Search results for "structures"

showing 10 items of 4815 documents

Objective analysis of contact lens fit.

2015

Purpose: To assess the validity and repeatability of objective compared to subjective contact lens fit analysis. Methods: Thirty-five subjects (aged 22.0. ±. 3.0 years) wore two different soft contact lens designs. Four lens fit variables: centration, horizontal lag, post-blink movement in up-gaze and push-up recovery speed were assessed subjectively (four observers) and objectively from slit-lamp biomicroscopy captured images and video. The analysis was repeated a week later. Results: The average of the four experienced observers was compared to objective measures, but centration, movement on blink, lag and push-up recovery speed all varied significantly between them (p 0.05). The 95% conf…

AdultMalegenetic structuresObjective analysisObjective assessmentCorneaDouble-Blind MethodStatisticsMyopiaHumansMathematicsFit/gap analysisBlinkingbusiness.industryObjective measurementReproducibility of ResultsGeneral MedicineRepeatabilityEquipment DesignContact Lenses HydrophilicCentrationConfidence intervalContact lensOphthalmologyFemaleNuclear medicinebusinessOptometryContact lensanterior eye : the journal of the British Contact Lens Association
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Electrophysiological signatures of masked transposition priming in a same-different task: Evidence with strings of letters vs. pseudoletters

2012

Research on masked transposed-letter priming (i.e., jugde-JUDGE triggers a faster response than jupte-JUDGE) has become a key phenomenon to reveal how the brain encodes letter position. Recent behavioural evidence suggests that the mechanism responsible for position coding in a masked priming procedure works with familiar "object" identities (e.g., letters, digits, symbols) but not with unfamiliar object identities (e.g., pseudoletters). Here we used event-related potentials (ERPs) to explore the time course of masked transposition priming of letters vs. pseudoletters in a cue-target same-different matching task. Target stimuli were preceded by a masked prime that could be: (i) identical to…

AdultMalegenetic structuresPerceptual MaskingYoung AdultReaction TimeHumansResponse primingCommunicationbusiness.industryGeneral NeuroscienceSame differentCognitionElectrophysiological PhenomenaElectrophysiologyPattern Recognition VisualCategorizationTime courseFemalePsychologybusinessPerceptual MaskingPriming (psychology)Photic StimulationPsychomotor PerformanceCognitive psychologyNeuroscience Letters
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Anatomical correlate of positive spontaneous visual phenomena: a voxelwise lesion study.

2010

Objectives: Visual phenomena such as phosphenes, photopsias, or complex visual hallucinations occur in patients with lesions affecting the occipital, parietal, or temporal lobe. Whether these phenomena are provoked by lesions in specific anatomical regions is still uncertain. To determine which brain regions might be involved in such visual phenomena, we used new brain imaging and lesion analysis tools that allow a direct comparison with control patients. Methods: Visual phenomena were investigated in a total of 23 patients with acute infarctions along the visual pathways (6 patients with left-sided and 17 patients with right-sided lesions). Results: Ten of these 23 patients (43%) reported …

AdultMalegenetic structuresPhosphenesLesion studyVisual phenomenaVisual systemTemporal lobeNeuroimagingPhysiology (medical)medicineHumansVisual PathwaysAgedVisual CortexAged 80 and overBrain Mappingbusiness.industryCerebral InfarctionMiddle Agedeye diseasesVisual HallucinationPhosphenemedicine.anatomical_structureVisual cortexDisinhibitionFemaleNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptomVisual FieldsbusinessPsychologyNeuroscienceOptic radiationNeurology
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Specific forms of neural activity associated with tactile space awareness

2002

Left tactile extinction, in which a left tactile stimulus fails to access consciousness only when a right stimulus is presented simultaneously, offers a model for studying tactile awareness from its transitory absence. Pairs of transcranial magnetic stimuli (TMS) on the parietal cortex inhibit contralateral tactile perception when separated by an interval of 1 ms. We have applied this technique on the left parietal cortex of right brain damaged (RBD) patients and normal subjects and have shown a selective lack of paired TMS inhibitory effects on right tactile perception of patients during bimanual stimulation. TMS effects were normal during unimanual right stimulation. These results suggest…

AdultMalegenetic structuresPosterior parietal cortexStimulationBrain damageStimulus (physiology)Synaptic TransmissionFunctional LateralityLateralization of brain functionExtinction PsychologicalHypesthesiaPerceptual DisordersMagneticsEvoked Potentials SomatosensoryParietal LobePhysical StimulationReaction TimemedicineHumansAttentionAgedAged 80 and overGeneral NeuroscienceParietal lobeNeural InhibitionMiddle AgedTactile perceptionElectric StimulationTouchBrain InjuriesSpace PerceptionFemalemedicine.symptomPsychologyNeurosciencePsychomotor PerformanceElectrical brain stimulationCognitive psychologyNeuroreport
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fMRI signal increases and decreases in cortical areas during small-field optokinetic stimulation and central fixation

2001

Small-field optokinetic nystagmus (OKN) was performed in seven healthy volunteers in order to analyze the activation and deactivation patterns of visual motion, ocular motor, and multisensory vestibular cortex areas by means of fMRI during coherent visual motion stimulation. BOLD signal decreases (deactivations) were found in the first and second long insular gyri and retroinsular areas (the human homologue of the parietoinsular vestibular cortex and the visual posterior sylvian area in the monkey) of both hemispheres, extending into the transverse temporal gyrus and inferior-anterior parts of the superior temporal gyrus (BA 22), and the precentral gyri at two separate sites (BA 4 and 6). F…

AdultMalegenetic structuresPrecentral sulcusMotion PerceptionPosterior parietal cortexFixation Ocularbehavioral disciplines and activitiesSuperior temporal gyrusTransverse temporal gyrusmedicineHumansNystagmus OptokineticVision OcularVisual CortexCerebral CortexGeneral NeurosciencePrecentral gyrusReflex Vestibulo-OcularSomatosensory CortexAnatomyMagnetic Resonance Imagingeye diseasesFrontal LobeVisual cortexmedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemFrontal lobeVisual PerceptionFemaleSuperior frontal sulcusPsychologyNeurosciencePhotic StimulationExperimental Brain Research
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Visual tracking combined with hand-tracking improves time perception of moving stimuli

2014

A number of studies have shown that performing a secondary task while executing a time-judgment task impairs performance on the latter task. However, this turns out not to be the case for certain motor secondary tasks. We show that concomitant secondary motor tasks involving pointing, when performed during a time-judgment task, can actually improve our time-judgment abilities. We compared adult participants' performance in a time-of-movement paradigm with visual pursuit-only and with visual pursuit plus hand pursuit. Rather than interfering with their estimation of stimulus movement duration, the addition of hand pursuit significantly improved their judgment. In addition, we considered the …

AdultMalegenetic structuresSecondary taskMovementSpeech recognitionDecision MakingMotion PerceptionStimulus (physiology)Sensitivity and Specificitybehavioral disciplines and activitiesArticleVisual pursuitHumansMedicineMotion perceptionSimulationMultidisciplinarybusiness.industryReproducibility of ResultsTime perceptionTime PerceptionEye trackingFemaleCuesbusinessPhotic StimulationPsychomotor PerformanceScientific Reports
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Evidence for cortical visual substitution of chronic bilateral vestibular failure (an fMRI study).

2007

Bilateral vestibular failure (BVF) is a rare disorder of the labyrinth or the eighth cranial nerve which has various aetiologies. BVF patients suffer from unsteadiness of gait combined with blurred vision due to oscillopsia. Functional MRI (fMRI) in healthy subjects has shown that stimulation of the visual system induces an activation of the visual cortex and ocular motor areas bilaterally as well as simultaneous deactivations of multisensory vestibular cortex areas. Our question was whether the chronic absence of bilateral vestibular input (BVF) causes a plastic cortical reorganization of the above-described visual-vestibular interaction. We used fMRI to measure the differential effects of…

AdultMalegenetic structuresSensory systemAuditory cortexOscillopsiamedicineImage Processing Computer-AssistedHumansEye Movement MeasurementsNystagmus OptokineticAgedVisual CortexVestibular systemAged 80 and overNeuronal Plasticitymedicine.diagnostic_testMiddle AgedVestibular cortexMagnetic Resonance ImagingVisual cortexmedicine.anatomical_structureVestibular DiseasesChronic DiseaseFemaleNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptomFunctional magnetic resonance imagingPsychologyNeurosciencePhotic StimulationBrodmann areaBrain : a journal of neurology
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Accommodation Responds to Optical Vergence and Not Defocus Blur Alone.

2017

Purpose To determine whether changes in wavefront spherical curvature (optical vergence) are a directional cue for accommodation. Methods Nine subjects participated in this experiment. The accommodation response to a monochromatic target was measured continuously with a custom-made adaptive optics system while astigmatism and higher-order aberrations were corrected in real time. There were two experimental open-loop conditions: vergence-driven condition, where the deformable mirror provided sinusoidal changes in defocus at the retina between -1 and +1 diopters (D) at 0.2 Hz; and blur-driven condition, in which the level of defocus at the retina was always 0 D, but a sinusoidal defocus blur …

AdultMalegenetic structuresVisual AcuityVergenceAstigmatismRefraction Ocular050105 experimental psychologyDeformable mirror03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineOpticsmedicineHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesAdaptive opticsDioptreMathematicsWavefrontbusiness.industry05 social sciencesAccommodation OcularAstigmatismConvergence Ocularmedicine.diseaseeye diseases030221 ophthalmology & optometryFemalesense organsMonochromatic colorCuesbusinessAccommodationPhotic StimulationInvestigative ophthalmologyvisual science
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Position but not color deviants result in visual mismatch negativity in an active oddball task.

2009

Changes in the visual environment might be detected automatically. This function is provided by the sensory systems and showed, for instance, by the pop-out phenomenon. Automatic change detection is also observable within visual oddball paradigms, where rare changes are introduced in an irrelevant stimulus feature; the detection of deviant stimuli is accompanied by a negative component (so-called visual mismatch negativity) in the human event-related brain potential. In this study, the deviating stimulus feature was embedded in a task-relevant object presented in the focus of attention. With this, visual mismatch negativity was observable only with position deviants presented in the upper v…

AdultMalegenetic structuresVisual N1Speech recognitionmedia_common.quotation_subjectMismatch negativityColorSensory systemStimulus (physiology)Neuropsychological Testsbehavioral disciplines and activitiesPerceptionDistractionmental disordersReaction TimeHumansAttentionOddball paradigmEvoked Potentialsmedia_commonCommunicationAnalysis of Variancebusiness.industryGeneral NeuroscienceBrainElectroencephalographyP200Visual PerceptionFemalebusinessPsychologyPhotic StimulationNeuroreport
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Blue-yellow deficiency in workers exposed to low concentrations of organic solvents

1997

Objectives: To evaluate the effects of low concentrations of organic solvents on color vision. Methods: Color vision was examined in 24 workers exposed to mixtures of solvents and in 24 control subjects. Exposure to mixtures was below the threshold-limit values. Color vision ability was assessed using the Ishihara plates (to screen for congenital dyschromatopsia), the Farnsworth panel D-15 test, the Lanthony desaturated panel D-15 test, and the Standard Pseudoisochromatic Plates part 2 (SPP2 test). Results: The comparatively less sensitive Farnsworth panel D-15 test failed to show any difference between the groups, but the Lanthony panel D-15 desaturated test as well as the SPP2 test showed…

AdultMalegenetic structuresbusiness.industryColor visionOrganic solventLow dosePublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthColor Vision DefectsControl subjectseye diseasesVision disorderLogistic ModelsCase-Control StudiesOccupational ExposureSolventsHumansMedicineOccupational exposureFood sciencemedicine.symptombusinessDyschromatopsiaVolume concentrationPsychophysiologyInternational Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health
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