Publications by authors named "Deviterne D"

This study aimed to determine the sensorimotor strategies privileged by mountain bikers (MTB) and road cyclists (RC) for balance control. Twenty-four MTB and 24 RC (off-road Olympics, world, continental and national champions, Tour-de-France participants, on-road world cup race winner) volunteered to answer a questionnaire about the characteristics of cycling practice and perform a sensory organization test, aiming to evaluate balance control in 6 different sensory situations based upon visual and support surface perturbations (C1(ES) to C6(ES)). RC balance performances were better than those of MTB both during quiet stance eyes opened (C1(ES), p=0.

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This study aimed to assess the efficiency of a motor skill learning method intended to promote learning course personalization through an increase in cognitive processing deployment in motor-handicapped persons. Thirty-three secondary school students volunteered to participate in an archery motor skill learning session, 11 motor-handicapped (MH(1)) and 11 able-bodied (AB) teenagers following a standard learning method, and 11 motor-handicapped teenagers following a cognitive enriched learning method (MH(2)) based on the use of an individually written and illustrated document. The results showed that MH(1) displayed lower performances than AB, both in terms of the mental representations of the movements expected and performed and of efficiency of the movement.

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Human cognitive processing limits can lead to difficulties in performing two tasks simultaneously. In this respect, the mobilization of attentional resources seems to be more important in voluntary than in reflexive visuo-oculomotor movements. With this in mind, this study aimed to determine the differentiated effects of carrying out cognitive tasks on reflexive and voluntary movements generated by the visuo-oculomotor system.

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The influence of physical and sporting activities (PSA) on idiopathic scoliosis (IS) is still obscure. The aim of this study was to investigate whether such an influence exists and if so, to determine its characteristics. Two hundred and one teenagers with IS and a control group of 192 adolescents completed an epidemiological questionnaire.

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The aim of this work was to determine the effects of ageing on the possible mobilisation of cognitive processes in orthostatic postural balance. Seventy-nine individuals of three different age groups were placed in dual-task situations that combined standing postural control with three different cognitive tasks. Two of these three tasks, auditory-verbal and visual-verbal ones, required external information acquisition whereas the third, a mental counting task, did not require such information.

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This study assessed the prevalence of sensory and cognitive disabilities and falls for various age groups, sexes, and socio-occupational categories, and their associations in the Lorraine population. The sample included 6,159 subjects, aged 15 years or more, randomly selected from the Lorraine population. They filled in a mailed questionnaire including socio-demographic characteristics, job, falls with physical injuries at the time of the survey, and sensory and cognitive disabilities.

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This study examined the effect of rotary auditory stimulation on postural control in the elderly. Thirty-two subjects aged over sixty were submitted to two rotary auditory stimulations, with a meaningful and a non-meaningful message, during a postural task. Although the non-meaningful task did not lead to postural control modification, the meaningful task allowed a reduction in the postural parameter values and therefore, a better stabilisation of posture.

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Ageing results in a decrease in balance control and correlatively raises the risk of falling. Furthermore, dual task situations can increase this age-related imbalance. Within this context, this study aimed to determine the differentiated effects of carrying out cognitive tasks on balance control in 40 healthy older adults.

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Neonatal screening programmes allow early treatment to limit the consequences of congenital hypothyroidism on maturation of the central nervous system, and on psychomotor and educational outcome. Consequences of age at thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) normalization on postural control were evaluated in 17 children with congenital hypothyroidism (14 females, three males; median age 12 years 1 month, range 7 to 14 years) and in 11 control individuals (eight females, three males: median age 10 years 6 months, range 8 to 14 years). Children with congenital hypothyroidism were split into two groups according to time of TSH normalization: before (group 1) or after (group 2) 3 months of age.

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Objectives: Training allows sportsmen to acquire new balance control abilities, possibly differing according to the discipline practised. We compared, by means of static and dynamic posturographic tests, the postural skills of high-level judoists, professional dancers and controls, in order to determine whether these sports improved postural control.

Results: With eyes open, judoists and dancers performed better than controls, indicating a positive effect of training on sensorimotor adaptabilities.

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While both discus and hammer throwing involve rotating movements resulting in the throw of an object, discus throwers sometimes report dizziness, a condition never experienced by hammer throwers. We investigated whether this susceptibility was related to the sensitivity of the thrower or to the type of throwing achieved. For the latter, we compared the determining features of gesture, gaze stabilization and projectile trajectory in both sports.

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Balance control relies on somesthetic, visual and vestibular afferences, their central processing, and adequate motor responses. We studied the consequences on postural control of the suppression of visual afferences by eye closure, during a dynamic posturographic test in six sportsmen and 14 non-sportsmen. Suppression of visual afferences during the test led to a prolongation of the pattern initially recorded with eyes open, followed by a transitory adaptive pattern, then a typical eyes closed pattern.

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Behavioral profiles of male rats were defined in nine intralitter groups of six individuals at various stages of their development: (a) at pup stage in individual situations (uncomfortable positions) and social situations (removal away from the mother), and (b) at adult stage in a difficult food supply social situation (complete immersion of the food access way). The male population was split into two sets, both at pup stage (the most and the least swift and efficient of each group to overcome uncomfortable situations), and at adult stage (carriers and noncarriers of food in each group tested). Our results showed an important relation between these pup and adult behavioral profiles: the swiftest and most efficient individuals of a group at pup stage adopted more often a food carrier behavioral profile at adult stage.

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Discrimination between own-litter pups by mother rats was studied over 14 litters, in a standardized situation eliciting maternal pup-retrieving activity. Results showed some consistency in the order in which pups of a litter were retrieved by the mother in the 4-day and 9-day tests and that this order was related to certain characteristics of the pups: 1) on Day 4 and 9, the best-developed pups of the litter (in terms of body weight and neuromotor behaviors) were first retrieved; 2) on Day 9, sex of pups became an additional discrimination factor, as males were retrieved before their female littermates. Variables included in these global discrimination factors and possible consequences of such differential mother-pups interactions are discussed.

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Variations of two maternal behavior components (time spent with litter and rapidity of pup retrieving) as well as certain physical and developmental characteristics of pups (weight, relative weight gain, and neuromotor maturation) in rats were simultaneously studied in 29 various-sized litters in which interindividual variations were not experimentally amplified. Results showed mothers' behavioral adaptations to litters' characteristics (size and weight). Time spent with young was linked to litter size, whereas rapidity of pup retrieving was related to the pups' physical characteristic.

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