Search results for "Stimulus"

showing 10 items of 555 documents

The effects of electrodermal lability and stimulus intensity on skin conductance habituation: A preliminary report

1981

A between-subjects design (N=60) was used to investigate the effects of electrodermal lability and auditory stimulus intensity on habituation of the skin conductance response (SCR). Subjects were subdivided into “labile” and “stabile” groups on the basis of frequency of nonspecific electrodermal responses during the prestimulation period. They received 20 presentations of a 1,000-Hz tone of 15, 35, 55, 75, 95, or 110 dB. There were significant effects of stimulus intensity on all three habituation measures (number of trials to habituation, reciprocal of SCR frequency to the first 10 stimuli, slope of the regression of SCR amplitude on log stimulus number). Additionally, significant effects …

medicine.medical_specialtyPhysiologyPreliminary reportLabilityGeneral NeurosciencemedicineStimulus (physiology)HabituationAudiologySkin conductancePsychologybehavioral disciplines and activitiesDevelopmental psychologyPhysiological Psychology
researchProduct

Stimuli and sensors that initiate skeletal muscle hypertrophy following resistance exercise

2018

One of the most striking adaptations to exercise is the skeletal muscle hypertrophy that occurs in response to resistance exercise. A large body of work shows that a mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1)-mediated increase of muscle protein synthesis is the key, but not sole, mechanism by which resistance exercise causes muscle hypertrophy. While much of the hypertrophy signaling cascade has been identified, the initiating, resistance exercise-induced and hypertrophy-stimulating stimuli have remained elusive. For the purpose of this review, we define an initiating, resistance exercise-induced and hypertrophy-stimulating signal as “hypertrophy stimulus,” and the sensor of such a s…

medicine.medical_specialtyPhysiologySkeletal muscle hypertrophylihaksetmuscle protein030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyMechanotransduction CellularMuscle hypertrophyWeight-Bearing03 medical and health sciencesskeletal muscle hypertrophy0302 clinical medicineStress PhysiologicalPhysiology (medical)Internal medicinemedicineAnimalsHumansMechanotransductionta315Muscle Skeletalbusiness.industryResistance trainingSkeletal muscleResistance Training030229 sport sciencesHypertrophyhypertrophy sensorEndocrinologymedicine.anatomical_structurelihasmassahypertrophy stimulusvoimaharjoitteluproteiinitSignal transductionbusiness
researchProduct

Independent component analysis on the mismatch negativity in an uninterrupted sound paradigm.

2008

We compared the efficiency of the independent component analysis (ICA) decomposition procedure against the difference wave (DW) and optimal digital filtering (ODF) procedures in the analysis of the mismatch negativity (MMN). The comparison was made in a group of 54 children aged 8-16 years. The MMN was elicited in a passive oddball protocol presenting uninterrupted auditory stimulation consisting of two frequent alternating tones (600 and 800 Hz) of 100 ms duration each. Infrequently, one of the 600 Hz tones was shortened to 50 or 30 ms. The event related potentials (ERPs) were decomposed into the MMN-like and non-MMN-like independent components (ICs) through the FastICA algorithm. The ICA …

medicine.medical_specialtyPrincipal Component Analysismedicine.diagnostic_testAdolescentGeneral NeuroscienceSpeech recognitionMismatch negativityBrainElectroencephalographyAudiologyElectroencephalographyDeviant stimulusIndependent component analysisSignal-to-noise ratioEvent-related potentialPrincipal component analysismedicineEvoked Potentials AuditoryHumansLatency (engineering)PsychologyChildEvoked PotentialsAlgorithmsJournal of neuroscience methods
researchProduct

Remember, know, confidence and the mirror effect: Changes as a function of discriminability conditions

2003

Recognition memory for Spanish-Catalan cognate and noncognate words was tested at retention intervals of 20 minutes, 1 hour, and 24 hours (Experiment 1) using a remember/know response procedure, and requiring a confidence judgement on the yes/no response. Noncognate words were accompanied by more “remember” responses than cognates, and overall A' was significantly different from remember A', except in the cognate condition at the longest retention interval. A strong mirror effect for the cognate-noncognate stimulus class was found for overall responding, and for high but not low confidence, indicating a differential use of recollection and familiarity in recognition. In general, the pattern…

medicine.medical_specialtyRecallLow ConfidenceMirror effectmedicineExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyCognateAudiologyRetention intervalStimulus (physiology)PsychologySocial psychologyRecognition memoryEuropean Journal of Cognitive Psychology
researchProduct

Three-month-old infants’ sensitivity to horizontal information within faces

2016

Horizontal information is crucial to face processing in adults. Yet the ontogeny of this preferential type of processing remains unknown. To clarify this issue, we tested 3-month-old infants' sensitivity to horizontal information within faces. Specifically, infants were exposed to the simultaneous presentation of a face and a car presented in upright or inverted orientation while their looking behavior was recorded. Face and car images were either broadband (UNF) or filtered to only reveal horizontal (H), vertical (V) or this combined information (HV). As expected, infants looked longer at upright faces than at upright cars, but critically, only when horizontal information was preserved in …

medicine.medical_specialtyRecallmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesSpace perceptionStimulus (physiology)AudiologyFacial recognition system050105 experimental psychologyDevelopmental psychology03 medical and health sciencesBehavioral Neuroscience0302 clinical medicineDevelopmental NeurosciencePerceptionDevelopmental and Educational Psychologymedicine0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryDevelopmental Biologymedia_commonDevelopmental Psychobiology
researchProduct

Event‐related brain potentials to change in rapidly presented acoustic stimuli in newborns

1997

Event-related brain potentials of 28 newborns to pitch change were studied during quiet sleep under stimulus conditions that typically elicit mismatch negativity in adults. Rarely occurring deviant tones of 1100 Hz (probability 12%) were embedded among repeated standard tones of 1000 Hz in an oddball-sequence with an interstimulus interval of 425 ms. Two control conditions were also employed: In the first, the 1100-Hz stimulus was presented alone without the intervening standard stimuli, and in the second the deviant stimulus had a pitch of 1300 Hz. In all conditions the infrequent stimulus elicited in most newborns a slow positive deflection peaking at a latency of 250-350 ms. The response…

medicine.medical_specialtyRefractory periodInterstimulus intervalMismatch negativityAudiologyStimulus (physiology)Deviant stimulusDevelopmental psychologyQuiet sleepNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyPositive responseDevelopmental and Educational PsychologymedicineDishabituationPsychologypsychological phenomena and processesDevelopmental Neuropsychology
researchProduct

Auditory evoked potentials to changes in speech sound duration in anesthetized mice

2018

AbstractElectrophysiological response termed mismatch negativity (MMN) indexes auditory change detection in humans. An analogous response, called the mismatch response (MMR), is also elicited in animals. Mismatch response has been widely utilized in investigations of change detection in human speech sounds in rats and guinea pigs, but not in mice. Since e.g. transgenic mouse models provide important advantages for further studies, we studied processing of speech sounds in anesthetized mice. Auditory evoked potentials were recorded from the dura above the auditory cortex to changes in duration of a human speech sound /a/. In oddball stimulus condition, the MMR was elicited at 53-259 ms laten…

medicine.medical_specialtySpeech soundSpeech perceptionbusiness.industrySpeech soundsMismatch negativityAudiologyStimulus (physiology)Auditory cortexElectrophysiologyotorhinolaryngologic diseasesMedicinesense organsbusinessskin and connective tissue diseases
researchProduct

Electrophysiological adaptations to endurance and strength training

2020

Abstract Sex differences in exercise training adaptations are still a largely unexplored field of study. There are well-known differences between men and women in terms of their average baseline fitness, such as larger muscle mass and higher cardiorespiratory fitness in men compared to women. Trained women may have a higher performance level than untrained men, but at the top end of the physical training and performance curve, i.e., where athletes are, men exhibit a higher prevalence and amplitude of sinus bradycardia and other electrophysiological changes. This chapter will explore whether men and women respond differently to a standardized training stimulus when sex differences at baselin…

medicine.medical_specialtyStrength trainingbusiness.industrySinus bradycardiaeducationCardiorespiratory fitnessStimulus (physiology)Muscle massElectrophysiologyPhysical medicine and rehabilitationMedicineElite athletesmedicine.symptombusiness
researchProduct

Vieillissement et troubles du goût et de l’olfaction

2020

Compared with other sensory modalities, age-related alterations in taste and smell are less known and less investigated in clinical practice. In fact, the elderly with a loss of smell or taste may not always report it or be aware of it. In addition, the clinical evaluation of taste and smell by specific tests is rarely performed.

medicine.medical_specialtyTastebusiness.industryfungiGeneral Medicinerespiratory systemAudiologyClinical PracticeStimulus modalitystomatognathic systemotorhinolaryngologic diseasesmedicinebusinessClinical evaluationpsychological phenomena and processesSoins Gérontologie
researchProduct

Cortical and subcortical visual event-related potentials to oddball stimuli in rabbits

2000

We applied repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) in order to induce interference on visuo-spatial perception in 11 healthy subjects. Subjects performed a visuo-spatial task requiring judgements about the symmetry of prebisected lines. Visual stimuli consisted of symmetrically or asymmetrically transected lines, tachystoscopically presented for 50 ms on a computer-monitor. Performance was examined in basal condition and during rTMS trains of 10 stimuli at 25 Hz, delivered through a focal coil over right or left posterior parietal cortex (P5 and P6 sites) and triggered synchronously with visual stimulus. Randomly intermixed sham rTMS trains were employed to control for non-speci…

medicine.medical_specialtyVisual perceptiongenetic structuresPhotic Stimulationmusculoskeletal neural and ocular physiologyGeneral Neurosciencemedicine.medical_treatmentmedia_common.quotation_subjectHealthy subjectsPosterior parietal cortexStimulus (physiology)Audiologybehavioral disciplines and activitiesNeglectTranscranial magnetic stimulationnervous systemLateralitymedicinePsychologyNeurosciencepsychological phenomena and processesmedia_commonNeuroReport
researchProduct