Search results for "latency"

showing 10 items of 135 documents

Masseter reflex in childhood and adolescence.

2003

We report normative data of masseter reflex from a group of 54 children 2-16 years of age. For statistical analysis, the patients were divided into five age groups: 2-4, 5-7, 8-10, 11-13, and 14-16 years of age. A tap to the chin, using a hammer with a trigger device, elicited the masseter reflex. The response was recorded by surface electrodes. The onset latency and peak-to-peak amplitude of the averaged curve of eight reflex responses were measured. The reflex response could be recorded in all children and adolescents of all groups. The mean latency shortened from age 2 to 7 and was stable at the age of 8 years. As a sign of maturation, the increase of amplitude corresponded to the shorte…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentElectromyographyAudiologyStatistics NonparametricReflex responseMasseter muscleDevelopmental NeuroscienceReflexmedicineReaction TimeHumansLatency (engineering)Childmedicine.diagnostic_testElectromyographyMasseter MuscleChinSurgerymedicine.anatomical_structureNeurologyEl NiñoChild PreschoolPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthReflexFemaleNeurology (clinical)PsychologyJaw jerk reflexPediatric neurology
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Comparing Subjective With Objective Sleep Parameters Via Multisensory Actigraphy in German Physical Education Students.

2015

This study compared subjective with objective sleep parameters among 72 physical education students. Furthermore, the study determined whether 24-hr recording differs from nighttime recording only. Participants wore the SenseWear Armband™ for three consecutive nights and kept a sleep log. Agreement rates ranged from moderate to low for sleep onset latency (ICC = 0.39 to 0.70) and wake after sleep onset (ICC = 0.22 to 0.59), while time in bed (ICC = 0.93 to 0.95) and total sleep time (ICC = 0.90 to 0.92) revealed strong agreement during this period. Comparing deviations between 24-hr wearing time (n = 24) and night-only application (n = 20) revealed no statistical difference (p > 0.05). As a…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyFuture studiesTime FactorsNeuroscience (miscellaneous)Medicine (miscellaneous)AudiologyPhysical education03 medical and health sciencesYoung Adult0302 clinical medicineGermanymedicineHumansWakefulnessStudentsPhysical Education and TrainingActigraphy030229 sport sciencesSleep timeActigraphyTime in bedPhysical therapyFemaleNeurology (clinical)Psychology (miscellaneous)Sleep (system call)Sleep onset latencySelf ReportSleep onsetPsychologySleep030217 neurology & neurosurgeryBehavioral sleep medicine
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Effects of sulpiride on the orienting movement evoked By acoustic stimulation in the Rat.

2000

Abstract Drugs that selectively block D 2 receptors are known to provoke a rapid cell firing increase followed by A9 and A10 dopaminergic (DA) neuron inactivation (depolarization block). In this study, possible relationships between cell firing rapid increase and specific behavioral effects, linked to sensorimotor integration, were investigated in the rat. To this purpose, with the aid of a video camera apparatus and a frame-by-frame analysis, effects of sulpiride-induced blockade of DA D 2 receptors were analyzed on the orienting movement of the head induced by acoustic stimulation. In a control group of rats, during trials lasting 20 min, latency and duration of head turning (HT) were 186…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyHead turningClinical BiochemistryStimulationSensorimotor integrationToxicologyBiochemistrySettore BIO/09 - FisiologiaBehavioral NeuroscienceInternal medicineOrientationmedicineAnimalsAttentionLatency (engineering)Rats WistarReceptorBiological PsychiatryPharmacologyNeuronsDose-Response Relationship DrugChemistryDopaminergicAntagonistDepolarizationD2 receptorRatsDopamine D2 Receptor Antagonistsmedicine.anatomical_structureEndocrinologyAcoustic StimulationHead MovementsA9 and A10 neuronRatDopamine AntagonistsNeuronSulpirideSulpirideNeuroscienceCell firing increaseInjections Intraperitonealmedicine.drugPharmacology, biochemistry, and behavior
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Similar rewarding effects of testosterone in mice rated as short and long attack latency individuals.

2002

An attempt was made to confirm and extend the findings of an earlier study on the rewarding properties of testosterone in male mice using conditioned place preference (CPP). Previous results had only partially demonstrated such an effect because the reinforcement depended on environmental cues such as the colour of the compartment. High individual variability was evident, suggesting that basal levels of aggressiveness may modulate such effects. Animals were pre-screened for aggressive behaviour and allocated to short and long attack latency (SAL and LAL) categories. Five days later the CPP procedure started. This involved pre-conditioning tests, conditioning and post-conditioning tests. SAL…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyInjections SubcutaneousMedicine (miscellaneous)Male miceDevelopmental psychologyBasal (phylogenetics)MiceRandom AllocationRewardInternal medicineTestosterone treatmentConditioning PsychologicalmedicineAnimalsTestosteroneLatency (engineering)ReinforcementPharmacologyBehavior AnimalTestosterone (patch)Conditioned place preferenceAggressionPsychiatry and Mental healthEndocrinologyConditioningPsychologyReinforcement PsychologyAddiction biology
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Delayed neonatal visual evoked potentials are associated to asymmetric growth pattern in twins

2020

Abstract Objectives To study the association between intrauterine growth and visual pathways maturation by neonatal visual evoked potentials (VEPs) in twins, in view of a possible prognostic role. Methods Seventy-four twin neonates from 37 pregnancies were selected based on gestational age of more than 30 weeks and uneventful perinatal clinical course. Flash VEPs were recorded at the same postmenstrual age in each twin pair. The association between P2 latency and anthropometric variables at birth was analyzed by comparison within each twin pair and regarding each variable as ordered difference between the two twins. Results Analysis of differences within each twin pair highlighted that inte…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtygenetic structuresTwinsSocio-culturaleVisual system050105 experimental psychologyFetal DevelopmentCorrelation03 medical and health sciencesChild Development0302 clinical medicinePhysiology (medical)Internal medicinemedicineHumansVisual Pathways0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesLatency (engineering)Visual evoked potential latencyPonderal IndexBody mass indexVisual Cortexbusiness.industry05 social sciencesInfant NewbornPostmenstrual AgeTwinGestational ageElectroencephalographyIntrauterine growthAnthropometryAsymmetric growthBody mass index; Intrauterine growth; Ponderal Index; Twins; Visual evoked potential latencySensory SystemsNeurologyCardiologyEvoked Potentials VisualFemaleNeurology (clinical)businessBody mass index030217 neurology & neurosurgeryClinical Neurophysiology
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Direct Evidence for Viral Antigen Presentation during Latent Cytomegalovirus Infection

2021

Murine models of cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection have revealed an immunological phenomenon known as “memory inflation” (MI). After a peak of a primary CD8+ T-cell response, the pool of epitope-specific cells contracts in parallel to the resolution of productive infection and the establishment of a latent infection, referred to as “latency.” CMV latency is associated with an increase in the number of cells specific for certain viral epitopes over time. The inflationary subset was identified as effector-memory T cells (iTEM) characterized by the cell surface phenotype KLRG1+CD127−CD62L−. As we have shown recently, latent viral genomes are not transcriptionally silent. Rather, viral genes are …

Microbiology (medical)Adoptive cell transferAntigenicitylatent infectionTransgeneAntigen presentationCongenital cytomegalovirus infectionBiologymedicine.disease_causeEpitopeviral latencymedicineImmunology and AllergyMolecular BiologycytomegalovirusMutationGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyBrief ReportRmedicine.diseaseVirologyantigen presentationInfectious Diseasesmemory inflation (MI)Medicineinflationary effector-memory CD8 T cells (iTEM)CD8Pathogens
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Molecular signature of Epstein Barr virus-positive Burkitt lymphoma and post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder suggest different roles for Epst…

2014

Epstein Barr virus (EBV) infection is commonly associated with human cancer and, in particular, with lymphoid malignancies. Although the precise role of the virus in the pathogenesis of different lymphomas is largely unknown, it is well recognized that the expression of viral latent proteins and miRNA can contribute to its pathogenetic role. In this study, we compared the gene and miRNA expression profile of two EBV-associated aggressive B non-Hodgkin lymphomas known to be characterized by differential expression of the viral latent proteins aiming to dissect the possible different contribution of such proteins and EBV-encoded miRNAs. By applying extensive bioinformatic inferring and an exp…

Microbiology (medical)lcsh:QR1-502Epstein Barr Virupost-transplant lymphoproliferative disorderBiologyEpstein Barr Virusmedicine.disease_causeMicrobiologylcsh:MicrobiologyVirusPost-transplant lymphoproliferative disorderhemic and lymphatic diseasesGene expressionmicroRNAmedicinegene expression profilingOriginal Research ArticleBurkitt lymphoma; Epstein Barr Virus; MicroRNA; gene expression profiling; latency; post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorderlatencyBurkitt lymphomaEpstein-Barr Virus PositiveMicroRNAmedicine.diseaseEpstein–Barr virusLymphomaGene expression profilingBurkitt lymphoma; Epstein barr virus; Gene expression profiling; Latency; microRNA; Post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder; Microbiology; Microbiology (medical)ImmunologyBurkitt lymphoma Epstein Barr Virus MicroRNA gene expression profiling latency post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder
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Early Auditory Evoked Potentials (EAEP) in Neurosurgery — A New Method for Diagnosis and Localization of Posterior Fossa Tumors in Childhood

1983

Auditory stimuli of suprathreshold intensity (above 60 dBHL) evoke about 15 waves: an early series (EAEP) during the initial 10 milliseconds (ms), a middle latency sequence (8 to 50 ms) and the longer latency cortical potentials (50 – 300 ms). PICTON et al. (1974) made a survey of all three potential groups. Only the EAEP (waves I to IV) are generated in the infratentorial part of the brain and reflect progressive activation of the auditory tracts and nuclei (Fig. 1): Wave I is assumed to originate at the distal part of the acoustic nerve, wave II in the medulla, wave III in the caudal and wave IV in the rostral pons and wave V in the midbrain (STARR and ACHOR, 1975; STOCKARD and ROSSITER, …

Midbrainmedicine.medical_specialtyMiddle latencymedicineAuditory stimuliNeurosurgeryAudiologyPsychologyPosterior Fossa TumorsPonsMedullaIntensity (physics)
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Low-Latency Infrastructure-Based Cellular V2V Communications for Multi-Operator Environments With Regional Split

2021

Mobile network operators are interested in providing Vehicle-to-Vehicle (V2V) communication services using their cellular infrastructure. Regional split of operators is one possible approach to support multi-operator infrastructure-based cellular V2V communication. In this approach, a geographical area is divided into non-overlapping regions, each one served by a unique operator. Its main drawback is the communication interruption motivated by the inter-operator handover in border areas, which prevents the fulfillment of the maximum end-to-end (E2E) latency requirements of fifth generation (5G) V2V services related to autonomous driving. In this work, we enable a fast inter-operator handove…

Mobile edge computingbusiness.industryComputer scienceMechanical EngineeringCore networkComputer Science ApplicationsBroadcasting (networking)HandoverServerAutomotive EngineeringCellular networkLatency (engineering)businessComputer networkIEEE Transactions on Intelligent Transportation Systems
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Electrophysiological brain stem investigations in idiopathic narcolepsy.

1998

Narcolepsy is associated with various rapid eye movement (REM) sleep abnormalities. Distinct brain stem areas seem to play a prominent role in REM sleep regulation. Recent magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies have led to conflicting findings concerning the presence of structural brain stem lesions in patients with idiopathic narcoleptic syndrome. However, multimodal electrophysiological brain stem investigations may reveal functional brain stem abnormalities even in the absence of MRI abnormality. Therefore we investigated brain stem function in 12 idiopathic narcoleptic patients by systematically studying tegmental brain stem pathways. All of the patients met the diagnostic criteria of…

Multiple Sleep Latency TestAdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyNeurologySleep REMNeurological disorderPolysomnographymedicineEvoked Potentials Auditory Brain StemHumansCorneal reflexAgedNarcolepsySleep disordermedicine.diagnostic_testBlinkingMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseElectrooculographyNeurologyFemaleNeurology (clinical)PsychologyNeuroscienceJaw jerk reflexNarcolepsyBrain StemJournal of neurology
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