Search results for "DEC"

showing 10 items of 10327 documents

Facilitating Effect of Natural Frequencies: Size Does Not Matter

2009

The question of whether humans are able to work in a Bayesian way is currently a topic of substantial investigation. An important finding, reported by Gigerenzer and Hoffrage in 1995 is that Bayesian reasoning is facilitated when the information format corresponds to natural frequencies. The present concern was whether the facilitating effect of frequencies persists when natural frequencies relate to samples which are not convenient multiples of 10. 150 undergraduates participated as volunteers (42 men, 108 women; M age = 23 yr.). Analysis showed the effect of natural frequency formats was not dependent on size of reference class. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.

AdultMaleComputer scienceConcept FormationDecision MakingStatistics as TopicBayesian probabilityBayesian reasoningExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyProbabilistic reasoningBayesian inferenceSampling StudiesJudgmentHumansNatural (music)Reference classPractical implicationsMultipleModels StatisticalBayes TheoremSensory SystemsNatural frequencies formatFemaleSocial psychologyAlgorithmsMathematicsCognitive psychologyPerceptual and Motor Skills
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Identifying musical pieces from fMRI data using encoding and decoding models.

2018

AbstractEncoding models can reveal and decode neural representations in the visual and semantic domains. However, a thorough understanding of how distributed information in auditory cortices and temporal evolution of music contribute to model performance is still lacking in the musical domain. We measured fMRI responses during naturalistic music listening and constructed a two-stage approach that first mapped musical features in auditory cortices and then decoded novel musical pieces. We then probed the influence of stimuli duration (number of time points) and spatial extent (number of voxels) on decoding accuracy. Our approach revealed a linear increase in accuracy with duration and a poin…

AdultMaleComputer scienceSpeech recognitionModels Neurologicalmusiikkilcsh:MedicineMusicalStimulus (physiology)Auditory cortexneural encodingkuunteleminen050105 experimental psychologyArticleKey (music)03 medical and health sciencesYoung Adult0302 clinical medicineSpatio-Temporal AnalysisEncoding (memory)Humans0501 psychology and cognitive scienceslcsh:ScienceAuditory CortexMultidisciplinaryPoint (typography)lcsh:R05 social sciencesneurotieteetMagnetic Resonance Imagingneural decodingHealthy VolunteerscortexaivokuorikoneoppiminenAcoustic StimulationDuration (music)lcsh:QFemale030217 neurology & neurosurgeryDecoding methodsMusicScientific reports
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Confabulation: damage to a specific inferior medial prefrontal system

2008

Confabulation, the pathological production of false memories, occurs following a variety of aetiologies involving the frontal lobes, and is frequently held to be underpinned by combined memory and executive deficits. However, the critical frontal regions and specific cognitive deficits involved are unclear. Studies in amnesic patients have associated confabulation with damage to the orbital and ventromedial prefrontal cortices. However, neuroimaging studies have associated memory-control processes which are assumed to underlie confabulation with the right lateral prefrontal cortex. We used a confabulation battery to investigate the occurrence and localisation of confabulation in an unselect…

AdultMaleConfabulationDeceptionCognitive NeuroscienceConfabulation frontal lobe executive function memory orbitofrontal cortexVentromedial prefrontal cortexAmnesiaPrefrontal CortexExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyNeuropsychological TestsDelusionsFunctional Lateralityfrontal lobe.confabulation; frontal lobe; executive function; memory; orbitofrontal cortexmemoryNeuroimagingReference ValuesNeural PathwaysmedicineMemory impairmentHumansConfabulationEpisodic memoryAgedBrain MappingMiddle Agedfrontal lobeSelf ConceptNeuropsychology and Physiological Psychologymedicine.anatomical_structureFrontal lobeexecutive functionCase-Control StudiesOrbitofrontal cortexBrain Damage ChronicFemaleAmnesiamedicine.symptomPsychologyorbitofrontal cortexNeuroscience
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Resilience Scale Psychometric Study. Adaptation to the Spanish Population in Nursing Students

2020

Nursing students and professionals are exposed to highly stressful clinical situations. However, when confronted with stress, which is exacerbated by academic and professional situations, there is a great disparity between those who do not know how to respond suitably to the demands from patients or teachers due to a lack of competence and personal resistance, and those who are more resilient and develop a greater range of strengths. This research aims to analyse the validity and psychometric characteristics of a questionnaire on resilience adapted to Spanish nursing bachelor’s degree students. The participants were 434 undergraduate nursing students from the province of Valencia (Spain) be…

AdultMaleCoping (psychology)scale validationAdolescentPsychometricsHealth Toxicology and Mutagenesismedia_common.quotation_subjectPopulationeducationBachelorpsychometric propertiesArticle03 medical and health sciencesYoung Adult0302 clinical medicineNursingInfermeriaSurveys and QuestionnairesHumans030212 general & internal medicineeducationCompetence (human resources)resiliencemedia_commonnursing studentseducation.field_of_study030504 nursingPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthEducation Nursing BaccalaureateMiddle AgedSpanish populationcopingCross-Sectional StudiesFeelingSpainFemaleStudents Nursing0305 other medical sciencePsychologyKnow-howDeclaration of HelsinkiInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
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Magnetic resonance findings in scuba diving-related spinal cord decompression sickness

1997

Scuba diving is associated with risk of severe decompression sickness (DCS type II), which results from rapid reduction of the environmental pressure sufficient to cause the formation into tissue or blood of inert gas bubbles previously loaded within tissues as a soluble phase. DCS type II constitutes a unique subset of ischemic insults to the central nervous system (CNS) with primarily involvement of the spinal cord. Ten patients with diving-related barotrauma underwent neurologic examination. Two of them presented progressive sensory and motor loss in the extremities at admission and were presumed affected by spinal cord DCS. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) demonstrated abnormalities in …

AdultMaleCordAdolescentSaturation divingDivingCentral nervous systemBiophysicsSpinal Cord DiseasesDecompression sicknessHumansMedicineRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingRadiological and Ultrasound Technologymedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryMagnetic resonance imagingDecompression Sicknessmedicine.diseaseSpinal cordMagnetic Resonance ImagingScuba divingmedicine.anatomical_structureAnesthesiaSpinal decompressionFemalebusinesshuman activitiesMagma: Magnetic Resonance Materials in Physics, Biology, and Medicine
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fMRI-activation patterns in the detection of concealed information rely on memory-related effects

2012

Recent research on potential applications of fMRI in the detection of concealed knowledge primarily ascribed the reported differences in hemodynamic response patterns to deception. This interpretation is challenged by the results of the present study. Participants were required to memorize probe and target items (a banknote and a playing card, each). Subsequently, these items were repeatedly presented along with eight irrelevant items in a modified Guilty Knowledge Test design and participants were instructed to simply acknowledge item presentation by pressing one button after each stimulus. Despite the absence of response monitoring demands and thus overt response conflicts, the experiment…

AdultMaleDeceptionCognitive Neurosciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectLie DetectionExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyStimulus (physiology)Neuropsychological TestsBrain mappingbehavioral disciplines and activitiesMemorizationDevelopmental psychologyLie detectionYoung AdultMemorymedicineImage Processing Computer-AssistedReaction TimeHumansResponse conflictLevels-of-processing effectmedia_commonBrain MappingSupplementary motor areaBrainGeneral MedicineGalvanic Skin ResponseOriginal ArticlesDeceptionMagnetic Resonance ImagingOxygenmedicine.anatomical_structureGames ExperimentalSkin conductanceGuiltFemaleGuilty knowledge testPsychologySkin conductanceConcealed informationCognitive psychology
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Covariations among fMRI, skin conductance, and behavioral data during processing of concealed information.

2007

Imaging techniques have been used to elucidate the neural correlates that underlie deception. The scientifically best understood paradigm for the detection of deception, however, the guilty knowledge test (GKT), was rarely used in imaging studies. By transferring a GKT‐paradigm to a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study, while additionally quantifying reaction times and skin conductance responses (SCRs), this study aimed at identifying the neural correlates of the behavioral and electrodermal response pattern typically found in GKT examinations. Prior to MR scanning, subjects viewed two specific items (probes) and were instructed to hide their knowledge of these. Two other spec…

AdultMaleDeceptionLie DetectionStimulus (physiology)Electroencephalographybehavioral disciplines and activitiesNeuroimagingEvent-related potentialMemorymedicineImage Processing Computer-AssistedReaction TimeHumansRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingResearch ArticlesCerebral CortexNeural correlates of consciousnessRadiological and Ultrasound Technologymedicine.diagnostic_testSupplementary motor areaWorking memoryElectroencephalographyGalvanic Skin ResponseEvent-Related Potentials P300Magnetic Resonance Imagingmedicine.anatomical_structureMemory Short-TermNeurologyMental RecallGuiltNeurology (clinical)AnatomyFunctional magnetic resonance imagingPsychologyNeuroscienceAlgorithmsHuman brain mapping
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Should I Stay or Should I Go? Physical Education Teachers' Career Intentions

2014

This study investigated Finnish physical education (PE) teachers' intentions to leave the profession and the reasons behind them.A large sample (N = 808) of PE teachers who graduated between 1980 and 2008 (432 women, 376 men) answered a modified job satisfaction and teacher follow-up questionnaire that elicited career perceptions, intentions, and current work duties.In this sample, 26% of the respondents were contemplating leaving their jobs as PE teachers and an additional 13% were actually in the process of transferring from PE teaching but planned to remain in school teaching. To determine the reasons for considering leaving the PE teaching profession, principal axis factoring with direc…

AdultMaleDecision MakingApplied psychologyPhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationIntentionWorkloadJob SatisfactionLikert scalePhysical educationSurveys and QuestionnairesHumansta516Orthopedics and Sports Medicineta315FinlandMedical educationPhysical Education and TrainingCareer ChoiceTeachingWorkloadGeneral MedicineNephrologyJob analysisWorkforceWorkforceFemaleJob satisfactionAttributionPsychologyCareer developmentResearch Quarterly for Exercise and Sport
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Is the go/no-go lexical decision task an alternative to the yes/no lexical decision task?

2002

In the go/no-go lexical decision task (LDT), participants are instructed to respond as quickly as they can when a word is presented and not to respond if a nonword is presented. By minimizing part of the response selection process in the experimental task, the impact of response decision time on the obtained lexical decision time is probably reduced relative to the standard yes/no LDT (Gordon, 1983). Experiments 1 and 2 show that the go/no-go LDT is sensitive to the effects of word frequency and associative priming--the magnitude of these effects is similar with the two tasks. More important, the go/no-go LDT has a number of advantages with respect to the "standard" yes/no LDT: It offers fa…

AdultMaleDecision MakingExperimental and Cognitive PsychologySemanticsTask (project management)Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Reaction TimeLexical decision taskSelection (linguistics)HumansAttentionAssociative propertyCognitionPaired-Associate LearningLinguisticsSemanticsWord lists by frequencyNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyReadingGo/no goMental RecallFemalePsychologyPsychomotor PerformanceCognitive psychologyMemory & Cognition
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Cisternostomy for Traumatic Brain Injury: Pathophysiologic Mechanisms and Surgical Technical Notes

2016

Objective Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is one of the major challenges in health care, representing the third most frequent cause of death. Current optimal management is based on a progressive, target-driven approach combining both medical and surgical treatment strategies. Here we describe cisternostomy, an emerging surgical treatment for the treatment of TBI. Methods Cisternostomy is a novel technique that incorporates knowledge of skull base and microvascular surgery. By opening the brain cisterns to atmospheric pressure, the technique could decrease the intracranial pressure due to a backshift of the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) from the swollen brain to the cisterns through the Virchow-Rob…

AdultMaleDecompressive CraniectomyTraumatic brain injurymedicine.medical_treatmentSubarachnoid Space03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineCerebrospinal fluidTraumatic brain injuryBrain Injuries TraumaticHumansMedicineDecompressive hemicraniectomyIntracranial pressureCause of deathbusiness.industryCisternmedicine.diseaseCisternostomyMicrovascular Decompression Surgerymedicine.anatomical_structure030220 oncology & carcinogenesisAnesthesiaSurgeryGlymphatic systemDecompressive craniectomyNeurology (clinical)Subarachnoid spacebusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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