Search results for "Subdominant"

showing 6 items of 6 documents

Immunodominant Cytomegalovirus Epitopes Suppress Subdominant Epitopes in the Generation of High-Avidity CD8 T Cells

2021

CD8+ T-cell responses to pathogens are directed against infected cells that present pathogen-encoded peptides on MHC class-I molecules. Although natural responses are polyclonal, the spectrum of peptides that qualify for epitopes is remarkably small even for pathogens with high coding capacity. Among those few that are successful at all, a hierarchy exists in the magnitude of the response that they elicit in terms of numbers of CD8+ T cells generated. This led to a classification into immunodominant and non-immunodominant or subordinate epitopes, IDEs and non-IDEs, respectively. IDEs are favored in the design of vaccines and are chosen for CD8+ T-cell immunotherapy. Using murine cytomegalov…

0301 basic medicineMicrobiology (medical)Subdominantantigenic peptidesAntigen presentationCD8 T cellsImmunodominanceBiologyArticleEpitopeAntigenic driftprotective immunity03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineMHC class IImmunology and AllergyCytotoxic T cellcytomegalovirusMolecular BiologyimmunodominanceGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyRVirologyepitope(s)antigen presentation030104 developmental biologyInfectious Diseasesvaccine designbiology.proteinMedicineimmunotherapyCD8030215 immunologyPathogens
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Processing of Musical Syntax Tonic versus Subdominant: An Event-related Potential Study

2006

Abstract The present study investigates the effect of a change in syntactic-like musical function on event-related brain potentials (ERPs). Eight-chord piano sequences were presented to musically expert and novice listeners. Instructed to watch a movie and to ignore the musical sequences, the participants had to react when a chord was played with a different instrument than the piano. Participants were not informed that the relevant manipulation was the musical function of the last chord (target) of the sequences. The target chord acted either as a syntactically stable tonic chord (i.e., a C major chord in the key of C major) or as a less syntactically stable subdominant chord (i.e., a C ma…

AdultMaleAnalysis of VarianceSubdominantCommunicationbusiness.industryCognitive NeuroscienceMusical syntaxPianoCognitionMusicalPitch DiscriminationMental ProcessesAcoustic StimulationEvent-related potentialAuditory PerceptionEvoked Potentials AuditoryHumansChord (music)FemalePsychologybusinessMusicCognitive psychologyJournal of Cognitive Neuroscience
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Further Investigation of Harmonic Priming in Long Contexts Using Musical Timbre as Surface Marker to Control for Temporal Effects

2004

Harmonic priming studies have reported facilitated processing for chords that are harmonically related to the prime context. Responses to the target (the last chord of an 8-chord sequence) were faster and more accurate when the target was strongly related, i.e., a tonic chord, to the preceding prime context than when it was less related, i.e., a subdominant chord. Results have been interpreted in terms of musical expectations and processing speed: the prime allows listeners to develop expectations for future events which lead to facilitated processing of the most strongly expected event. The present experiment investigated an alternative hypothesis suggesting that the harmonic structure of…

ConsonantSubdominantTime Factorsmedia_common.quotation_subjectExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyMusical050105 experimental psychologyJudgmentRandom Allocation03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineSurveys and QuestionnairesReaction TimeHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPitch Perceptionmedia_commonCommunicationbusiness.industry05 social sciences030229 sport sciencesConsonance and dissonanceAmbiguitySensory SystemsChord (music)PsychologybusinessTimbrePriming (psychology)MusicCognitive psychologyPerceptual and Motor Skills
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Priming paradigm reveals harmonic structure processing in congenital amusia.

2012

Abstract Deficits for pitch structure processing in congenital amusia has been mostly reported for melodic stimuli and explicit judgments. The present study investigated congenital amusia with harmonic stimuli and a priming task. Amusic and control participants performed a speeded phoneme discrimination task on sung chord sequences. The target phoneme was sung either on a functionally important chord (tonic chord, referred to as “related target”) or a less important one (subdominant chord, referred to as “less-related target”). Correct response times were faster when the target phoneme was sung on tonic chords rather than on subdominant chords, and this effect was less pronounced, albeit si…

MelodyMaleSubdominantCognitive NeuroscienceEmotionsExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyAmusia050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinemedicineReaction TimeHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPitch PerceptionAgedHarmonic structure05 social sciencesAuditory Perceptual DisordersBrainMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseCorrect responseNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyAcoustic StimulationAuditory PerceptionChord (music)FemalePsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryMusicCognitive psychologyCortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior
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The influence of task-irrelevant music on language processing: syntactic and semantic structures.

2011

Recent research has suggested that music and language processing share neural resources, leading to new hypotheses about interference in the simultaneous processing of these two structures. The present study investigated the effect of a musical chord's tonal function on syntactic processing (Experiment 1) and semantic processing (Experiment 2) using a cross-modal paradigm and controlling for acoustic differences. Participants read sentences and performed a lexical decision task on the last word, which was, syntactically or semantically, expected or unexpected. The simultaneously presented (task-irrelevant) musical sequences ended on either an expected tonic or a less-expected subdominant ch…

SubdominantDeep linguistic processingComputer sciencelcsh:BF1-990structural integrationMusicalcomputer.software_genremusical expectancy050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineLexical decision taskSemantic memoryPsychology0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesGeneral PsychologyOriginal Researchbusiness.industryMusical syntax05 social sciencessemantic expectancySyntaxsyntactic expectancylcsh:PsychologyChord (music)Artificial intelligencecross-modal interactionsbusinesscomputer030217 neurology & neurosurgeryNatural language processingFrontiers in psychology
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The effect of harmonic context on phoneme monitoring in vocal music

2001

The processing of a target chord depends on the previous musical context in which it has appeared. This harmonic priming effect occurs for fine syntactic-like changes in context and is observed irrespective of the extent of participants' musical expertise (Bigand & Pineau, Perception and Psychophysics, 59 (1997) 1098). The present study investigates how the harmonic context influences the processing of phonemes in vocal music. Eight-chord sequences were presented to participants. The four notes of each chord were played with synthetic phonemes and participants were required to quickly decide whether the last chord (the target) was sung on a syllable containing the phoneme /i/ or /u/. The mu…

Vocal musicLinguistics and LanguageSubdominantSpeech perceptionMusic psychologyCognitive NeuroscienceSpeech recognitionmedia_common.quotation_subjectMusical syntaxExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyLanguage and LinguisticsLinguisticsCognitionPerceptionAuditory PerceptionSpeech PerceptionDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyHumansChord (music)PsychologyPriming (psychology)Musicmedia_commonCognition
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