Search results for "cognitive neuroscience"

showing 10 items of 1135 documents

The role of N-methyl-D-asparate receptors in neurogenesis.

2006

The dentate gyrus continues to incorporate granule neurons during adulthood. Among the factors that we know modulate adult neurogenesis in the dentate gyrus, one of the first studied was the influence of excitatory amino-acids. These neurotransmitters, acting through NMDA receptors, are able to modulate both the proliferation of progenitor cells as well as the rate of neurogenesis in the adult dentate gyrus. However, the mechanisms by which these processes are influenced are not clearly known. Although there is no anatomical evidence of NMDA receptor expression in adult hippocampal progenitor cells or differentiating granule neurons, electrophysiological data and in vitro studies suggest th…

NeuronsNeuronal PlasticityNeuriteCognitive NeuroscienceDentate gyrusStem CellsNeurogenesisGlutamic AcidCell DifferentiationHippocampal formationBiologyReceptors N-Methyl-D-Aspartatenervous systemDentate GyrusNMDA receptorAnimalsHumansProgenitor cellReceptorLong-term depressionNeuroscienceCell ProliferationHippocampus
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Nucleus incertus—An emerging modulatory role in arousal, stress and memory

2011

A major challenge in systems neuroscience is to determine the underlying neural circuitry and associated neurotransmitters and receptors involved in psychiatric disorders, such as anxiety and depression. A focus of many of these studies has been specific brainstem nuclei that modulate levels of arousal via their ascending monoaminergic projections (e.g. the serotonergic dorsal raphe, noradrenergic locus ceruleus and cholinergic laterodorsal tegmental nucleus). After years of relative neglect, the subject of recent studies in this context has been the GABAergic nucleus incertus,1 which is located in the midline periventricular central gray in the ‘prepontine’ hindbrain, with broad projection…

NeuronsSystems neuroscienceCognitive NeuroscienceNeuropeptideNucleus IncertusRatsMiceBehavioral NeuroscienceNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyLaterodorsal tegmental nucleusmedicine.anatomical_structureDorsal raphe nucleusMemorymedicineAnimalsPeriaqueductal GrayWakefulnessArousalMedial forebrain bundlePsychologyRelaxin-3Neurosciencegamma-Aminobutyric AcidNeuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews
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A module for syntactic processing in music?

2006

Music and language have rules governing the structural organization of events. By analogy to language, these rules are referred to as the ‘syntactic rules’ of music. Does this analogy imply that the brain actually performs syntactic computations on musical structures, similar to those for language and based on a specialized module [1–3]? In contrast to linguistic syntax, which involves abstract computation between words, rules governing musical syntax are rooted in psychoacoustic properties of sound: syntactically related events are related on a sensory level and involve only weak acoustical deviance.

Neuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyCognitive NeuroscienceComputationMusical syntaxAnalogyExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyContrast (music)PsychoacousticsMusicalPsychologySensory levelSyntaxLinguisticsTrends in Cognitive Sciences
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Time Hurries on but Does not Fly in Older Age — No Effect of Depressive Symptoms

2021

Abstract Research on the commonly known phenomenon of perceived accelerated time passage with increasing age has provided inconsistent results. This could be due to a mediating time-slowing effect of depressive symptoms as the prevalence of depression does also alter with age. Based on a large sample of 380 subjects covering a continuous range of age between 20 and 70 years, we tested whether the assumed age-related effect on time perception is being mediated by symptoms of depression. Cross-sectional differences indicate a weak, but significant nonlinear acceleration of the perceived passage of time especially during mid-adulthood, whereas no further alteration was observed above the age o…

Neuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyCognitive NeuroscienceExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyApplied PsychologyDepressive symptomsClinical psychologyTiming & Time Perception
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2015

In everyday life, one of the most frequent activities involves accelerating and decelerating an object held in precision grip. In many contexts, humans scale and synchronize their grip force, normal to the finger/object contact, in anticipation of the expected tangential load force, resulting from the combination of the gravitational and the inertial forces. In many contexts, grip force and load force are linearly coupled. A few studies have examined how we adjust the parameters - gain and offset - of this linear relationship. However, the question remains open as to how the brain adjusts grip force regardless of whether load force is generated by different combinations of weight and inerti…

Offset (computer science)Normal forceCognitive Neurosciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectMotor controlInertiaSensory SystemsGravitationCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceEquilibrant ForceNon-contact forceControl theoryFictitious forceSimulationmedia_commonMathematicsFrontiers in Integrative Neuroscience
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Targeting the Stress System During Gestation: Is Early Handling a Protective Strategy for the Offspring?

2020

The perinatal window is a critical developmental time when abnormal gestational stimuli may alter the development of the stress system that, in turn, influences behavioral and physiological responses in the newborns. Individual differences in stress reactivity are also determined by variations in maternal care, resulting from environmental manipulations. Despite glucocorticoids are the primary programming factor for the offspring's stress response, therapeutic corticosteroids are commonly used during late gestation to prevent preterm negative outcomes, exposing the offspring to potentially aberrant stress reactivity later in life. Thus, in this study, we investigated the consequences of one…

OffspringCognitive NeurosciencePhysiologyprenatal exposurestress reactivitylcsh:RC321-57103 medical and health sciencesBehavioral Neurosciencechemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicineNeurochemicalEmotionalityCorticosteronemedicineWeaninglcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryOriginal Research030304 developmental biologyemotionality0303 health sciencesPregnancyprenatal exposure glucocorticoid early handling stress reactivity depressive-like behavior emotionalitybusiness.industrymedicine.diseasedepressive-like behaviorNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologychemistrySettore BIO/14 - Farmacologiaearly handlingGestationglucocorticoidbusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryGlucocorticoidmedicine.drugFrontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience
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A putative social chemosignal elicits faster cortical responses than perceptually similar odorants.

2006

Social chemosignals, so-called pheromones, have recently attracted much attention in that effects on women's psychophysiology and cortical processing have been reported. We here tested the hypothesis that the human brain would process a putative social chemosignal, the endogenous steroid endrostadienone, faster than other odorants with perceptually matched intensity and hedonic characteristics. Chemosensory event-related potentials (ERP) were recorded in healthy women. ERP analyses indicate that androstadienone was processed significantly faster than the control odorants. Androstadienone elicited shorter latencies for all recorded ERP components but most so for the late positivity. This fin…

Olfactory systemVisual perceptionMotion PerceptionCortical processingPheromoneschemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicineAttentionHydrogen SulfideEvoked PotentialsCerebral Cortex0303 health sciencesBrain MappingAndrostadienoneElectroencephalographyHuman brainOlfactory PathwaysMiddle AgedChemoreceptor CellsSmellmedicine.anatomical_structureNeurologyPattern Recognition VisualSex pheromoneSensory Thresholds[ SCCO.NEUR ] Cognitive science/NeuroscienceAndrogensFemalePsychologyERPpsychological phenomena and processesAdultCognitive NeuroscienceOlfactionAndrosterone03 medical and health sciencesmedicinePsychophysicsReaction TimeHumansSocial Behavior030304 developmental biologyCommunicationDose-Response Relationship Drugbusiness.industry[SCCO.NEUR]Cognitive science/NeuroscienceOlfactionAndrostadienesPsychophysiologychemistrybusinessNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgeryPsychomotor PerformanceNeuroImage
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proNGF Measurement in Cerebrospinal Fluid Samples of a Large Cohort of Living Patients With Alzheimer's Disease by a New Automated Immunoassay

2021

The discovery of new biomarkers for Alzheimer's disease (AD) is essential for an accurate diagnosis, to conceive new strategies of treatments, and for monitoring the efficacy of potential disease-modifying therapies in clinical trials. proNGF levels in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) represent a promising diagnostic biomarker for AD, but its validation was hampered by the absence of a reliable immunoassay. In the literature, proNGF is currently measured in postmortem brain tissue by semiquantitative immunoblot. Here we describe the development and validation of a new method to measure proNGF in the CSF of living patients. This method, based on molecular size separation by capillary electropho…

OncologyAgingmedicine.medical_specialtydiagnosisCognitive NeuroscienceNeurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryDiseaseSettore BIO/09 - FisiologiaCerebrospinal fluidneurodegenerative diseaseInternal medicinemedicineDiagnostic biomarkerneurodegenerative diseasesproNGFimmunoassayOriginal Researchmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industrySignificant differenceAlzheimer's diseaseLarge cohortdiagnosiImmunoassayBiomarker (medicine)biomarkerAutomated immunoassaybusinessRC321-571Neuroscience
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Back to Pupillometry: How Cortical Network State Fluctuations Tracked by Pupil Dynamics Could Explain Neural Signal Variability in Human Cognitive Ne…

2017

Visual Abstract

OpinionCognitive Neuroscience1Cognitive neuroscienceBiologyStimulus (physiology)PupilCognitionddc:570Neural PathwaysPupillary responsemedicineAnimalsHumansnetwork state changesCerebral CortexGeneral NeurosciencepupillometryInformation processingPupilGeneral MedicineHuman brainpupil diameter1.11medicine.anatomical_structureCognition and BehaviorSignal variabilitysense organsNeurosciencePupillometryeNeuro
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Adaptive design optimization: a mutual information-based approach to model discrimination in cognitive science.

2010

Discriminating among competing statistical models is a pressing issue for many experimentalists in the field of cognitive science. Resolving this issue begins with designing maximally informative experiments. To this end, the problem to be solved in adaptive design optimization is identifying experimental designs under which one can infer the underlying model in the fewest possible steps. When the models under consideration are nonlinear, as is often the case in cognitive science, this problem can be impossible to solve analytically without simplifying assumptions. However, as we show in this letter, a full solution can be found numerically with the help of a Bayesian computational trick d…

Optimal designCognitive scienceModels StatisticalArtificial neural networkbusiness.industryCognitive NeuroscienceDesign of experimentsBayesian probabilityPosterior probabilityStatistical modelBayes TheoremMutual informationDensity estimationCognitionDiscrimination PsychologicalArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Nonlinear DynamicsResearch DesignHumansComputer SimulationArtificial intelligencebusinessMathematicsNeural computation
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