:Psychologygrammatical licensingStripping (linguistics)medicinePsychologyPsychologyGeneral PsychologyOriginal Researchmorphological processingFrontiers in Psychology
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Executive functions rehabilitation proposal: A tailored intervention

2018

Executive functions (EFs) are cognitive processes that allow the development of intentional behaviors e requiring the ability to formulate goals and objectives, capacity for initiative, to anticipate the consequences of actions, to organize behavior and monitor it and adapt it based on the context. Patients with EFs deficiencies exhibit specific disorders of planning, regulation and correction intentional conduct and cognitive activity, while they have no problem in the execution of usual action sequences.

Cognitive-behavioral trainingExecutive functionMedicine (all)Tailored-chid rehabilitation
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Varieties of algebras with pseudoinvolution: Codimensions, cocharacters and colengths

2022

Abstract Let A be a finitely generated superalgebra with pseudoinvolution ⁎ over an algebraically closed field F of characteristic zero. In this paper we develop a theory of polynomial identities for this kind of algebras . In particular, we shall consider three sequences that can be attached to Id ⁎ ( A ) , the T 2 ⁎ -ideal of identities of A: the sequence of ⁎-codimensions c n ⁎ ( A ) , the sequence of ⁎-cocharacter χ 〈 n 〉 ⁎ ( A ) and the ⁎-colength sequence l n ⁎ ( A ) . Our purpose is threefold. First we shall prove that the ⁎-codimension sequence is eventually non-decreasing, i.e., c n ⁎ ( A ) ≤ c n + 1 ⁎ ( A ) , for n large enough. Secondly, we study superalgebras with pseudoinvoluti…

ColengthsPolynomialSequencePure mathematicsMultiplicitiesAlgebra and Number TheoryMathematics::Commutative AlgebraPseudoinvolutionsZero (complex analysis)Cocharacters; Colengths; Multiplicities; Polynomial identities; PseudoinvolutionsCocharactersSuperalgebraPolynomial identitiesSettore MAT/02 - AlgebraSection (category theory)Bounded functionIdeal (ring theory)Algebraically closed fieldMathematics
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Data from: Functional structure of European forest beetle communities is enhanced by rare species

2022

From article abstract: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2022.109491 ABSTRACT Biodiverse communities have been shown to sustain high levels of multifunctionality and thus a loss of species likely negatively impacts ecosystem functions. For most taxa, however, the roles of individual species are poorly known. Rare species, often the most likely to go extinct, may have unique traits leading to unique functional roles. Alternatively, rare species may be functionally redundant, such that their loss would not disrupt ecosystem functions. We quantified the functional role of rare species by using capture records of wood-living (saproxylic) beetle species, combined with recent databases of their mo…

Coleopteracommunity functional structureextinctionecosystem functionrarityfunctional traits
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Collective and Cooperative Behaviour Models

2016

International audience; In modelling residential choice we cannot escape the debate about the effect of societal context on an individual’s decision-making. This debate depends on whether we set more store by the aggregate scale of society or by the individual’s decision-making. An individual-centred approach will focus on the particularities of an individual and the way her past, for example, influences her decisions.

Collective behaviorSocietal context[SHS.GEO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Geography[SHS.PSY]Humanities and Social Sciences/Psychology[SHS.GEO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Geography[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and Finance[ SHS.GEO ] Humanities and Social Sciences/GeographyFocus (linguistics)[SHS.PSY] Humanities and Social Sciences/PsychologyMicroeconomicsresidential choice[ SHS.PSY ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Psychologybehaviour modelsSelf organisationScale (social sciences)Indirect utility function[ SHS.ECO ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economies and financesSociology[SHS.ECO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and FinanceSet (psychology)Social psychology
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Characterizing the collective personality of ant societies: aggressive colonies do not abandon their home.

2011

Animal groups can show consistent behaviors or personalities just like solitary animals. We studied the collective behavior of Temnothorax nylanderi ant colonies, including consistency in behavior and correlations between different behavioral traits. We focused on four collective behaviors (aggression against intruders, nest relocation, removal of infected corpses and nest reconstruction) and also tested for links to the immune defense level of a colony and a fitness component (per-capita productivity). Behaviors leading to an increased exposure of ants to micro-parasites were expected to be positively associated with immune defense measures and indeed colonies that often relocated to other…

Collective behaviorTemnothorax nylanderimedia_common.quotation_subjectved/biology.organism_classification_rank.speciesImmunologyZoologylcsh:MedicineBiologyNestBehavioral ecologymedicinePersonalityAnimalslcsh:ScienceBiologymedia_commonLikelihood FunctionsMultidisciplinaryBehavior AnimalEcologyved/biologyEcologyAggressionAntslcsh:RAnt colonyAggressionCommunity Ecologylcsh:QCollective animal behaviormedicine.symptomZoologyResearch ArticlePloS one
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