Search results for "Senso"

showing 10 items of 4750 documents

Trait impulsivity associated with altered resting-state functional connectivity within the somatomotor network

2020

Knowledge of brain mechanisms underlying self-regulation can provide valuable insights into how people regulate their thoughts, behaviors, and emotional states, and what happens when such regulation fails. Self-regulation is supported by coordinated interactions of brain systems. Hence, behavioral dysregulation, and its expression as impulsivity, can be usefully characterized using functional connectivity methodologies applied to resting brain networks. The current study tested whether individual differences in trait impulsivity are reflected in the functional architecture within and between resting-state brain networks. Thirty healthy individuals completed a self-report measure of trait im…

Cognitive NeuroscienceSensory systemSomatosensory systemImpulsivitylcsh:RC321-57103 medical and health sciencesBehavioral Neuroscience0302 clinical medicineBarratt Impulsiveness Scalemedicineresting statelcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryOriginal Research030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencestrait impulsivitymedicine.diagnostic_testResting state fMRIFunctional connectivityfunctional connectivitysomatomotor networkNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyTraitBarratt Impulsiveness Scalemedicine.symptomPsychologyFunctional magnetic resonance imagingNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgeryNeuroscience
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Do Grading Gray Stimuli Help to Encode Letter Position?

2021

Numerous experiments in the past decades recurrently showed that a transposed-letter pseudoword (e.g., JUGDE) is much more wordlike than a replacement-letter control (e.g., JUPTE). Critically, there is an ongoing debate as to whether this effect arises at a perceptual level (e.g., perceptual uncertainty at assigning letter position of an array of visual objects) or at an abstract language-specific level (e.g., via a level of “open bigrams” between the letter and word levels). Here, we designed an experiment to test the limits of perceptual accounts of letter position coding. The stimuli in a lexical decision task were presented either with a homogeneous letter intensity or with a graded gra…

Cognitive Neurosciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectBigramSpeech recognitionword recognition050105 experimental psychologyorthographic processingVisual ObjectsPerceptionperceptual factorsLexical decision task0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesControl (linguistics)lcsh:QH301-705.5computer.programming_languagemedia_commonlexical decisionCommunication05 social sciences050301 educationCell BiologySensory SystemsPseudowordOphthalmologylcsh:Biology (General)letter position codingWord recognitionPsychology0503 educationcomputerOptometryCoding (social sciences)Vision
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Cortical plasticity associated with Braille learning

1998

Blind subjects who learn to read Braille must acquire the ability to extract spatial information from subtle tactile stimuli. In order to accomplish this, neuroplastic changes appear to take place. During Braille learning, the sensorimotor cortical area devoted to the representation of the reading finger enlarges. This enlargement follows a two-step process that can be demonstrated with transcranial magnetic stimulation mapping and suggests initial unmasking of existing connections and eventual establishment of more stable structural changes. In addition, Braille learning appears to be associated with the recruitment of parts of the occipital, formerly `visual', cortex (V1 and V2) for tacti…

Cognitive Neurosciencemedicine.medical_treatmentmedia_common.quotation_subjectInformation processingExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyNeurophysiologyBrailleSomatosensory systemCross modal plasticityTranscranial magnetic stimulationNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyReading (process)NeuroplasticitymedicinePsychologyNeuroscienceCognitive psychologymedia_commonTrends in Cognitive Sciences
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Distributed Pseudo-Gossip Algorithm and Finite-Length Computational Codes for Efficient In-Network Subspace Projection

2013

In this paper, we design a practical power-efficient algorithm for Wireless Sensor Networks (WSN) in order to obtain, in a distributed manner, the projection of an observed sampled spatial field on a subspace of lower dimension. This is an important problem that is motivated in various applications where there are well defined subspaces of interest (e.g., spectral maps in cognitive radios). As opposed to traditional Gossip Algorithms used for subspace projection, where separation of channel coding and computation is assumed, our algorithm combines binary finite-length Computational Coding and a novel gossip-like protocol with certain communication rules, achieving important savings in conve…

Cognitive radioTheoretical computer scienceComputationSignal ProcessingBinary numberEnergy consumptionElectrical and Electronic EngineeringLinear subspaceWireless sensor networkAlgorithmSubspace topologyMathematicsCoding (social sciences)IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Signal Processing
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A Note on the Horizontal-Vertical Illusion - A Reply to Wade (2014).

2016

Like many others before him, Nicholas Wade, in a recent publication in this journal, did not provide the correct title of Adolf Fick's dissertation, approved by the University at Marburg, Germany, in 1851, and Wade also wrongly attributed now famous illusion figures, meant to illustrate the so-called horizontal-vertical illusion (the +, the L, and the inverted T), to this author. After having corrected these errors, I briefly relate Fick’s work to modern work in the field and note that it has been widely neglected.

Cognitive scienceMüller-Lyer illusionmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesIllusionArt historyExperimental and Cognitive Psychology050105 experimental psychologySensory Systems03 medical and health sciencesOphthalmology0302 clinical medicineArtificial IntelligenceHistory of psychology0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesInverted tPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgerymedia_commonPerception
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Titchener's T in Context Delimited, Discrete Monomotif Patterns

2014

Cognitive scienceOphthalmologyContext (language use)SociologySensory SystemsJournal of Vision
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Exploring Sensory Memories

2019

Lee Strasberg and other acting teachers developed sense memory exercises that teach an artistic re-enactment method to explore the interplay of sensory perception and emotional memory.
 Apparently, secondary sensory stimuli often trigger flashbacks for traumatised people. From my experience as an actress, I learned that the sense memory method is a controlled triggering of emotional memory that functions in the same way. Many anthropologists consider sensory experiences and emotions a relevant topic, but how can we teach students to deal with these phenomena?
 After looking at sense memory exercises against the backdrop of neuroscientific findings, I will consider why and how we s…

Cognitive sciencePerceptionmedia_common.quotation_subjectTeaching methodSensory memoryEmotional memorySensory systemPsychologymedia_commonQualitative researchTeaching Anthropology
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P24. Classical brain stem syndromes: Myth or reality?

2007

Cognitive sciencePsychoanalysisNeurologyPhysiology (medical)Neurology (clinical)MythologyPsychologySensory SystemsClinical Neurophysiology
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<Pheromones> and behaviour of rodents and primates

1987

Abstract This paper reviews the concept of the ≪pheromone≫ as applied to behavioural studies on mammals with particular emphasis on rodents and primates. It is concluded that although the olfactory sense is very important in many representatives of these orders, the term pheromone is often used too uncritically in such species. Odours may certainly change behaviour but: (a) it is difficult to identify complex specific chemicals underlying such effects; (b) the response often depends on the nature and experiences of the recipient animal; and (c) many behaviours in such animals are modulated by a variety of sensory inputs. Perhaps ≪sociochemical communication≫ would be a better term to apply …

Cognitive scienceSex pheromonePheromoneZoologyAnimal Science and ZoologySensory systemOlfactionBiologyVariety (cybernetics)Term (time)Bolletino di zoologia
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Flavour: From food to perception

2016

Revue; This book will cover all aspects of flavour perception, including aroma, taste and the role of the trigeminal nerve, from the general composition of food to the perception at the peri-receptor and central level. This book will answer to a growing need for multidisciplinary approaches to better understand the mechanisms involved in flavour perception.The book presents the bases of anatomy of sensory perception. It will provide the requisite basic knowledge on the molecules responsible for flavour perception, on their release from the food matrix during the eating process in order to reach the chemosensory receptors, and on their retention and release from and transformation by bodily …

Cognitive scienceTasteflavorgenetic structuresbusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subject[ SDV.AEN ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food and NutritionFlavourchemistrytaste[SDV.AEN] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food and Nutritionsensory scienceBasic knowledgeSensory sciencePerceptionFood processingfood processingproduction & manufacturechemical sensefood science & technologybusiness[SDV.AEN]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food and NutritionFlavormedia_common
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