Search results for "Pink noise"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

Cardiovascular effects of impulse noise, road traffic noise, and intermittent pink noise at LAeq = 75 dB, as a function of sex, age, and level of anx…

1992

In a previous paper, in which the experimental conditions of the present research are fully described (Parrot et al., this issue), heart rate (HR) was studied in 60 male and in 60 female subjects in response to a pile-driver noise (P), a gunfire noise (G), a road traffic noise (T), and an intermittent pink noise (R), all noises being emitted at the same LAeq = 75 dB for 15 min. Digital pulse level (PL) responses were concomitantly surveyed by the use of pulse oximetry, allowing continuous arterial oxygen saturation (SaO2) readings. An index of pulse reactivity (PRI) could be calculated. Arterial blood pressure was measured 7 times from the beginning to the end of each trial. At rest, within…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentHemodynamicsBlood PressureAudiologyAnxietyPink noiseImpulse noiseHeart RateOccupational ExposureHeart rateAdaptation PsychologicalmedicineHumansHabituation Psychophysiologicmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryPulse (signal processing)Public Health Environmental and Occupational HealthHemodynamicsMiddle AgedSurgeryOccupational DiseasesPlethysmographyNoisePulse oximetryBlood pressureNoise TransportationNoise OccupationalFemaleVascular ResistancebusinessArousalInternational archives of occupational and environmental health
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Cardiovascular effects of impulse noise, road traffic noise, and intermittent pink noise at LAeq = 75 dB, as a function of sex, age, and level of anx…

1992

This study aimed at comparing for their cardiovascular effects: a pile-driver noise (P), a gunfire noise (G), a road traffic noise (T), an intermittent pink noise (R). All noises were presented at the same LAeq = 75 dB for 15 min each. Some 120 subjects were divided into 8 subgroups of 15 subjects each: OM (men between 40 and 50 years of age), OF (women, same age range), YM (men, between 15 and 20 years of age), YF (women, same age range), AM (typically anxious men, 20–25 years of age), AF (typically anxious women, same age range), NM (typicall anxiety-free men, same age range), and NF (typically anxiety-free women, same age range). Heart rate (HR), digital pulse level, and arterial blood p…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentIndividualityBlood PressureAudiologyAnxietyPink noiseImpulse noiseSex FactorsHeart RateHeart rateAdaptation PsychologicalMedicineHumansRoad trafficPulse noisebusiness.industryPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthAge FactorsHemodynamicsMiddle AgedOccupational DiseasesNoiseBlood pressureNoise TransportationNoise OccupationalAnxietyFemaleVascular Resistancemedicine.symptombusinessArousalInternational archives of occupational and environmental health
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Do happy faces really modulate liking for Jackson Pollock art and statistical fractal noise images?

2017

Flexas et al. (2013) demonstrated that happy faces increase preference for abstract art if seen in short succession. We could not replicate their findings. In our first experiment, we tested whether valence, saliency or arousal of facial primes can modulate liking of Jackson Pollock art crops. In the second experiment, the emphasis was on testing another type of abstract visual stimuli which possess similar low-level image features: statistical fractal noise images. Pollock crops were rated significantly higher when primed with happy faces in contrast to neutral faces, but not differently to the no-prime condition. Findings of our study suggest that affective priming with happy faces may be…

CommunicationVisual materialVisual perceptionbiologybusiness.industrylcsh:BF1-990Abstract artAffective primingbiology.organism_classificationPollockArousalFractallcsh:Psychologyhappy facesJackson Pollockaffective primingValence (psychology)businessPsychologyabstract artGeneral Psychologypink noiseCognitive psychologyPsihologija
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Quantifying Intermodal Distraction by Emotion During Math Performance: An Electrophysiological Approach

2019

Emotionally engaging stimuli are powerful competitors for limited attention capacity. In the cognitive neuroscience laboratory, the presence of task-irrelevant emotionally arousing visual distractors prompts decreased performance and attenuated brain responses measured in concurrent visual tasks. The extent to which distraction effects occur across different sensory modalities is not yet established, however. Here, we examined the extent and time course of competition between a naturalistic distractor sound and a visual task stimulus, using dense-array electroencephalography (EEG) recordings from 20 college students. Steady-state visual evoked potentials (ssVEPs) were quantified from EEG, e…

medicine.medical_specialtylcsh:BF1-990Sensory systemElectroencephalographyAudiologyStimulus (physiology)Cognitive neurosciencePink noisetemporal competition050105 experimental psychologyemotional arousal03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineStimulus modalityDistractionmedicinePsychology0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesEEGGeneral PsychologyOriginal Researchsteady-state visual evoked potentialmedicine.diagnostic_test05 social sciencesarithmeticauditory distractionEducational neurosciencelcsh:Psychologyvisual attentionPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryFrontiers in Psychology
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