Publications by authors named "Baptiste M Waltzing"

Motor Simulation Theory proposes that imagined actions are produced using the brain's motor system, and should therefore always be temporally equivalent to physical movements. However, empirical results are not always consistent with this prediction. Studies indicate that the durations of unfamiliar imagined actions are over-estimated, whereas the durations of more familiar actions may be closer to (or even faster than) actual movement execution.

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Article Synopsis
  • The research aimed to determine how common different visual imagery abilities—aphantasia, hypophantasia, typical imagery, and hyperphantasia—are in a large multinational group of people.
  • In the first study, 3,049 participants completed a questionnaire, revealing that 1.2% had aphantasia, 3% had hypophantasia, 89.9% had typical imagery ability, and 5.9% had hyperphantasia.
  • A second study combined these results with additional data from previous studies, confirming similar prevalence rates in a larger sample of 9,063 participants, thus providing a comprehensive understanding of visual imagery abilities.
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Mental Imagery is a topic of longstanding and widespread scientific interest. Individual studies have typically focused on a single modality (e.g.

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Background: Repeated sub-concussive head impacts are a growing brain health concern, but their possible biomarkers remain elusive. One impediment is the lack of a randomised controlled human experimental model to study their effects on the human brain.

Objectives: This work had two objectives.

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Objective: We predicted that accelerometry would be a viable alternative to electromyography (EMG) for assessing fundamental Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) measurements (e.g. Resting Motor Threshold (RMT), recruitment curves, latencies).

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Researchers from multiple disciplines have studied the simulation of actions through motor imagery, action observation, or their combination. Procedures used in these studies vary considerably between research groups, and no standardized approach to reporting experimental protocols has been proposed. This has led to under-reporting of critical details, impairing the assessment, replication, synthesis, and potential clinical translation of effects.

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Motor Imagery is a subject of longstanding scientific interest. However, critical details of motor imagery protocols are not always reported in full, hampering direct replication and translation of this work. The present review provides a quantitative assessment of the prevalence of under-reporting in the recent motor imagery literature.

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