Search results for "Stimulus modality"

showing 10 items of 36 documents

Attitudes toward everyday odors for children with visual impairments: A pilot study

2010

The question of how the processing of stimuli from the external world is organized or reorganized when a sensory modality is altered or missing has been the subject of numerous studies, although the studies have mostly been on tactile and auditory abilities (Hatwell, 2003). In contrast, olfaction has been poorly investigated in people who are visually impaired, despite the increasing evidence that humans have a keen sense of smell (Schaal & Porter, 1991). Odors influence mood; well-being (Ehrlichman & Bastone, 1992); and social interactions, such as the choice of partners (Herz & Inzlicht, 2002). Emotional and social implications of odors go back to the earliest periods of development (Scha…

Questionnairesgenetic structuresmedia_common.quotation_subject[ SDV.AEN ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food and NutritionOlfaction050105 experimental psychologyDevelopmental psychology03 medical and health sciencesCongenital Impairments0302 clinical medicineStimulus modalitySniffingPerception0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesEveryday lifeChildrenmedia_commonCued speechVisual ImpairmentsStimuli05 social sciencesRehabilitationSocial cueOlfactory PerceptionForeign Countrieseye diseasesOphthalmologyMoodFood[SCCO.PSYC]Cognitive science/PsychologyCuesPsychology[SDV.AEN]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food and Nutrition030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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Chapter 24 Bihemispheric plasticity after acute hand deafferentation

2003

Publisher Summary This chapter summarizes experiments showing that deprivation of somatosensory input could also elicit organizational changes in the hemisphere contralateral to the deafferented one. The existence of interactions among homotopic sites within cortical representations in both hemispheres provides a substrate for such an effect. It has been proposed that chronic deafferentation, in association with long-term practice as in blind, deaf, or individuals with amputation results in compensatory gains in the same and in other sensory modalities. However, the long-term changes described are mild and the question whether blind or deaf people develop enhanced capacities of their remain…

Sensory inputStimulus modalityPerceptionmedia_common.quotation_subjectSomatosensory systemPsychologyNeurosciencemedia_common
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Sensory Processing in Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder and/or Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder in the Home and Classroom Contexts.

2017

Children with neurodevelopmental disorders often show impairments in sensory processing (SP) and higher functions. The main objective of this study was to compare SP, praxis and social participation (SOC) in four groups of children: ASD Group (n = 21), ADHD Group (n = 21), ASD+ADHD Group (n = 21), and Comparison Group (n = 27). Participants were the parents and teachers of these children who were 5-8 years old (M = 6.32). They completed the Sensory Processing Measure (SPM) to evaluate the sensory profile, praxis and SOC of the children in both the home and classroom contexts. In the home context, the most affected was the ASD+ADHD group. The ADHD group obtained higher scores than the ASD gr…

Sensory processingmedicine.medical_treatmentlcsh:BF1-990Context (language use)Body awarenessbehavioral disciplines and activitiesDevelopmental psychology03 medical and health sciencesAutism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)0302 clinical medicineStimulus modalityIntervention (counseling)mental disordersmedicineAttention deficit hyperactivity disorderPsychology0501 psychology and cognitive scienceshome and classroom contextshigher functionssensory processingGeneral PsychologySensory Processing Measure (SPM)Original ResearchAttention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)05 social sciencesmedicine.diseaseSocial engagementlcsh:PsychologyAutism spectrum disorderPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgery050104 developmental & child psychologyFrontiers in psychology
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Motor learning and body size within an insect brain computational model

2014

Nowadays modeling insect brains is also an important source of inspiration to develop learning architectures and control algorithms for applications on autonomous walking robots. Within the insect brain two important neuropiles received a lot of attention: the mushroom bodies (MBs) and the central complex (CX). Recent research activities considered the MBs as a unique architecture where different behavioural functions can be found. MBs are well known in bees and flies for their role in performing associative learning and memory in odor conditioning experiments [4]. They are also involved in the processing of multiple sensory modalities including visual tasks [3], different forms of learning…

Stimulus modalityComputer sciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectFeature extractionMushroom bodiesRobotInsectBody sizeMotor learningNeurosciencemedia_commonAssociative learning
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Panel Summary:Multistimuli and Different Sensory Modalities

1999

Our everyday environment in which we live is characterised by stimuli capable of eliciting our actions (or reactions). Generally our actions are influenced by a number of stimuli which are multimodal.

Stimulus modalitybacteriaSingle photon absorptionequipment and suppliesPsychologycomplex mixturesNeuroscience
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Attempt to Construct a Scale for the Measurement of the Effect of Suggestion on Perception1

1975

A scale based on experimental methods has been prepared for measuring the effects of indirect suggestion upon perception. Three categories are included: (1) distorting the interpretation of presented stimuli, (2) inducing sense-impressions in the absence of adequate stimuli, and (3) producing insensitivity to stimuli that are objectively present. Test situations were designed for tactual, auditory, and visual perception. The scale was tested on a sample of 112 students from the 11th and 12th grades of a large city high school (58 girls and 54 boys). Most of the item intercorrelations were positive and many significantly so. Eliminating the 9 lowest items of 21 left 12 for a reduced matrix,…

Visual perceptionScale (ratio)Item analysisApplied Mathematicsmedia_common.quotation_subjectSample (material)05 social sciences050401 social sciences methodsEducationDevelopmental psychologyTest (assessment)Stimulus modality0504 sociologyPerceptionDevelopmental and Educational Psychology0501 psychology and cognitive sciences050102 behavioral science & comparative psychologyPsychologyApplied PsychologyReliability (statistics)Cognitive psychologymedia_commonEducational and Psychological Measurement
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A study on texture-taste-aroma interactions: physico-chemical and cognitive mechanisms

2009

International audience; Texture–taste, texture–aroma and aroma–taste interactions were examined in custard desserts varying in viscosity (at identical composition), sucrose level and aroma nature. All reciprocal interactions were investigated, with each binary interaction addressed through an independent sensory study. Rheological, in vivo aroma release and sucrose release measurements were run in parallel to control for a possible physico-chemical origin of these interactions. Observed interactions were found to be dependent upon the nature of the sensory modalities involved; physico-chemical mechanisms could only in some instances entirely explain these interactions. Taste and aroma did n…

[SDV.SA]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciencesTaste030309 nutrition & dieteticsmedia_common.quotation_subjectSensory systemTEXTURETexture perceptionApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyTexture (geology)PHYSICO-CHEMICAL AND COGNITIVE MECHANISMS03 medical and health sciences0404 agricultural biotechnologyStimulus modalityPerceptionAROMA INTERACTIONSFood scienceAromamedia_common0303 health sciencesTASTEbiologyChemistryfood and beveragesCognition04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesbiology.organism_classification040401 food scienceFood Science
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Automatic auditory intelligence: an expression of the sensory-cognitive core of cognitive processes.

2010

Abstract In this article, we present a new view on the nature of cognitive processes suggesting that there is a common core, viz., automatic sensory–cognitive processes that form the basis for higher-order cognitive processes. It has been shown that automatic sensory–cognitive processes are shared by humans and various other species and occur at different developmental stages and even in different states of consciousness. This evidence, based on the automatic electrophysiological change-detection response mismatch negativity (MMN), its magnetoencephalographic equivalent MMNm, and behavioral data, indicates that in audition surprisingly complex processes occur automatically and mainly in the…

media_common.quotation_subjectMismatch negativitySensory systemStimulus (physiology)Electroencephalography050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineStimulus modalityCognitionPerceptionmedicineAnimalsHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesmedia_commonmedicine.diagnostic_testGeneral Neuroscience05 social sciencesBrainCognitionPattern Recognition PhysiologicalAuditory PerceptionVisual PerceptionNeurology (clinical)ConsciousnessPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryCognitive psychologyBrain research reviews
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Event-related potentials to task-irrelevant changes in facial expressions

2009

Abstract Background Numerous previous experiments have used oddball paradigm to study change detection. This paradigm is applied here to study change detection of facial expressions in a context which demands abstraction of the emotional expression-related facial features among other changing facial features. Methods Event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded in adult humans engaged in a demanding auditory task. In an oddball paradigm, repeated pictures of faces with a neutral expression ('standard', p = .9) were rarely replaced by pictures with a fearful ('fearful deviant', p = .05) or happy ('happy deviant', p = .05) expression. Importantly, facial identities changed from picture to pi…

medicine.medical_specialtyFacial expressiongenetic structuresPsykologia - PsychologyCognitive NeuroscienceResearchMismatch negativityContext (language use)General MedicineAudiologybehavioral disciplines and activitieslcsh:RC346-429Expression (mathematics)Behavioral NeuroscienceStimulus modalityEvent-related potentialmental disordersmedicinePsychologyOddball paradigmNeurosciencelcsh:Neurology. Diseases of the nervous systemChange detectionBiological PsychiatryBehavioral and Brain Functions : BBF
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Is lack of habituation a biomarker of migraine? A critical perspective

2015

Processing of sensory stimuli has been supposed to be dysfunctioning in migraine. A basis for such abnormality has been identified in a defective ability to habituate to repetitive sensorial stimulation. Habituation, i.e. the way the nervous system attenuates response to repeated non noxious stimuli is a fundamental function of sensory systems, that allows appropriate adaptation of neural responses to the relevance of incoming stimuli. In humans, habituation can be studied by evoked potentials where it is indexed by a reduction of amplitude of the evoked response to repeated stimulation. After the first evidence by Schoenen et al in 1995[1] of reduced habituation to visual evoked potentials…

medicine.medical_specialtyNeurologybusiness.industryInvited Speaker PresentationClinical NeurologySensory systemStimulationGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseSomatosensory systemhabituationNeurology (clinical); Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine; habituation; migraineStimulus modalityAnesthesiology and Pain MedicineMigrainemedicineNoxious stimulusmigraineSettore MED/26 - NeurologiaNeurology (clinical)HabituationbusinessNeuroscience
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