Search results for "SALIENCE"

showing 10 items of 78 documents

Maximum Torque Per Ampere control algorithm for low saliency ratio interior permanent magnet synchronous motors

2017

This paper presents an investigation on the comparison between the Maximum Torque Per Ampere (MTPA) and the Field Orientation Control (FOC) algorithms for interior permanent magnet synchronous machines (IPMSMs). In particular, this study was carried out on a small-power IPMSM with low salience ratio. Both control algorithms have been implemented in the Matlab/Simulink environment, obtaining promising results.

010302 applied physicsControl algorithmMaximum torque per ampere control algorithmPermanent magnet synchronous motorComputer scienceRenewable Energy Sustainability and the Environment020208 electrical & electronic engineeringEnergy Engineering and Power Technology02 engineering and technologySettore ING-IND/32 - Convertitori Macchine E Azionamenti Elettrici01 natural sciencesField oriented control algorithmField orientationSalience (neuroscience)Control theoryMagnet0103 physical sciences0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringInterior permanent magnet synchronous machineMATLABAmperecomputerMaximum torquecomputer.programming_language
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Selection for multicomponent mimicry: equal feature salience and variation in preferred traits

2016

When should multiple traits on Batesian mimics be selected to resemble corresponding traits on model species? Here, we explore two possibilities. First, features of equal salience to predators may be used to categorize prey, selecting for multicomponent mimicry. Second, if different predators use single yet different traits to categorize prey, multicomponent mimicry may still be selected. We studied how blue tits categorized rewarding and unrewarding artificial prey items that are differentiated by a combination of two color dimensions. Many birds used both color dimensions to make decisions, and overall, the population selected for multicomponent mimicry. However, a subset of birds used on…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineeducation.field_of_studylearningindividual variationEcologyPopulationMultiple traitsovershadowingBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesBatesian mimicryPredation03 medical and health sciences030104 developmental biologyCategorizationEvolutionary biologySalience (neuroscience)Mimicryta1181Animal Science and Zoologycomplex signaleducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsBehavioral Ecology
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Watching happy faces potentiates incentive salience but not hedonic reactions to palatable food cues in overweight/obese adults

2019

International audience; ‘Wanting’ and ‘liking’ are mediated by distinct brain reward systems but their dissociation in human appetite and overeating remains debated. Further, the influence of socioemotional cues on food reward is little explored. We examined these issues in overweight/obese (OW/OB) and normal-weight (NW) participants who watched food images varying in palatability in the same time as videoclips of avatars looking at the food images while displaying facial expressions (happy, disgust or neutral) with their gaze directed only toward the food or consecutively toward the food and participants. We measured heart rate (HR) deceleration as an index of attentional/incentive salienc…

0301 basic medicineAdultMalelikingAdolescent030209 endocrinology & metabolismOverweightwantingDevelopmental psychology03 medical and health sciencesFood PreferencesYoung Adult0302 clinical medicineRewardmedicineHumansoverweightPalatabilityObesityOvereatingincentive salienceGeneral PsychologyComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSfacial expressionFacial expressionMotivation030109 nutrition & dieteticsNutrition and DieteticsSocioemotional selectivity theory[SDV.NEU.PC]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC]/Psychology and behaviorsocial rewardDisgustIncentive salienceFemaleFrancemedicine.symptomCuesPsychologyFacial electromyography[SDV.AEN]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food and Nutrition
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Cortical Recruitment Determines Learning Dynamics and Strategy

2018

AbstractSalience is a broad and widely used concept in neuroscience whose neuronal correlates, however, remain elusive. In behavioral conditioning, salience is used to explain various effects, such as stimulus overshadowing, and refers to how fast and strongly a stimulus can be associated with a conditioned event. Here, we show that sounds of diverse quality, but equal intensity and perceptual detectability, can recruit different levels of population activity in mouse auditory cortex. When using these sounds as cues in a Go/NoGo discrimination task, the degree of cortical recruitment matches the salience parameter of a reinforcement learning model used to analyze learning speed. We test an …

0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studymedia_common.quotation_subjectPopulationStimulus (physiology)OptogeneticsAuditory cortexStimulus Salience03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineSalience (neuroscience)PerceptionReinforcement learning10. No inequalityeducationPsychologyAssociation (psychology)Neuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgerymedia_common030304 developmental biologySSRN Electronic Journal
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Did you hear? Auditory prospective memory cues are more beneficial for autistic than for non-autistic children and adolescents

2021

Item does not contain fulltext Background: The transition from primary to secondary school is particularly difficult for autistic children, a transition underpinned by an increase in prospective memory (PM) demands. Aims: To better understand PM in autistic children of the relevant age range and its underlying processes, the current study investigated the impact of cue salience (distinctiveness) on PM in autistic and non-autistic children and adolescents. The study was unique in manipulating the visual and auditory salience of PM cues. Salient cues are assumed to put lower demands on executive control resources as compared to cues that blend in with the ongoing activity. Methods and procedu…

030506 rehabilitationmedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentSensory processingInformationSystems_INFORMATIONINTERFACESANDPRESENTATION(e.g.HCI)Memory Episodicmedicine.medical_treatmentComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISIONAudiologyExecutive Function03 medical and health sciencesCognitionProspective memoryDevelopmental and Educational PsychologymedicineHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesAutistic DisorderChildNeuro- en revalidatiepsychologieSalience (language)05 social sciencesNeuropsychology and rehabilitation psychologymedicine.diseaseClinical PsychologyAutismOptimal distinctiveness theoryCues0305 other medical sciencePsychology050104 developmental & child psychology
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The Causal Influence of Life Meaning on Weight and Shape Concerns in Women at Risk for Developing an Eating Disorder

2021

Background: Although previous studies have shown an inverse relation between life meaning and eating disorder symptoms, the correlational nature of this evidence precludes causal inferences. Therefore, this study used an experimental approach to test the causal impact of life meaning on individuals' weight and shape concerns.Methods: Female students at risk for developing an eating disorder (N = 128) were randomly assigned to the control or the meaning condition, which involved thinking about and committing to pursue intrinsically valued life goals. A color-naming interference task was used to assess the motivational salience of body-related stimuli, and self-report measures were used to as…

050103 clinical psychologybody imagelcsh:BF1-99005 social sciences050109 social psychologycolor-naming interference taskTest (assessment)Developmental psychologyClinical Practicemeaning in lifelcsh:Psychologyovervaluation of shape and weightMotivational salienceeating disorderCausal inferenceovervaluation of weight and shapePsychology0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesgoalsMeaning (existential)PsychologyControl (linguistics)Female studentsGeneral PsychologyOriginal ResearchFrontiers in Psychology
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Gap perception in bumblebees

2018

ABSTRACT A number of insects fly over long distances below the natural canopy, where the physical environment is highly cluttered consisting of obstacles of varying shape, size and texture. While navigating within such environments, animals need to perceive and disambiguate environmental features that might obstruct their flight. The most elemental aspect of aerial navigation through such environments is gap identification and ‘passability’ evaluation. We used bumblebees to seek insights into the mechanisms used for gap identification when confronted with an obstacle in their flight path and behavioral compensations employed to assess gap properties. Initially, bumblebee foragers were train…

570PhysiologyAcousticsmedia_common.quotation_subjectOptic FlowAquatic Science03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineSalience (neuroscience)PerceptionAnimalsMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics030304 developmental biologymedia_common0303 health sciencesSensorimotor systemBeesLateral displacementLateral velocityFlight AnimalInsect ScienceObstacleAnimal Science and Zoology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryGeology
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Thinking of future as an older individual increases perceived risks for age‐related diseases but not for COVID‐19

2022

Actively thinking of one's future as an older individual could increase perceived risk and risk aversion. This could be particularly relevant for COVID-19, if we consider the common representation of the risk of being infected by COVID-19 as associated with being older. Increased perceived risk could bear consequences on the adoption of preventive behaviours. Thus, we investigated whether increasing the salience of individuals' future as an older adult would impact on their perceived risk for COVID-19 and medical conditions varying for age-relatedness. One hundred and forty-four Italian adults (Mage = 27.72, range: 18–56) were randomly assigned to either a future as older adult thinking or …

AdultAging2019-20 coronavirus outbreakCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)050109 social psychology050105 experimental psychologyDevelopmental psychologyArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)COVID‐19risk perceptionAge relatedAge priming; Age-related diseases; COVID-19; Future-oriented thinking; Risk perceptionHumansAge‐related diseases0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesGeneral PsychologyAgedage-related diseaseSalience (language)SARS-CoV-2Risk aversion05 social sciencesCOVID-19General MedicineFuture‐oriented thinkingRisk perceptionfuture-oriented thinkingCross-Sectional StudiesItalyRegular Empirical ArticleRegular Empirical ArticlesPsychologyAge-related diseasesage primingInternational Journal of Psychology
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Resting-State Functional Connectome in Patients with Brain Tumors Before and After Surgical Resection

2020

Purpose: High-grade glioma surgery has evolved around the principal belief that a safe maximal tumor resection improves symptoms, quality of life, and survival. Mapping brain function has been recently improved by resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rest-fMRI), a novel imaging technique that explores networks connectivity at “rest.” Methods: This prospective study analyzed 10 patients with high-grade glioma in whom rest-fMRI connectivity was assessed both in single-subject and in group analysis before and after surgery. Seed-based functional connectivity analysis was performed with CONN toolbox. Network identification focused on 8 major functional connectivity networks. A v…

AdultMaleBrain mappingFunctional connectivity03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineSalience (neuroscience)Region of interestGliomaNeural PathwaysConnectomemedicineHumansFunctional disconnectionResting-state fMRIDefault mode networkAgedBrain MappingResting state fMRImedicine.diagnostic_testBrain Neoplasmsbusiness.industryBrainMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseMagnetic Resonance ImagingBrain tumor030220 oncology & carcinogenesisQuality of LifeFemaleSurgeryNeurology (clinical)GlioblastomabusinessFunctional magnetic resonance imagingNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgeryWorld Neurosurgery
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Increased amygdala and parahippocampal gyrus activation in schizophrenic patients with auditory hallucinations: An fMRI study using independent compo…

2010

Objective: Hallucinations in patients with schizophrenia have strong emotional connotations. Functional neuroimaging techniques have been widely used to study brain activity in patients with schizophrenia with hallucinations or emotional impairments. However, few of these Studies have investigated the association between hallucinations and emotional dysfunctions using an emotional auditory paradigm. Independent component analysis (ICA) is an analysis method that is especially useful for decomposing activation during complex cognitive tasks in which multiple operations occur simultaneously. Our aim in this Study is to analyze brain activation after the presentation of emotional auditory stim…

AdultMalePsychosisFACIAL EXPRESSIONSHallucinationsBrain activity and meditationDIFFERENTIAL NEURAL RESPONSENEUROBIOLOGYFEARFUL FACESIndependent component analysisAuditory hallucinationsAmygdalaSeverity of Illness IndexPSYCHOSISFunctional neuroimagingBrief Psychiatric Rating ScalemedicineEMOTIONHumansBRAINBiological PsychiatryAuditory hallucinationSALIENCEmedicine.diagnostic_testABNORMALITIESfMRIRECOGNITIONmedicine.diseaseAmygdalaMagnetic Resonance ImagingAuditory emotional paradigmPsychiatry and Mental healthmedicine.anatomical_structureSchizophreniaParahippocampal Gyrusmedicine.symptomPsychologyFunctional magnetic resonance imagingBrain activityNeuroscienceParahippocampal gyrus
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