Search results for "Laterality"

showing 10 items of 307 documents

Effects of escitalopram on the regulation of brain-derived neurotrophic factor and nerve growth factor protein levels in a rat model of chronic stres…

2009

Escitalopram (ES-CIT) is a widely used, highly specific antidepressant. Until now there has been very little evidence on how this drug under pathological conditions affects an important feature within the pathophysiology of stress-related disorders such as depression: the endogenous neurotrophins. By using a well-characterized rat model in which chronic stress induces depressive-like behavior, the levels of neurotrophins brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and nerve growth factor (NGF) were determined in representative brain regions and serum using a highly sensitive improved fluorometric two-site ELISA system. There was a significant increase of BDNF in the left and right cortices aft…

Dominance-SubordinationMalemedicine.medical_specialtyDrinking BehaviorEnzyme-Linked Immunosorbent AssayCitalopramFunctional LateralityCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceNeurotrophic factorsInternal medicineAdrenal GlandsNerve Growth FactormedicineAnimalsChronic stressRats WistarSocial stressBrain-derived neurotrophic factorbiologyBrain-Derived Neurotrophic FactorBody WeightBrainOrgan SizeCortex (botany)RatsEndocrinologyNerve growth factornervous systemChronic Diseasebiology.proteinLinear ModelsAntidepressantAntidepressive Agents Second-GenerationPsychologyStress PsychologicalNeurotrophinJournal of neuroscience research
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Effect of claustrum stimulation on neurons of the contralateral medial oculomotor area, in the cat

1990

In chloralose-anaesthetized cats, the extracellular spontaneous unitary activity was recorded from 157 neurons, located in the medial oculomotor area. 98 units were identified as projecting onto the superior colliculus. Electrical stimulations of the contralateral claustrum provoked, on 13 of these cells, an excitatory effect, lasting 10-35 ms and appearing with a latency of 20-50 ms. Full length section of the corpus callosum totally abolished the contralateral claustrum effect. The results suggest that in the cat, the claustrum may have a role in the bilateral control of the visuo-motor performance.

General NeuroscienceSuperior colliculusCentral nervous systemAnatomyBiologyCorpus callosumClaustrumBasal GangliaElectric StimulationFunctional LateralityFrontal LobeOculomotor nucleusElectrophysiologyElectrophysiologymedicine.anatomical_structureBasal gangliaCatsExcitatory postsynaptic potentialmedicineAnimalsNeuroscienceNeuroscience Letters
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Recognising a hand by grasp.

2000

The present study aimed to demonstrate that motor representations are used to recognise biological stimuli. In three experiments subjects were required to judge laterality of hands and forearms presented by pictures. The postures of the hands were those assumed when holding a small, medium and large sphere. In experiment 1, the sphere held in hand was presented, whereas in experiment 2 it was absent. In experiment 3, the same images, showing holding-a-sphere hands, as in experiment 1 were presented, but without forearm. In all experiments one finger of each hand could be absent. In experiment 1 recognition time was longer for those hand postures for which the corresponding grasping motor ac…

Hand recognitionAdultMaleCognitive NeuroscienceExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyMotor programMental rotationFunctional LateralityFingersBehavioral NeuroscienceMemoryOrientationHumansControl (linguistics)Hand recognition Grasp representation Action Type of grip Mental rotation HumanCognitive scienceHand StrengthGRASPMental rotationObject (philosophy)Type of gripBiomechanical PhenomenaForm PerceptionGrasp representationForearmAction (philosophy)ActionTouchLateralityMental representationFemalePsychologyPhotic StimulationHumanBrain research. Cognitive brain research
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Immunfluorescence study of neuropeptides in identified neurons of the rat auditory superior olivary complex.

1999

The present study was conducted to investigate the distribution and immunohistochemical characteristics of ascending and descending projection neurons of the rat superior olivary complex (SOC), a group of interrelated brainstem nuclei. Ascending neurons were identified by injection of cholera toxin B subunit (CTB) into the central nucleus of the inferior colliculus (IC), descending neurons were labeled by application of Fluoro-Gold (FG) into the scala tympani of the cochlea, ipsilaterally to the IC injection. In accordance with the literature, we observed neurons innervating the IC located in the lateral superior olivary nucleus (LSO) and dorsal periolivary groups (DPO) on both sides, in th…

Inferior colliculusMaleHistologyAuditory PathwaysStilbamidinesTyrosine 3-MonooxygenaseCalcitonin Gene-Related PeptidePopulationNeuropeptideFluorescent Antibody TechniqueBiologyOlivary NucleusSubstance PAxonal TransportFunctional LateralityPathology and Forensic MedicineRats Sprague-DawleyNerve Fibersotorhinolaryngologic diseasesmedicineTrapezoid bodyAnimalseducationFluorescent DyesNeuronseducation.field_of_studyCell BiologyAnatomyRetrograde tracingInferior ColliculiCochleaRatsmedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemSuperior olivary complexBrainstemNeuroscienceNucleusCell and tissue research
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Transcranial direct current stimulation over left and right DLPFC: Lateralized effects on planning performance and related eye movements.

2014

Left and right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) were recently found to be differentially affected by unilateral continuous theta-burst stimulation, reflected in an oppositional alteration of initial thinking time (ITT) in the Tower of London planning task. Here, we further explored this finding using bilateral transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) and simultaneous tracking of eye movements. Results revealed a decrease in ITT during concurrent cathodal tDCS of left dlPFC and anodal tDCS of right dlPFC. Eye-movement analyses showed that this facilitating tDCS effect was associated with the actual planning phase, thus reflecting a planning-specific impact of stimulation. For the…

Left and rightAdultMaleAnodal tdcsmedicine.medical_specialtyEye Movementsmedicine.medical_treatmentPrefrontal CortexStimulationAudiologyTranscranial Direct Current Stimulationbehavioral disciplines and activitiesFunctional LateralityYoung AdultHemispheric asymmetrymental disordersTask Performance and AnalysismedicineHumansTranscranial direct-current stimulationGeneral NeuroscienceEye movementGazeDorsolateral prefrontal cortexNeuropsychology and Physiological Psychologymedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemFemalePsychologypsychological phenomena and processesCognitive psychologyBiological psychology
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Field location and player roles as constraints on emergent 1-vs-1 interpersonal patterns of play in football

2017

This study examined effects of player roles on interpersonal patterns of coordination that sustain decision-making in 1-vs-1 sub-phases of football in different field locations near the goal (left-, middle- and right zone). Participants were fifteen U-16 yrs players from a local competitive amateur team. To measure interpersonal patterns of coordination in the 1-vs-1 dyads we recorded: (i) the relative distance value between each attacker and defender to the centre of the goal, and (ii), the relative angle between the centre of the goal, each defender and attacker. Results revealed how variations in field locations near the goal (left-, middle- and right-zones) constrained the relative dist…

Left and rightMalefootballCompetitive BehaviorAdolescentDecision MakingBiophysicsExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyInterpersonal communicationFootballpatterns of playAthletic Performanceinterpersonal coordinationFunctional Laterality03 medical and health sciencesInterpersonal relationship0302 clinical medicineSoccerHumansOrthopedics and Sports MedicineInterpersonal Relationsperformance analysista315Motor skillgamesField (Bourdieu)030229 sport sciencesGeneral Medicinegame constraintsPreferenceAthletesMotor Skillsplays and gamesPsychologySocial psychologyAmateur030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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2016

The neural systems supporting speech and sign processing are very similar, although not identical. In a previous fTCD study of hearing native signers (Gutierrez-Sigut, Daws, et al., 2015) we found stronger left lateralization for sign than speech. Given that this increased lateralization could not be explained by hand movement alone, the contribution of motor movement versus ‘linguistic’ processes to the strength of hemispheric lateralization during sign production remains unclear. Here we directly contrast lateralization strength of covert versus overt signing during phonological and semantic fluency tasks. To address the possibility that hearing native signers’ elevated lateralization ind…

Linguistics and LanguageCognitive Neuroscience05 social sciencesSemantic fluencyExperimental and Cognitive PsychologySign language050105 experimental psychologyLanguage and LinguisticsLateralization of brain functionlanguage.human_languageMotor movement03 medical and health sciencesSpeech and Hearing0302 clinical medicineBritish Sign LanguageCovertLateralitylanguage0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPsychologyPhonological encoding030217 neurology & neurosurgeryCognitive psychologyBrain and Language
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Transposed-letter and laterality effects in lexical decision.

2006

Two divided visual field lexical decision experiments were conducted to examine the role of the cerebral hemispheres in transposed-letter similarity effects. In Experiment 1, we created two types of nonwords: nonadjacent transposed-letter nonwords (TRADEGIA; the base word was TRAGEDIA, the Spanish for TRAGEDY) and two-letter different nonwords (orthographic controls: TRATEPIA). In Experiment 2, the controls were one-letter different nonwords (TRAGEPIA) instead of two-letter different nonwords (TRATEPIA). The effect of transposed-letter similarity was substantially greater in the right visual field (left hemisphere) than in the left visual field. Furthermore, nonwords created by transposing …

Linguistics and LanguageVisual perceptionCognitive Neurosciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectDecision MakingBrainExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyCognitionChoice BehaviorVocabularyLanguage and LinguisticsLateralization of brain functionFunctional LateralityVisual fieldSpeech and HearingPerceptionLateralityWord recognitionLexical decision taskHumansVisual FieldsPsychologyCognitive psychologymedia_commonBrain and language
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Hemispheric differences in specificity effects in talker identification

2010

In the visual domain, Marsolek and colleagues (1999, 2008) have found support for two dissociable and parallel neural subsystems underlying object and shape recognition: an abstract-category subsystem that operates more effectively in the left cerebral hemisphere (LH), and a specific-exemplar subsystem that operates more effectively in the right cerebral hemisphere (RH). Evidence of this asymmetry has been observed in priming specificity for linguistic (words, pseudoword forms) and nonlinguistic (objects) stimuli. In the auditory domain, the authors previously found hemispheric asymmetries in priming effects for linguistic (spoken words) and nonlinguistic (environmental sounds) stimuli. In …

Linguistics and Languagemedicine.medical_specialtyProperty (programming)Cervell--Localització de funcionsmedia_common.quotation_subjectObject (grammar)Experimental and Cognitive PsychologyAudiologyLanguage and LinguisticsPerceptionmedicineHumansDominance Cerebralmedia_commonCommunicationbusiness.industryHemisphere asymmetriesReconeixement de la parlaTalker identificationSensory SystemsSemanticsPseudowordAcoustic StimulationPattern Recognition VisualPrimingLateralitySpeech PerceptionTest phaseIdentification (psychology)Specificity effectsCuesPsychologybusinessPriming (psychology)Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics
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[Postural balance following stroke: towards a disadvantage of the right brain-damaged hemisphere].

1999

International audience; In the light of studies published in the last ten years, we have suspected a differential influence of the sides of hemispheric cerebral lesions on posture and balance. A study was aimed at verifying this hypothesis, the method of which being original because many possible confounding factors such as age, sex as well as topography and size of the brain lesion have been taken into account in the statistical analysis. Inclusion criteria were: right-handed patients, first stroke, no previous disease which might have affected balance. Their postural abilities (ranging from 0 to 36) were assessed 90 +/- 3 days after stroke onset on a clinical scale. This clinical assessme…

MESH : MaleMESH : HumansMESH : AgedMESH : PostureMESH : Visual Fields[ SDV.NEU.SC ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC]/Cognitive SciencesMESH : Vision DisordersMESH : BrainMESH : Postural BalanceMESH : Brain IschemiaMESH : Severity of Illness IndexMESH : FemaleMESH : Middle AgedMESH : Aged 80 and overMESH : Functional Laterality[SDV.NEU.SC] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC]/Cognitive Sciences
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