Research on perception without awareness primarily relies on the dissociation paradigm, which compares a measure of awareness of a critical stimulus (direct measure) with a measure indicating that the stimulus has been processed at all (indirect measure). We argue that dissociations between direct and indirect measures can only be demonstrated with respect to the critical stimulus feature that generates the indirect effect, and the observer's awareness of that feature, the critical cue. We expand Kahneman's (Psychological Bulletin, 70, 404-425, 1968) concept of criterion content to comprise the set of all cues that an observer actually uses to perform the direct task.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: The aim of this study is to describe the use of near-infrared autofluorescence (NIR-AF) to identify and preserve parathyroid glands (PGs) in a group of patients with advanced hypopharyngeal/laryngeal cancer undergone total (pharyngo)laryngectomy with hemi- or total thyroidectomy.
Methods: At San Raffaele Hospital, Milan (Italy), from January 2021 to May 2021, 7 patients affected by cT4a laryngeal squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) underwent surgery using an autofluorescence detection system (Fluobeam-Fluoptics). For proper surgical planning, the demolition phase envisaged extension of the intervention to 4 hemithyroidectomies and 3 total thyroidectomies associated, respectively, with homolateral or bilateral CCND.
We propose that any theory of visual awareness must explain the gradient of different awareness measures over experimental conditions, especially when those measures form double dissociations among each other. Theories meeting this requirement must be specific to the measured facets of awareness, such as motion, contrast, or color. Integrated information theory (IIT) lacks such specificity because it is an underconstrained theory with unspecific predictions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNowadays, many patients facing head and neck oncological surgery have a history of tissue irradiation. This represents an important risk factor for postsurgical complications, including dehiscences and fistulas. Platelet-rich plasma (PRP) obtained from the patient's blood represents an easy, fast and inexpensive method for the prevention and treatment of such complications.
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