Search results for "auditor"

showing 10 items of 737 documents

Brain responses to sound intensity changes dissociate depressed participants and healthy controls.

2017

Depression is associated with bias in emotional information processing, but less is known about the processing of neutral sensory stimuli. Of particular interest is processing of sound intensity which is suggested to indicate central serotonergic function. We tested weather event-related brain potentials (ERPs) to occasional changes in sound intensity can dissociate first-episode depressed, recurrent depressed and healthy control participants. The first-episode depressed showed larger N1 amplitude to deviant sounds compared to recurrent depression group and control participants. In addition, both depression groups, but not the control group, showed larger N1 amplitude to deviant than standa…

masennusBrain activationAdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentdepression (mental disorders)Mismatch negativitySensory systempsychologyAudiologySerotonergicDevelopmental psychologysound intensity03 medical and health sciencesYoung Adult0302 clinical medicineHealthy controlmedicineHumanspre-attentive processingta515Depression (differential diagnoses)MMNDepressive Disorder MajorPre-attentive processingGeneral Neuroscienceauditory perceptionsBrainN1ElectroencephalographyMiddle AgedSound intensity030227 psychiatryäänenvoimakkuusNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologySoundAcoustic StimulationCase-Control StudiesAuditory PerceptionEvoked Potentials AuditorypsykologiaFemalePsychologyERP030217 neurology & neurosurgeryBiological psychology
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Auditory event-related potentials in separating patients with depressive disorders and non-depressed controls: A narrative review

2021

This narrative review brings together the findings regarding the differences in the auditory event-related potentials (ERPs) between patients with depressive disorder and non-depressed control subjects. These studies' results can inform us of the possible alterations in sensory-cognitive processing in depressive disorders and the potential of using these ERPs in clinical applications. Auditory P3, mismatch negativity (MMN) and loudness dependence of auditory evoked potentials (LDAEP) were the subjects of the investigation. A search in PubMed yielded 84 studies. The findings of the reviewed studies were not highly consistent, but some patterns could be identified. For auditory P3b, the commo…

masennusDepressive DisorderLoudness dependence of auditory evoked potentialsGeneral NeuroscienceaistitbiomarkkeritElectroencephalographykuulomielenterveysongelmatkuulohavainnotpsykofysiologiaäänenvoimakkuusNeuropsychology and Physiological Psychologydepressive disorderAcoustic StimulationPhysiology (medical)mismatch negativityEvoked Potentials AuditorybiomarkerHumansääniEvoked Potentialsärsykkeetauditory P3International Journal of Psychophysiology
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Event-Related Potentials to Changes in Sound Intensity Demonstrate Alterations in Brain Function Related to Depression and Aging

2020

Measures of the brain’s automatic electrophysiological responses to sounds represent a potential tool for identifying age- and depression-related neural markers. However, these markers have rarely been studied related to aging and depression within one study. Here, we investigated auditory event-related potentials (ERPs) in the brain that may show different alterations related to aging and depression. We used an oddball condition employing changes in sound intensity to investigate: (i) sound intensity dependence; (ii) sensory gating; and (iii) change detection, all within a single paradigm. The ERPs of younger (18–40 years) and older (62–80 years) depressed female participants and age-match…

masennusikääntyminenneuropsykologiaauditory-evoked potentialsagingdepressionHuman Neurosciencesensory gatingkuulointensity dependenceOriginal ResearchFrontiers in Human Neuroscience
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Even violins can cry: specifically vocal emotional behaviours also drive the perception of emotions in non-vocal music.

2021

A wealth of theoretical and empirical arguments have suggested that music triggers emotional responses by resembling the inflections of expressive vocalizations, but have done so using low-level acoustic parameters (pitch, loudness, speed) that, in fact, may not be processed by the listener in reference to human voice. Here, we take the opportunity of the recent availability of computational models that allow the simulation of three specifically vocal emotional behaviours: smiling, vocal tremor and vocal roughness. When applied to musical material, we find that these three acoustic manipulations trigger emotional perceptions that are remarkably similar to those observed on speech and scream…

media_common.quotation_subjectEmotionsSingingMusical050105 experimental psychologyGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyLoudnessViolin03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinePerceptionHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesmusicHuman voiceResearch Articlesmedia_commonVocal music05 social sciencesVocal tremorArticlesAuditory PerceptionVoiceSingingGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryCognitive psychologyPhilosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences
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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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Classification of Schizophrenia Patients and Healthy Controls Using ICA of Complex-Valued fMRI Data and Convolutional Neural Networks

2019

Deep learning has contributed greatly to functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) analysis, however, spatial maps derived from fMRI data by independent component analysis (ICA), as promising biomarkers, have rarely been directly used to perform individualized diagnosis. As such, this study proposes a novel framework combining ICA and convolutional neural network (CNN) for classifying schizophrenia patients (SZs) and healthy controls (HCs). ICA is first used to obtain components of interest which have been previously implicated in schizophrenia. Functionally informative slices of these components are then selected and labelled. CNN is finally employed to learn hierarchical diagnostic fea…

medicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryComputer scienceDeep learningSchizophrenia (object-oriented programming)05 social sciencesPattern recognitionmedicine.diseaseAuditory cortexConvolutional neural networkIndependent component analysis050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineSchizophreniamedicine0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesArtificial intelligencebusinessFunctional magnetic resonance imaging030217 neurology & neurosurgeryDefault mode networkDiagnosis of schizophrenia
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EEG Effective Source Projections Are More Bilaterally Symmetric in Infants Than in Adults

2020

Although anatomical brain hemispheric asymmetries have been clearly documented in the infant brain, findings concerning functional hemispheric specialization have been inconsistent. The present report aims to assess whether bilaterally symmetric synchronous activity between the two hemispheres is a characteristic of the infant brain. To asses cortical bilateral synchronicity, we used decomposition by independent component analysis (ICA) of high-density electroencephalographic (EEG) data collected in an auditory passive oddball paradigm. Decompositions of concatenated 64-channel EEG data epochs from each of 34 typically developing 6-month-old infants and from 18 healthy young adults particip…

medicine.medical_specialty1.1 Normal biological development and functioningAuditory oddballAudiologyElectroencephalography050105 experimental psychologylcsh:RC321-57103 medical and health sciencesFunctional brainBehavioral Neuroscience0302 clinical medicineClinical ResearchUnderpinning researchmedicinePsychology0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesEEGbrain symmetryOddball paradigmdevelopmentlcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryBiological PsychiatryOriginal ResearchPediatricmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industrybrain laterality05 social sciencesBrain maturationCortical fieldNeurosciencesExperimental Psychologyfunctional brain organizationIndependent component analysisPsychiatry and Mental healthmedicine.anatomical_structureNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyNeurologyindependent component analysisScalpNeurologicalCognitive Sciencesbusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryNeuroscienceFrontiers in Human Neuroscience
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Differences in visual information processing style between Idiopathic Generalized Epilepsy with and without photosensitivity.

2021

Purpose: Recently, altered visual cortical processes i.e., lack of habituation to visual evoked potentials (VEP), has been highlighted in both photosensitive epilepsy and in a specific i.e., analytic mode of processing visual inputs. In this study we aimed at evaluating the relationship between photosensitivity (PS) and analytic style of processing visual information, in a sample of 30 patients with Idiopathic Generalized Epilepsy (IGE) and matched healthy controls. Methods: At our Epilepsy unit of the Sapienza University of Rome, we consecutively enrolled 15 patients with IGE with PSand matched them with 15 patients with IGE without PS and 15 Healthy Volunteers. All patients underwent EEG …

medicine.medical_specialtyAudiologyEpilepsy ReflexVisual processingIdiopathic generalized epilepsyBehavioral NeuroscienceEpilepsyCognitionPhotosensitive epilepsyPhotosensitivity; Idiopathic Generalized Epilepsy; Analytic cognitive style; Habituation; Visual processing; Auditory processingPhotosensitivitymedicineHumansHabituationAssociation (psychology)Analytic cognitive styleIdiopathic Generalized Epilepsybusiness.industryCognitionElectroencephalographyAuditory processingmedicine.diseaseNeurologyVisual processingEvoked Potentials VisualEpilepsy GeneralizedNeurology (clinical)Analysis of varianceHabituationbusinessEpilepsybehavior : EB
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[Paediatric cochlear implantation in the critical period of the auditory pathway, our experience].

2009

Numerous experimental and clinical studies have suggested a critical or sensitive period in which the auditory pathway develops its greatest potential in terms of plasticity and learning. Early cochlear implantation performed in prelingual deaf children in this period provides a better prognosis for language acquisition. The aim of this study is to show the importance of cochlear implantation before this critical period ends.We conducted an observational, longitudinal, retrospective study of 57 children suffering profound prelingual bilateral sensorineural hearing loss who had received Advanced Bionics implants at our ENT department between June, 1998, and November, 2006. Data on their audi…

medicine.medical_specialtyAuditory PathwaysAdolescentbusiness.industryCritical Period PsychologicalENT departmentAge FactorsInfantRetrospective cohort studyGeneral MedicineAudiologyLanguage acquisitionCochlear ImplantationChild PreschoolmedicineHumansObservational studyLongitudinal StudiesBilateral sensorineural hearing lossCochlear implantationbusinessChildRetrospective StudiesActa otorrinolaringologica espanola
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Ultrastructural evidence for protection of the outer hair cells of the inner ear during intense noise exposure by application of the organic calcium …

1999

Outer hair cells could be protected during intense noise exposure by the application of the calcium channel blocker diltiazem given before and after noise treatment. After various experimental approaches, the ultrastructural morphology was analysed for the different animal populations in the basal part of the second turn of the cochlea, which was the most destroyed area after an acute noise trauma caused by a gun shot (sound pressure at the ear drum 156 dB, frequency maximum between 4 and 6 kHz). Compared to untreated control specimens (experimental animal group I), the outer hair cells in the basal part of the second turn of the cochlea were mostly destroyed without any diltiazem applicati…

medicine.medical_specialtyCytoplasmmedicine.drug_classmedicine.medical_treatmentGuinea PigsCalcium channel blockerAntiarrhythmic agentDiltiazemInternal medicinemedicineAnimalsInner earDiltiazemCochleaChemistryCalcium Channel BlockersDisease Models AnimalHair Cells Auditory OuterMicroscopy Electronmedicine.anatomical_structureEndocrinologyOtorhinolaryngologyHearing Loss Noise-InducedEar InnerAcute DiseaseUltrastructureBiophysicsAudiometry Pure-ToneHair cellNoiseNoise (radio)medicine.drugORL; journal for oto-rhino-laryngology and its related specialties
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