Search results for "Move"

showing 10 items of 2153 documents

Representational flexibility in children's drawings: Effects of age and verbal instructions

1999

This study aims to investigate representational and syntactical flexibility in children's drawing behaviour, and the extent to which changes introduced at both representational and syntactical levels are related to age or can be induced by contextual manipulations. A Deletion task required three age groups of 5-, 7- and 9-year-old children to draw objects that had been rendered partially invisible, thanks to magic transformations. Two different verbal instructions about what was to remain visible in the objects, and two different objects, one regularly and one non-regularly drawn, were designed to investigate contextual sensitivity in children's representational and syntactical behaviour re…

media_common.quotation_subjectMagic (programming)Flexibility (personality)Body movementRepresentation (arts)Task (project management)Developmental psychologyDevelopmental NeuroscienceExpression (architecture)Developmental and Educational PsychologyCognitive developmentPsychologyFunction (engineering)Cognitive psychologymedia_commonBritish Journal of Developmental Psychology
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Music as a mnemonic to learn gesture sequences in normal aging and Alzheimer’s disease

2014

Strong links between music and motor functions suggest that music could represent an interesting aid for motor learning. The present study aims for the first time to test the potential of music to assist in the learning of sequences of gestures in normal and pathological aging. Participants with mild Alzheimer's disease (AD) and healthy older adults (Controls) learned sequences of meaningless gestures that were either accompanied by music or a metronome. We also manipulated the learning procedure such that participants had to imitate the gestures to-be-memorized in synchrony with the experimenter or after the experimenter during encoding. Results show different patterns of performance for t…

media_common.quotation_subjectMovement.Motor abilitiesMnemonicMusicalMetronomeMnemonic050105 experimental psychologyimitationDevelopmental psychologylaw.inventionlcsh:RC321-57103 medical and health sciencesBehavioral Neuroscience0302 clinical medicinelawmedicineDementia0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesRelevance (information retrieval)lcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryBiological PsychiatryOriginal Researchmedia_commonaging05 social sciencesmedicine.diseasehumanitiesPsychiatry and Mental healthNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyNeurologyAging; ImitationmovementImitationPsychologyMotor learningAlzheimer’s disease030217 neurology & neurosurgeryMusicNeuroscienceCognitive psychologyGestureFrontiers in Human Neuroscience
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Effects of conversation content on viewing dyadic conversations

2016

People typically follow conversations closely with their gaze. We asked whether this viewing is influenced by what is actually said in the conversation and by the viewer’s psychological condition. We recorded the eye movements of healthy (N = 16) and depressed (N = 25) participants while they were viewing video clips. Each video showed two people, each speaking one line of dialogue about socio-emotionally important (i.e., personal) or unimportant topics (matter-of-fact). Between the spoken lines, the viewers made more saccadic shifts between the discussants, and looked more at the second speaker, in personal vs. matter-of-fact conversations. Higher depression scores were correlated with les…

media_common.quotation_subjectQM1-695Eye movementSocial attentionGazeSensory SystemsSaccadic maskingsocial influencesta3125attentionOphthalmologyHuman anatomysocial attentiondepressionConversationConversation contenttarkkaavaisuusPsychologySocial psychologyeye movementindividual differencesSocial influencemedia_commonJournal of Eye Movement Research
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Multi-destination trips: A survey on incoming zourism in Sicily

2012

Many pleasure trips are often characterized by the visit of more than a single destination. Despite the topic is well documented in literature, the empirical studies are limited to a few pioneering studies. This lack may be attributable to the failure of tourism organizations to collect data on multi-destination trip behaviors, as it results, for example, from the system of European statistics on tourism (according to the Council Directive 95/57 EC), where no information on the average number of destinations visited within a single trip are provided. This paper aims to analyze the main implications of multi-destination trips both on tourism statistics and in tourism planning, and to describ…

media_common.quotation_subjectjel:C83DestinationsPleasurejel:L83Tourism planningEmpirical researchGeographyMulti-destination triptourists behaviorsspatial movementstourism statisticsborder surveyTRIPS architectureMarketingCouncil directiveTourismmedia_common
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Processing Information During Regressions: An Application of the Reverse Boundary-Change Paradigm.

2018

Although 10-15% of eye-movements during reading are regressions, we still know little about the information that is processed during regressive episodes. Here, we report an eye-movement study that uses what we call the "reverse boundary change technique" to examine the processing of lexical-semantic information during regressions, and to establish the role of this information during recovery from processing difficulty. In the critical condition of the experiment, an initially implausible sentence (e.g. "There was an old house that John had ridden when he was a boy.") was rendered plausible by changing a context word ("house") to a lexical neighbour ("horse") using a gaze-contingent display …

media_common.quotation_subjectlcsh:BF1-990regressionsContext (language use)050105 experimental psychologyBoundary (real estate)eye-movement control03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinefixationsreadingReading (process)0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesGeneral Psychologymedia_commonPoint (typography)05 social scienceseye-movementsInformation processingEye movementsaccadesGazelcsh:PsychologyPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgerySentenceCognitive psychologyFrontiers in psychology
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Data from: Temporal structure of human gaze dynamics is invariant during free viewing

2016

We investigate the dynamic structure of human gaze and present an experimental study of the frequency components of the change in gaze position over time during free viewing of computer-generated fractal images. We show that changes in gaze position are scale-invariant in time with statistical properties that are characteristic of a random walk process. We quantify and track changes in the temporal structure using a well-defined scaling parameter called the Hurst exponent, H. We find H is robust regardless of the spatial complexity generated by the fractal images. In addition, we find the Hurst exponent is invariant across all participants, including those with distinct changes to higher or…

medicine and health careEye movementsgaze shiftsLife SciencesMedicinescale invariancerandom walk processses
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Special Features of the Hippocampal Formation with Respect to Seizure Conditions

1987

The hippocampus has long been known as a region particularly prone to epileptiform discharges (Kandel et al. 1961). Connections and physiology of this archaic cortical structure are relatively well charac-terized and a wealth of information on features favoring exaggerated neuronal activity has emerged in recent years. The lamellar organization of the hippo-campus (Andersen et al. 1971) may be one of these features; it certainly has facilitated their investigation. Tissue slices cut along the lamellae, perpendicular to the axis of the structure, contain a relatively undisturbed chain of neurons which can be rigorously investigated in vitro. The results from such experiments have allowed mod…

medicine.anatomical_structureBasket cellParoxysmal depolarizing shiftmedicineHippocampusPremovement neuronal activityPopulation spikePyramidal cellBiologyHippocampal formationNeuroscienceEpileptic activity
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Serotonin modulation of the basal ganglia circuitry: therapeutic implication for Parkinson's disease and other motor disorders

2008

Several recent studies have emphasized a crucial role for the interactions between serotonergic and dopaminergic systems in movement control and the pathophysiology of basal ganglia. These observations are supported by anatomical evidence demonstrating large serotonergic innervation of all the basal ganglia nuclei. In fact, serotonergic terminals have been reported to make synaptic contacts with both substantia nigra dopamine-containing neurons and their terminal areas such as the striatum, the globus pallidus and the subthalamus. These brain areas contain a high concentration of serotonin (5-HT), with the substantia nigra pars reticulata receiving the greatest input. In this chapter, the d…

medicine.anatomical_structureGlobus pallidusnervous systemBasal gangliamedicineSubthalamusSubstantia nigraStriatumIndirect pathway of movementSerotonergicPsychologyMedium spiny neuronNeuroscience
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2020

Besides the pure pleasure of watching a dance performance, dance as a whole-body movement is becoming increasingly popular for health-related interventions. However, the science-based evidence for improvements in health or well-being through dance is still ambiguous and little is known about the underlying neurophysiological mechanisms. This may be partly related to the fact that previous studies mostly examined the neurophysiological effects of imagination and observation of dance rather than the physical execution itself. The objective of this pilot study was to investigate acute effects of a physically executed dance with its different components (recalling the choreography and physical …

medicine.diagnostic_testDanceBrain activity and meditationMovement (music)media_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesElectroencephalographyChoreography (dance)050105 experimental psychologyPleasure03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineRhythmmedicine0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesJazzPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryGeneral PsychologyCognitive psychologymedia_commonFrontiers in Psychology
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TMS-EEG signatures of glutamatergic neurotransmission in human cortex

2019

AbstractNeuronal activity in the brain is regulated by an excitation-inhibition balance. Glutamate is the main excitatory neurotransmitter. Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) evoked electroencephalographic (EEG) potentials (TEPs) represent a novel way to quantify pharmacological effects on neuronal activity in the human cortex. Here we tested TEPs under the influence of a single oral dose of two anti-glutamatergic drugs, perampanel, an AMPA-receptor antagonist, and dextromethorphan, an NMDA-receptor antagonist, and nimodipine, an L-type voltage-gated calcium channel blocker in 16 healthy adults in a pseudorandomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled, crossover design. Single-pulse TM…

medicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industrymedicine.medical_treatmentGlutamate receptorElectroencephalographyNeurotransmissionTranscranial magnetic stimulationGlutamatergicPerampanelchemistry.chemical_compoundmedicine.anatomical_structurechemistrynervous systemCortex (anatomy)medicinePremovement neuronal activitybusinessNeuroscience
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