Search results for "auditor"

showing 10 items of 737 documents

Emotional words induce enhanced brain activity in schizophrenic patients with auditory hallucinations.

2005

Neuroimaging studies of emotional response in schizophrenia have mainly used visual (faces) paradigms and shown globally reduced brain activity. None of these studies have used an auditory paradigm. Our principal aim is to evaluate the emotional response of patients with schizophrenia to neutral and emotional words. An auditory emotional paradigm based on the most frequent words heard by psychotic patients with auditory hallucinations was designed. This paradigm was applied to evaluate cerebral activation with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) in 11 patients with schizophrenia with persistent hallucinations and 10 healthy subjects. We found a clear enhanced activity of the fronta…

AdultMalePsychosisHallucinationsBrain activity and meditationEmotionsNeuroscience (miscellaneous)Brain mappingAmygdalaGyrus CinguliImaging Three-DimensionalmedicineImage Processing Computer-AssistedHumansRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingDominance CerebralTemporal cortexCerebral CortexAuditory hallucinationBrain Mappingmedicine.diagnostic_testBrainMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseAmygdalaMagnetic Resonance ImagingTemporal LobeFrontal LobeOxygenPsychiatry and Mental healthmedicine.anatomical_structureFrontal lobeChronic DiseaseSchizophreniaSpeech PerceptionSchizophrenic Psychologymedicine.symptomFunctional magnetic resonance imagingPsychologyNeurosciencePsychiatry research
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Schizophrenia with auditory hallucinations: A voxel-based morphometry study

2006

Many studies have shown widespread but subtle pathological changes in gray matter in patients with schizophrenia. Some of these studies have related specific alterations to the genesis of auditory hallucinations, particularly in the left superior temporal gyrus, but none has analysed the relationship between morphometric data and a specific scale for auditory hallucinations. The present study aims to define the presence and characteristics of structural abnormalities in relation with the intensity and phenomenology of auditory hallucinations by means of magnetic resonance voxel-based morphometry (MR-VBM) method applied on a highly homogeneous group of 18 persistent hallucinatory patients me…

AdultMalePsychosisHallucinationscomputer.software_genrebehavioral disciplines and activitiesBrain mappingFunctional LateralityVoxelmental disordersmedicineHumansPathologicalBiological PsychiatryPharmacologyBrain MappingAuditory hallucinationmedicine.diagnostic_testMagnetic resonance imagingVoxel-based morphometryMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseMagnetic Resonance Imagingnervous systemSchizophreniaFemalemedicine.symptomPsychologyInsulacomputerNeuroscienceProgress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology and Biological Psychiatry
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An analysis of the brain's transfer properties in schizophrenia: Amplitude frequency characteristics and evoked potentials during sleep

1998

Background: Classical analysis of spontaneous sleep electroencephalogram (EEG) in schizophrenia commonly reveals alterations of sleep continuity, number of awakenings, slow-wave sleep (SWS), and REM sleep compared to healthy controls; however, conventional analysis cannot help understand dynamic differences of the sleep EEG during different sleep stages. Methods: We measured late components of auditory evoked potentials (AEPs) and visual evoked potentials (VEPs) during different sleep stages of 11 schizophrenic inpatients and in a sex- and age-matched control group from scalp positions FZ, CZ, and PZ. According to linear system theory, we then computed the amplitude-frequency characteristic…

AdultMalePsychosisSleep REMPolysomnographyElectroencephalographymental disordersmedicineHumansBiological PsychiatryDepressive DisorderSleep Stagesmedicine.diagnostic_testBrainElectroencephalographymedicine.diseaseSleep in non-human animalsDelta waveSchizophreniaEvoked Potentials AuditorySchizophreniaEvoked Potentials VisualFemaleSleep StagesK-complexPsychologyNeuroscienceBiological Psychiatry
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Spectroscopic metabolomic abnormalities in the thalamus related to auditory hallucinations in patients with schizophrenia

2008

Abstract Objective Previous studies have found neurochemical abnormalities in thalamic nuclei in patients with schizophrenia. These abnormalities have been associated with information processing deficiencies and symptom formation. There are no metabolic spectroscopy studies in patients with schizophrenia attending to auditory hallucinations. The aim of the present study is to explore metabolic Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy (MRS) ratio differences in the thalamus between schizophrenic patients with and without auditory hallucinations and control subjects. Methods MRS studies (MRI 1.5 T unit) were performed in 49 patients with schizophrenia (30 with auditory hallucinations and 19 without au…

AdultMalePsychosismedicine.medical_specialtyMagnetic Resonance SpectroscopyHallucinationsThalamusAudiologyFunctional LateralityCholineThalamusBrief Psychiatric Rating ScalemedicineBrief Psychiatric Rating ScaleHumansBiological PsychiatryAspartic AcidAuditory hallucinationmedicine.diagnostic_testPositive and Negative Syndrome ScaleMagnetic resonance imagingCreatinemedicine.diseaseDiagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental DisordersPsychiatry and Mental healthSchizophreniaSchizophreniaAge of onsetmedicine.symptomPsychologyNeuroscienceSchizophrenia Research
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The effects of a startle on awareness of action

2003

The execution of a ballistic movement within a reaction time task paradigm is significantly speeded up when an unexpected startling auditory stimulus (SAS) is delivered together with the imperative signal. Using Libet's clock, we investigated whether acceleration involves also the subjective appraisal of the time of task execution. In trials containing the SAS, reaction time shortened to 68.7% of control values. However, subjective judgment of task execution remained a similar time with respect to the imperative signal as in control trials. The dissociation between task execution and its subjective perception indicates the existence of separate circuits for action execution and action aware…

AdultMaleReflex StartleMovementSubjective perceptionmedia_common.quotation_subjectPoison controlStimulus (physiology)Efferent PathwaysPerceptionReaction TimemedicineHumansmedia_commonGeneral NeuroscienceMotor CortexMotor controlBallistic movementBody movementAwarenessmedicine.anatomical_structureAcoustic StimulationTime PerceptionAuditory PerceptionFemalePsychologyAction awarenessSocial psychologyPsychomotor PerformanceCognitive psychologyExperimental Brain Research
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Factors limiting performance in a multitone intensity-discrimination task: disentangling non-optimal decision weights and increased internal noise.

2013

To identify factors limiting performance in multitone intensity discrimination, we presented sequences of five pure tones alternating in level between loud (85 dB SPL) and soft (30, 55, or 80 dB SPL). In the "overall-intensity task", listeners detected a level increment on all of the five tones. In the "masking task", the level increment was imposed only on the soft tones, rendering the soft tones targets and loud tones task-irrelevant maskers. Decision weights quantifying the importance of the five tone levels for the decision were estimated using methods of molecular psychophysics. Compatible with previous studies, listeners placed higher weights on the loud tones than on the soft tones i…

AdultMaleScienceSocial and Behavioral SciencesYoung AdultPsychophysicsPsychologyHumansStatistical MethodsBiologyBehaviorLikelihood FunctionsPhysicsStatisticsQRClassical MechanicsExperimental PsychologyAcousticsModels TheoreticalSensory SystemsAuditory System150 PsychologieAuditory PerceptionMedicineSensory PerceptionFemaleAttention (Behavior)Noise150 PsychologyPerceptual MaskingMathematicsResearch ArticleNeurosciencePsychoacousticsPLoS ONE
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Temporal expectation and spectral expectation operate in distinct fashion on neuronal populations

2013

The formation of temporal expectation (i.e., the prediction of ‘when’) is of prime importance to sensory processing. It can modulate sensory processing at early processing stages probably via the entrainment of low-frequency neuronal oscillations in the brain. However, sensory predictions involve not only temporal expectation but also spectral expectation (i.e., the prediction of ‘what’). Here we investigated how temporal expectation may interrelate with spectral expectation by explicitly setting up temporal expectation and spectral expectation in a target detection task. We found that temporal expectation and spectral expectation interacted on reaction time (RT). RT was shorter when target…

AdultMaleSignal Detection PsychologicalCognitive NeuroscienceExperimental and Cognitive PsychologySensory systemElectroencephalographyta3112050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health sciencesBehavioral Neuroscience[SCCO]Cognitive science0302 clinical medicineReaction TimemedicineHumansAttention0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesta515Analysis of VarianceBrain MappingCommunicationmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industrySpectrum Analysis[SCCO.NEUR]Cognitive science/Neuroscience05 social sciencesBrainSensory SystemsHealthy VolunteersOphthalmologyAcoustic StimulationEvoked Potentials AuditoryFemaleComputer Vision and Pattern RecognitionPsychologybusinessEntrainment (chronobiology)Neuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgeryPsychoacoustics
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Excitability and susceptibility of the brain's electrical activity during sleep: an analysis of late components of AEPs and VEPs.

1991

We investigated ten healthy male subjects and measured late components of AEPs and VEPs during sleep. According to Rechtschaffen and Kales (1968) we performed an off-line scoring procedure of sleep-EEG and averaged the AEPs and VEPs of five different periods, corresponding to sleep stages I, II, III, IV and REM. From the averaged evoked potentials we computed the amplitude-frequency-characteristic (AFC) of the brain (Basar, 1980) during different sleep stages. These AFCs characterize transfer properties of an oscillating system. A comparison of different AFCs has shown that the excitability of the brain depicts a clear alpha resonance during stage I, a pronounced delta resonance during stag…

AdultMaleSleep Stagesmedicine.diagnostic_testGeneral Neurosciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectModels NeurologicalBrainGeneral MedicineElectroencephalographyElectrophysiologyCorrelation analysismedicineEvoked Potentials AuditoryEvoked Potentials VisualHumansSpectral analysisSleep StagesPsychologySleepNeuroscienceSleep eegVigilance (psychology)media_commonThe International journal of neuroscience
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Speech Perception: Phonological Neighborhood Effects on Word Recognition Persist Despite Semantic Sentence Context

2019

This study tested the hypothesis that two lexical properties, both phonological neighborhood density (ND) and neighborhood frequency (NF), influence the recognition of target words when preceded by either a semantically congruent or semantically neutral context. Our study is the first to test this hypothesis using a language other than English (i.e., Spanish). We used highly familiar bisyllabic nouns with medium-frequency occurrence as target words, and we expected recognition accuracy to increase as ND and NF decreased in both semanticallly congruent and semantically neutral sentences. We presented 48 undergraduate listeners with a set of 80 words, differing in ND and NF, within these two…

AdultMaleSpeech perceptionExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyContext (language use)phonological proximitysentence context050105 experimental psychologyAssociation03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinePhoneticsHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesAttentionauditory word recognitionLanguageSpeech Reception Threshold Test05 social sciencesSensory SystemsSemanticsWord recognitionSpeech PerceptionFemalePsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgerySentenceCognitive psychology
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Two Distinct Auditory-Motor Circuits for Monitoring Speech Production as Revealed by Content-Specific Suppression of Auditory Cortex

2015

Speech production, both overt and covert, down-regulates the activation of auditory cortex. This is thought to be due to forward prediction of the sensory consequences of speech, contributing to a feedback control mechanism for speech production. Critically, however, these regulatory effects should be specific to speech content to enable accurate speech monitoring. To determine the extent to which such forward prediction is content-specific, we recorded the brain's neuromagnetic responses to heard multisyllabic pseudowords during covert rehearsal in working memory, contrasted with a control task. The cortical auditory processing of target syllables was significantly suppressed during rehear…

AdultMaleSpeech productionSpeech perceptionInhibition (Psychology)Cognitive NeuroscienceSpeech recognitionShort-term memoryAuditory cortexFunctional Laterality050105 experimental psychologySpeech shadowingYoung Adult03 medical and health sciencesCellular and Molecular Neuroscience0302 clinical medicineSpeech Production MeasurementNeural PathwaysSpeech Production Measurementotorhinolaryngologic diseasesHumansSpeech0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesAuditory CortexAnalysis of VarianceBrain MappingWorking memory05 social sciencesMagnetoencephalographyInhibition PsychologicalAcoustic StimulationSpeech PerceptionFemaleNeurocomputational speech processingPsychologyPhotic Stimulation030217 neurology & neurosurgeryCognitive psychologyCerebral Cortex
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