Search results for "ECoG"

showing 10 items of 3774 documents

Effect of luminance on photopic visual acuity in the presence of laser speckle

1988

Visual acuity in coherent and incoherent light has been determined by using square-wave gratings of 100% contrast. Luminance was varied from 3 to 400 cd/m2. Coherent illumination resulted in a 40% loss of visual acuity. This is probably due to the masking effect of coherent spatial noise (speckle). However, the most interesting finding is the change in shape of the photopic visual-acuity-luminance function. With coherent illumination, the function is vertically displaced and of a different gradient. An increase in luminance produces a decrease in visual acuity. This indicates that the masking effect of the speckle is dependent on luminance. Two observers were used, and similar results were …

AdultMaleMasking (art)Visual acuityLightgenetic structuresmedia_common.quotation_subjectVisual AcuityLuminanceSpeckle patternOpticsmedicineHumansContrast (vision)media_commonPhysicsbusiness.industryLasersAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsFemaleComputer Vision and Pattern RecognitionSpeckle imagingSpatial frequencymedicine.symptombusinessPhotopic visionJournal of the Optical Society of America A
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Binaural release from masking in forward-masked intensity discrimination: Evidence for effects of selective attention

2012

In a forward-masked intensity discrimination task, we manipulated the perceived lateralization of the masker via variation of the interaural time difference (ITD). The maskers and targets were 500 Hz pure tones with a duration of 30 ms. Standards of 30 and 60 dB SPL were combined with 60 or 90 dB SPL maskers. As expected, the presentation of a forward masker perceived as lateralized to the other side of the head as the target resulted in a significantly smaller elevation of the intensity difference limen than a masker lateralized ipsilaterally. This binaural release from masking in forward-masked intensity discrimination cannot be explained by peripheral mechanisms because varying the ITD l…

AdultMaleMasking (art)medicine.medical_specialtySpeech recognitionInteraural time differenceMonauralAudiologybehavioral disciplines and activitiesLateralization of brain functionIntensity discriminationYoung AdultDiscrimination PsychologicalmedicineHumansAttentionSound LocalizationSelective attentionAuditory ThresholdSensory SystemsIntensity (physics)Acoustic StimulationAuditory PerceptionFemalePsychologyPerceptual MaskingBinaural recordingpsychological phenomena and processesPsychoacousticsHearing Research
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Sequential grouping modulates the effect of non-simultaneous masking on auditory intensity resolution.

2012

The presence of non-simultaneous maskers can result in strong impairment in auditory intensity resolution relative to a condition without maskers, and causes a complex pattern of effects that is difficult to explain on the basis of peripheral processing. We suggest that the failure of selective attention to the target tones is a useful framework for understanding these effects. Two experiments tested the hypothesis that the sequential grouping of the targets and the maskers into separate auditory objects facilitates selective attention and therefore reduces the masker-induced impairment in intensity resolution. In Experiment 1, a condition favoring the processing of the maskers and the targ…

AdultMaleMasking (art)medicine.medical_specialtyTime FactorsCognitive NeuroscienceLoudness Perceptionmedia_common.quotation_subjectSpeech recognitionPerceptual Maskinglcsh:MedicineAudiologySocial and Behavioral Sciencesbehavioral disciplines and activitiesPitch DiscriminationBehavioral NeuroscienceYoung AdultCognitionPerceptionPsychophysicsmedicinePsychophysicsPsychologyHumansAttentionPsychoacousticsPitch Perceptionlcsh:ScienceBiologymedia_commonPhysicsMultidisciplinarylcsh:RExperimental PsychologyAuditory ThresholdSensory SystemsInterval (music)Auditory SystemAcoustic StimulationQUIETPitch DiscriminationSensory PerceptionFemalelcsh:QPerceptual Maskingpsychological phenomena and processesResearch ArticleNeurosciencePsychoacousticsPLoS ONE
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Integration of internal and external facial features in 8- to 10-year-old children and adults.

2013

Abstract Investigation of whole-part and composite effects in 4- to 6-year-old children gave rise to claims that face perception is fully mature within the first decade of life (Crookes & McKone, 2009). However, only internal features were tested, and the role of external features was not addressed, although external features are highly relevant for holistic face perception (Sinha & Poggio, 1996; Axelrod & Yovel, 2010, 2011). In this study, 8- to 10-year-old children and adults performed a same–different matching task with faces and watches. In this task participants attended to either internal or external features. Holistic face perception was tested using a congruency paradigm, in which f…

AdultMaleMatching (statistics)Face (sociological concept)Experimental and Cognitive PsychologyContext (language use)Face matchingTask (project management)Young AdultChild DevelopmentArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Age groupsFace perceptionDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyFeature (machine learning)HumansAttentionChildRecognition PsychologyGeneral MedicineFaceVisual PerceptionFemalePsychologySocial psychologyCognitive psychologyActa psychologica
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Holistic processing and reliance on global viewing strategies in older adults' face perception

2013

There is increasing evidence that face recognition might be impaired in older adults, but it is unclear whether the impairment is truly perceptual, and face specific. In order to address this question we compared performance in same/different matching tasks with face and non-face objects (watches) among young (mean age 23.7) and older adults (mean age 70.4) using a context congruency paradigm (Meinhardt-Injac, Persike & Meinhardt, 2010, Meinhardt-Injac, Persike and Meinhardt, 2011a). Older adults were less accurate than young adults with both object classes, while face matching was notably impaired. Effects of context congruency and inversion, measured as the hallmarks of holistic processin…

AdultMaleMatching (statistics)Visual perceptionmedia_common.quotation_subjectFace (sociological concept)Experimental and Cognitive PsychologyContext (language use)Facial recognition systemYoung AdultArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Face perceptionPerceptionReaction TimeDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyHumansAttentionYoung adultAgedmedia_commonAged 80 and overRecognition PsychologyGeneral MedicineFaceVisual PerceptionFemalePsychologySocial psychologyPhotic StimulationCognitive psychologyActa Psychologica
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Does matching of internal and external facial features depend on orientation and viewpoint?

2009

Although it is recognized that external (hair, head and face outline, ears) and internal (eyes, eyebrows, nose, mouth) features contribute differently to face recognition it is unclear whether both feature classes predominately stimulate different sensory pathways. We employed a sequential speed-matching task to study face perception with internal and external features in the context of intact faces, and at two levels of contextual congruency. Both internal and external features were matched faster and more accurately in the context of totally congruent/incongruent facial stimuli compared to just featurally congruent/ incongruent faces. Matching of totally congruent/incongruent faces was no…

AdultMaleMatching (statistics)media_common.quotation_subjecteducationExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyContext (language use)Facial recognition systemYoung AdultArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Face perceptionOrientationPerceptionReaction TimeDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyHumansmedia_commonCommunicationOrientation (computer vision)business.industryRecognition PsychologyGeneral MedicineForm PerceptionFeature (computer vision)FaceFace (geometry)FemaleVisual FieldsbusinessPsychologyCognitive psychologyActa Psychologica
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Familiarity-based recognition in the young, healthy elderly, mild cognitive impaired and Alzheimer's patients

2009

This study investigates the possible existence of deficits in familiarity in five samples of participants spanning a broad range of ages and cognitive states. Five groups of 16 participants with a diagnosis of multi-domain cognitive impairment with a slight or no deficit in memory, 16 multi-domain amnestic, and 16 Alzheimer's disease patients were compared in a recognition test with equivalent samples of old and young healthy participants. In one of the tests, participants studied words extracted from a restricted set of letters of the alphabet that were later mixed with new words from a different set. The unconscious use of the fluency produced by the repeated use of the set of letters was…

AdultMaleMedicina i psicologiaAgingmedicine.medical_specialtyCognitive NeuroscienceExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyNeuropsychological TestsAudiologyChoice BehaviorDevelopmental psychologyYoung AdultBehavioral NeuroscienceFluencyDiscrimination PsychologicalAlzheimer DiseasemedicineHumansDementiaGeriatric AssessmentAgedRecognition memoryAnalysis of VarianceRecallMemoriaNeuropsychologyRecognition PsychologyCognitionmedicine.diseaseFemaleAlzheimer's diseaseCognition DisordersPsychologyPhotic StimulationNeuropsychologia
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Dynamics of brain activity underlying working memory for music in a naturalistic condition

2014

We aimed at determining the functional neuroanatomy of working memory (WM) recognition of musical motifs that occurs while listening to music by adopting a non-standard procedure. Western tonal music provides naturally occurring repetition and variation of motifs. These serve as WM triggers, thus allowing us to study the phenomenon of motif tracking within real music. Adopting a modern tango as stimulus, a behavioural test helped to identify the stimulus motifs and build a time-course regressor of WM neural responses. This regressor was then correlated with the participants' (musicians') functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) signal obtained during a continuous listening condition. In…

AdultMaleMemory Long-TermAdolescentBrain activity and meditationCognitive NeuroscienceExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyCognitive neuroscienceStimulus (physiology)Recognition (Psychology)behavioral disciplines and activitiesHippocampusTemporal lobeYoung AdultCognitionmedicineHumansta515Working memory (WM)Brain MappingSupplementary motor areamedicine.diagnostic_testWorking memoryBrainRecognition PsychologyMiddle AgedMagnetic Resonance ImaginghumanitiesDorsolateral prefrontal cortexFunctional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)NaturalisticNeuropsychology and Physiological Psychologymedicine.anatomical_structureMemory Short-TermAcoustic Stimulationta6131Auditory PerceptionFemalePsychologyFunctional magnetic resonance imagingNeurosciencepsychological phenomena and processesMusicCognitive psychologyCORTEX
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Discovering dynamic task-modulated functional networks with specific spectral modes using MEG.

2019

Efficient neuronal communication between brain regions through oscillatory synchronization at certain frequencies is necessary for cognition. Such synchronized networks are transient and dynamic, established on the timescale of milliseconds in order to support ongoing cognitive operations. However, few studies characterizing dynamic electrophysiological brain networks have simultaneously accounted for temporal non-stationarity, spectral structure, and spatial properties. Here, we propose an analysis framework for characterizing the large-scale phase-coupling network dynamics during task performance using magnetoencephalography (MEG). We exploit the high spatiotemporal resolution of MEG to m…

AdultMaleMovementcanonical polyadic decompositionlcsh:RC321-571Functional connectivitytensor decompositionNeural PathwaysConnectomeHumansaivotutkimuslcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryCanonical polyadic decompositionMEGdynamic brain networksQuantitative Biology::Neurons and Cognitionsignaalinkäsittelyfunctional connectivityhermoverkot (biologia)BrainMagnetoencephalographySignal Processing Computer-AssistedMemory Short-TermTensor decompositionFrequency-specific oscillationsFemaleDynamic brain networksNerve NetFacial Recognitionfrequency-specific oscillationsNeuroImage
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Memory detection using fMRI - does the encoding context matter?

2015

Recent research revealed that the presentation of crime related details during the Concealed Information Test (CIT) reliably activates a network of bilateral inferior frontal, right medial frontal and right temporal-parietal brain regions. However, the ecological validity of these findings as well as the influence of the encoding context are still unclear. To tackle these questions, three different groups of subjects participated in the current study. Two groups of guilty subjects encoded critical details either only by planning (guilty intention group) or by really enacting (guilty action group) a complex, realistic mock crime. In addition, a group of informed innocent subjects encoded hal…

AdultMaleMultivariate analysisDeceptionEcological validityCognitive NeuroscienceLie DetectionPrefrontal CortexContext (language use)Functional LateralityNeural activityYoung AdultMemoryEncoding (memory)Parietal LobeImage Processing Computer-AssistedHumansBrain MappingUnivariateRecognition PsychologyGalvanic Skin ResponseMagnetic Resonance ImagingTest (assessment)NeurologyAction (philosophy)GuiltFemaleCrimeNerve NetPsychologySocial psychologyPsychomotor PerformanceCognitive psychologyNeuroImage
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