Two clinical phenotypes characterize the onset of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS): the spinal variant, with symptoms beginning in the limbs, and the bulbar variant, affecting firstly speech and swallowing. The two variants show some distinct features in the histopathology, localization and prognosis, but to which extent they really differ clinically and pathologically remains to be clarified. Recent neuropathological and neuroimaging studies have suggested a broader spreading of the neurodegenerative process in ALS, extending beyond the motor areas, toward other cortical and deep grey matter regions, many of which are involved in visual processing and saccadic control.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVisual sequential search might use a peripheral spatial ranking of the scene to put the next target of the sequence in the correct order. This strategy, indeed, might enhance the discriminative capacity of the human peripheral vision and spare neural resources associated with foveation. However, it is not known how exactly the peripheral vision sustains sequential search and whether the sparing of neural resources has a cost in terms of performance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAttention allows us to selectively process the vast amount of information with which we are confronted, prioritizing some aspects of information and ignoring others by focusing on a certain location or aspect of the visual scene. Selective attention is guided by two cognitive mechanisms: saliency of the image (bottom up) and endogenous mechanisms (top down). These two mechanisms interact to direct attention and plan eye movements; then, the movement profile is sent to the motor system, which must constantly update the command needed to produce the desired eye movement.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMany high cognitive applications, such as vision processing and representation and understanding of images, often need to analyse in detail how an ongoing visual search was performed in a representative subset of the image, which may be arranged into sequences of loci, called regions of interest (ROIs). We used the Trial Making Test (TMT) in which subjects are asked to fixate a sequence of letters and numbers in a logical alphanumeric order. The main characteristic of TMT is to force the subject to perform a default and well-known path.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFComput Methods Programs Biomed
September 2012
Human visual search is an everyday activity that enables humans to explore the real world. Given the visual input, during a visual search, it is necessary to select some aspects of input to shift the gaze to next target. The aim of the study is to develop a mathematical method able to evaluate the visual selection process during the execution of a high cognitively demanding task such as the trial making test part B (TMT).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWavelet decomposition of ocular motor signals was investigated with a view to its use for noise analysis and filtering. Ocular motor noise may be physiological, depending on brain activities, or experimental, depending on the eye recording machine, head movements and blinks. Experimental noise, such as spikes, must be removed, preserving noise due to neuro-physiological activities.
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