Search results for "senso."

showing 10 items of 4746 documents

Modern health worries and idiopathic environmental intolerance attributed to electromagnetic fields are associated with paranoid ideation.

2021

Paranoid ideation is assumed to characterize worries about possible harmful effects of modern technologies (MHWs) and idiopathic environmental intolerances (IEIs), such as IEI attributed to electromagnetic fields (IEI-EMF). Empirical evidence on these associations is scarce.In a cross-sectional on-line survey, participants of a community sample (n = 700; mean age: 28.4 ± 12.0; 434 females) completed the Somatosensory Amplification Scale, the Modern Health Worries Scale, and the Paranoid Ideation scale of the Symptom Checklist 90 Revised. They were considered IEI-EMF if (1) they categorized themselves so, (2) they had experienced symptoms that they attributed to the exposure to electromagnet…

AdultAdolescentSymptom Checklist 90Anxiety03 medical and health sciencesYoung Adult0302 clinical medicineElectromagnetic Fieldsmental disordersmedicineHumans030212 general & internal medicineParanoiaSomatosensory amplificationMean ageIdiopathic environmental intolerancePsychiatry and Mental healthClinical PsychologyCross-Sectional StudiesMedically Unexplained SymptomsParanoid ideationFemaleMultiple Chemical Sensitivitymedicine.symptomPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgerySymptom distressClinical psychologyJournal of psychosomatic research
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Accuracy and accommodation capability of a handheld autorefractor

2000

Purpose: To determine the accuracy of measurement by the Nikon Retinomax handheld autorefractor and its ability to relax accommodation. Setting: Pediatric Section, Department of Ophthalmology, University of Mainz, Germany. Methods: To perform a series of comparative measurements, autorefractor readings were obtained on healthy young adults (students) and on children aged 2 to 12 years. The autorefractor readings were compared with subjective refractions of the young adults and with cycloplegic retinoscopy of the children. Results: In adults, the accuracy of the handheld autorefractor measurements was comparable to that of conventional tabletop autorefractors. In children, the autorefractor …

AdultAgingmedicine.medical_specialtygenetic structuresOcular refractionRefraction OcularOcular physiologyReference ValuesOphthalmologymedicineHumansChildDioptreRetinoscopyElectronic Data Processingmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryVision TestsAutorefractorsAccommodation OcularReproducibility of ResultsCycloplegiaRefractive ErrorsSensory SystemsOphthalmologyAutorefractorChild PreschoolOptometrySurgerymedicine.symptombusinessAccommodationJournal of Cataract and Refractive Surgery
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Preoperative simulation of postoperative iris-fixated phakic intraocular lens position and simulation of aging using high-resolution Scheimpflug imag…

2006

To increase postoperative safety after implantation of iris-fixated phakic intraocular lenses (pIOLs), optimal preoperative evaluation and patient selection is mandatory. We present a new software tool in a high-resolution Scheimpflug imaging device that precisely simulates the postoperative position of an iris-fixated pIOL and also simulates the effect of aging on the pIOL's position.

AdultAgingmedicine.medical_specialtygenetic structuresmedicine.medical_treatmentSoftware toolScheimpflug principleIrisHigh resolutionIntraocular lensPhakic intraocular lensPreoperative careImaging Three-DimensionalLens Implantation IntraocularAnterior Eye SegmentOphthalmologyLens CrystallinePreoperative CaremedicineHumansComputer SimulationPostoperative PeriodIris (anatomy)Lens crystallinebusiness.industryeye diseasesSensory SystemsOphthalmologymedicine.anatomical_structureFemaleSurgerysense organsbusinessJournal of Cataract and Refractive Surgery
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Flexible switching of feedback control mechanisms allows for learning of different task dynamics.

2013

To produce skilled movements, the brain flexibly adapts to different task requirements and movement contexts. Two core abilities underlie this flexibility. First, depending on the task, the motor system must rapidly switch the way it produces motor commands and how it corrects movements online, i.e. it switches between different (feedback) control policies. Second, it must also adapt to environmental changes for different tasks separately. Here we show these two abilities are related. In a bimanual movement task, we show that participants can switch on a movement-by-movement basis between two feedback control policies, depending only on a static visual cue. When this cue indicates that the …

AdultAnatomy and PhysiologyCognitive NeuroscienceMovementFeedback controlNeurophysiologylcsh:MedicineMotor ActivitySocial and Behavioral SciencesNeurological SystemFeedbackMotor ReactionsYoung Adult03 medical and health sciencesLearning and Memory0302 clinical medicineHuman–computer interactionTask Performance and AnalysisMotor systemReaction TimePsychologyLearningHumansMotor activitylcsh:ScienceBiologySensory cue030304 developmental biologyMotor SystemsComputational NeurosciencePhysics0303 health sciencesMultidisciplinarybusiness.industrylcsh:RCognitive PsychologyMotor commandsRoboticsMental HealthArmMedicinelcsh:QArtificial intelligenceCuesbusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryHuman learningResearch ArticleNeurosciencePLoS ONE
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Mismatch negativity (MMN) as a tool for investigating auditory discrimination and sensory memory in infants and children

2000

For decades behavioral methods, such as the head-turning or sucking paradigms, have been the primary methods to investigate auditory discrimination, learning and the function of sensory memory in infancy and early childhood. During recent years, however, a new method for investigating these issues in children has emerged. This method makes use of the mismatch negativity (MMN), the brain's automatic change-detection response, which has been used intensively in both basic and clinical studies in adults for twenty years. This review demonstrates that, unlike many other components of event-related potentials, the MMN is developmentally quite stable and can be obtained even from pre-term infants…

AdultAuditory perceptionMismatch negativityEngrambehavioral disciplines and activities050105 experimental psychologyDevelopmental psychology03 medical and health sciencesDiscrimination Psychological0302 clinical medicineAudiometryMemoryEvent-related potentialPhysiology (medical)NeuroplasticityReaction TimemedicineHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesChildNeuronal Plasticitymedicine.diagnostic_testMemoriaSensory memory05 social sciencesBrainInfantSensory SystemsNeurologyAuditory PerceptionEvoked Potentials AuditoryNeurology (clinical)AudiometryPsychologypsychological phenomena and processes030217 neurology & neurosurgeryClinical Neurophysiology
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Evaluation of the practicality of optical biometry and applanation ultrasound in 253 eyes

2003

Abstract Purpose To evaluate the percentage of eyes that could not be measured using optical biometry and ultrasound applanation and the reasons. Setting Department of Ophthalmology, Johannes Gutenberg-University Hospital, Mainz, Germany. Methods Optical biometry (IOLMaster®, Carl Zeiss Meditec AG) and A-scan ultrasound biometry were performed consecutively in 253 eyes scheduled for cataract surgery the next day. Lens opacities were evaluated with the Opacity Lensmeter (Interzeag), and a slitlamp examination and measurement of visual acuity were performed. The 2 techniques were compared in terms of the rate of and reasons for primary measurement failure. Results Measurement with the IOLMast…

AdultBiometryVisual acuityAdolescentLightPseudophakiagenetic structuresmedicine.medical_treatmentEye diseaseVision DisordersVisual AcuityIntraocular lensDiagnostic Techniques OphthalmologicalEyeRefraction OcularCataractOptical biometryLens Implantation IntraocularHumansMedicineChildAgedUltrasonographyAged 80 and overLenses Intraocularbusiness.industryUltrasoundMiddle AgedCataract surgerymedicine.diseaseeye diseasesSensory SystemsOptical axisOphthalmologyInterferometryChild PreschoolOptometrySurgerysense organsmedicine.symptombusinessPseudophakiaJournal of Cataract and Refractive Surgery
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Thalamic infarctions cause side-specific suppression of vestibular cortex activations.

2005

H2O15-PET was performed during caloric vestibular stimulation of the right and left external ears in eight right-handed patients with acute unilateral infarctions or haemorrhages of the posterolateral thalamus (four right, four left). The posterolateral thalamus is the relay station for ipsi- and contralateral ascending vestibular input to the multiple multisensory vestibular cortex areas. The aim of this study was to evaluate the differential effects of unilateral vestibular thalamic lesions on thalamo-cortical projections, right hemispheric dominance and reciprocal inhibitory visual-vestibular interaction, as well as perceptual and ocular motor consequences during caloric irrigation. The …

AdultBrain InfarctionMaleEye MovementsThalamusMotion PerceptionSensory systemVestibular nucleiThalamusCortex (anatomy)otorhinolaryngologic diseasesmedicineCaloric TestsImage Processing Computer-AssistedPsychophysicsHumansInner earDominance CerebralAgedVestibular systemCerebral CortexBrain MappingAnatomyMiddle AgedVestibular cortexElectrooculographymedicine.anatomical_structureVestibulePositron-Emission TomographyFemalesense organsNeurology (clinical)Vestibule LabyrinthPsychologyNeuroscienceBrain : a journal of neurology
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Different generators in human temporal-parasylvian cortex account for subdural laser-evoked potentials, auditory-evoked potentials, and event-related…

2000

In order to localize cortical areas mediating pain we now report subdural cortical potentials evoked by auditory stimulation (auditory-evoked potentials - AEPs) and by cutaneous stimulation with a laser (laser-evoked potentials - LEPs). Stimulation with the laser evokes a pure pain sensation by selective activation of nociceptors. LEPs were maximal over the inferior aspect of the central sulcus and had the same polarity on either side of the sylvian fissure. AEPs were maximal posterior to the LEP maximum and had opposite polarity on opposite sides of the sylvian fissure, consistent with the location of a known generator in the temporal operculum. Auditory P3 (event-related) potentials were …

AdultBrain MappingLaser-Evoked PotentialsSecondary somatosensory cortexLasersGeneral NeuroscienceNociceptorsSomatosensory CortexSubdural SpaceAnatomyCentral sulcusTemporal LobeTemporal lobeElectrophysiologymedicine.anatomical_structureCerebral cortexEvoked Potentials SomatosensoryCortex (anatomy)Evoked Potentials AuditorymedicineHumansPsychologyOperculum (brain)Evoked PotentialsNeuroscienceNeuroscience Letters
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Three de novo losses and one insertion within a pericentric inversion of chromosome 6 in a patient with complete absence of expressive speech and red…

2008

A 32-year-old female patient, observed for 30 years because of a distinctive phenotype consisting of a dysmorphic face non-progressive deficit of motor control, lack of speech development, reduced sensitivity to pain, with a known, complex interstitial deletion 6q14 within a de novo pericentric inversion 6p11.2;q15, was re-examined at the molecular level. Applying the Infinium HumanHap300 BeadChip array and BAC-based FISH we found two new non-contiguous microdeletions in addition to the one detected previously by high resolution G-band analysis. A 360 kb loss in band 6p12.3, containing the genes RHAG, CRISP1, 2, and 3, and PGK2, a 1.15 Mb loss in 6p12.2-p12.1, containing the genes PKHD1, IL…

AdultCell Adhesion Molecules NeuronalSingle-nucleotide polymorphismBiologySpeech DisordersReceptor Cannabinoid CB1GeneticsmedicineHumansGeneGenetics (clinical)Chromosomal inversionChromosome AberrationsFamily HealthGeneticsmedicine.diagnostic_testBrainChromosome MappingChromosomeGeneral MedicinePhenotypeFaceCytogenetic AnalysisRHAGSomatosensory Disordersbiology.proteinChromosomes Human Pair 6FemaleFluorescence in situ hybridizationSNP arrayEuropean Journal of Medical Genetics
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Postural equilibrium: functional system and its stabilization by means of osteoreflexotherapy.

1998

Our investigations have confirmed that the osteoreceptive sensory system participates in the polysensoric regulation of animal and human posture. Experiments with animals have demonstrated that the irritation of osteoreceptors by electric pulses leads to osteoreceptive response potentials of the same parts of the brain (Deiter's nuclei, cerebellum, caudate nucleus, cortical motor centre etc.) which participate in the regulation of animal and human posture and other motion acts. Close functional relations have been established between the skin, bone, vestibular and muscle sensory systems in the brain structures where the osteoreceptive excitation converges. The studies of osteoreceptive sens…

AdultCerebellummedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentPostureCaudate nucleusSensory systemmedicine.disease_causemedicinePostural BalanceHumansPostural BalanceAgedVestibular systemAged 80 and overbusiness.industryGeneral NeuroscienceMiddle AgedFunctional systemSurgeryAnesthesiology and Pain Medicinemedicine.anatomical_structureComplementary and alternative medicineCalcaneusIrritationbusinessNeuroscienceReflexotherapyAcupunctureelectro-therapeutics research
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