In the processing of emotions, the brain prepares and reacts in distinctive manners depending upon the negative or positive nuance of the emotion elicitors. Previous investigations showed that negative elicitors generally evoke more intense neural activities than positive and neutral ones, as reflected in the augmented amplitude of all sub-components of the event-related potentials (ERP) late posterior positivity (LPP) complex, while less is known about the emotion of disgust. The present study aimed to examine whether the LPP complex during the processing of disgust stimuli showed greater amplitude than other emotion elicitors with negative or positive valences, thus confirming it as a neural marker of disgust-related negativity bias at earlier or later stages.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRespiration and cardiac activity intricately interact through complex physiological mechanisms. The heartbeat-evoked potential (HEP) is an EEG fluctuation reflecting the cortical processing of cardiac signals. We recently found higher HEP amplitude during exhalation than inhalation during a task involving attention to cardiac sensations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMultisensory integration (MSI) is a phenomenon that occurs in sensory areas after the presentation of multimodal stimuli. Nowadays, little is known about the anticipatory top-down processes taking place in the preparation stage of processing before the stimulus onset. Considering that the top-down modulation of modality-specific inputs might affect the MSI process, this study attempts to understand whether the direct modulation of the MSI process, beyond the well-known sensory effects, may lead to additional changes in multisensory processing also in non-sensory areas (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElevated anxiety levels degrade task performance, likely because of cognitive function reduction in the frontoparietal brain network. This study aimed to test whether anxiety could impact the frontal cortex anticipatory brain functions and to investigate the possible beneficial effect of response-related feedback on task performance. The electroencephalographic activity was recorded while participants performed two Go/No-go tasks: one with response-related feedback on errors (feedback task) and one task without feedback (standard task).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFReceiving feedback on action correctness is a relevant factor in learning, but only a few recent studies have investigated the neural bases involved in feedback processing and its consequences on performance. Several event-related potentials (ERP) studies investigated the feedback-related negativity, which is an ERP occurring after the presentation of a feedback stimulus. In contrast, the present study investigates the effect of providing feedback on brain activities before and after the presentation of an imperative stimulus with the aim to show how this could have an impact on cognitive functions related to anticipatory and post-stimulus task processing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProactive and reactive brain activities usually refer to processes occurring in anticipation or in response to perceptual and/or cognitive events. Previous studies found that, in auditory tasks, musical expertise improves performance mainly at the reactive stage of processing. In the present work, we aimed at acknowledging the effects of musical practice on proactive brain activities as a result of neuroplasticity processes occurring at the level of anticipatory motor/cognitive functions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe brain is able to gather different sensory information to enhance salient event perception, thus yielding a unified perceptual experience of multisensory events. Multisensory integration has been widely studied, and the literature supports the hypothesis that it can occur across various stages of stimulus processing, including both bottom-up and top-down control. However, evidence on anticipatory multisensory integration occurring in the fore period preceding the presentation of the expected stimulus in passive tasks, is missing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Stroop task has been largely used to explore the ability to inhibit the automatic process of reading when reporting the ink color of incongruent color-words. Given the extensive literature regarding the processes involved in task performance, here we aimed at exploring the anticipatory brain activities during the Stroop task using the event-related potential (ERP) method. To accomplish this, eighteen participants performed two different blocks where neutral words were intermixed with congruent and incongruent words, respectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe existence of neural correlates of spatial attention is not limited to the reactive stage of stimulus processing: neural activities subtending spatial attention are deployed well ahead of stimulus onset. ERP evidence supporting this proactive (top-down) attentional control is based on trial-by-trial S1-S2 paradigms, where the onset of a directional cue (S1) indicates on which side attention must be directed to respond to an upcoming target stimulus (S2). Crucially, S1 onset trigger both attention and motor preparation, therefore, these paradigms are not ideal to demonstrate the effect of attention at preparatory stage of processing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe anticipation of upcoming events is a key-feature of cognition. Previous investigations on anticipatory visuospatial attention mainly adopted transient and-more rarely-sustained tasks, whose main difference consists in the presence of transient or sustained cue stimuli and different involvement of top-down or bottom-up forms of attention. In particular, while top-down control has been suggested to drive sustained attention, it is not clear whether both endogenous and exogenous controls are recruited in transient attention task, or whether the cue-evoked attention may be interpreted as a mainly bottom-up guided process.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Psychophysiol
January 2021
In the present study, we investigated scalp-recorded activities of motor and cognitive preparation preceding stimulus presentation in relatively simple and complex visual motor discriminative response tasks (DRTs). Targets and non-targets were presented (with equal probability) in both tasks, and the complexity of the task depended on the discrimination and categorization processing load, which was based on the number of stimuli used (two stimuli in the simple- and four in the complex-DRT, respectively). We recorded event-related potentials (ERPs) in 16 participants in simple-DRT and 16 participants in complex-DRT.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIt is well established that task complexity can affect both performance and brain processing. Event-related potentials (ERPs) studies have shown modulation of the well-known N2 and P3 components. However, limited information is available on the recently described frontal components associated with processing within the anterior insular cortex.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrevious event-related potential (ERP) studies mainly from the present research group showed a novel component, that is, the prefrontal negativity (pN), recorded in visual-motor discriminative tasks during the pre-stimulus phase. This component is concomitant to activity related to motor preparation, that is, the Bereitschaftspotential (BP). The pN component has been reported in experiments based on the visual modality only; for other modalities (acoustic and/or somatosensory) the presence of the pN warrants further investigation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEvent-related potentials (ERPs) are obtained from the electroencephalogram (EEG) or the magnetoencephalogram (MEG, event-related fields (ERF)), extracting the activity that is time-locked to an event. Despite the potential utility of ERP/ERF in cognitive domain, the clinical standardization of their use is presently undefined for most of procedures. The aim of the present review is to establish limits and reliability of ERP medical application, summarize main methodological issues, and present evidence of clinical application and future improvement.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe literature on aerobic exercise and neurocognition reports acute post-exercise enhancement of neural activity linked to motor preparation in the premotor area and inhibitory control in the frontoparietal areas. However, the acute effect of vigorous-intensity aerobic exercise (VIAE) on the prefrontal, the insular, and the occipito-parietal activities linked to proactive control, early perceptual, and attentional processing is indeterminate. Thus, the present study investigated the acute effect of VIAE on the neurobehavioral correlates of these proactive and reactive neurocognitive functions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn a series of previous studies, we found that when participants were required to imagine another person performing a manual action, they imagined a significantly higher proportion of actions performed with their dominant rather than non-dominant hand, which indicates that shared motor representations between the self and the other are involved also during the imagination of others' actions. Interestingly, the activation of lateralized body-specific motor representations (as indexed by the congruence between the participant's handedness and the imagined person's handedness) appeared to be affected by the visual perspective adopted and participants' handedness. Given that past literature indicates that incongruent or unnatural postures interfere with motor imagery, we tested 480 right-handed participants to investigate whether subjects holding their right hand behind their back would have imagined right-handed actions less frequently than those holding their left hand behind their back.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Vasc Endovasc Surg
June 2002
Objectives: although the mechanism of arterial dilation and aneurysm development has not been clarified, the degradation of elastin and collagen plays undoubtedly a critical role. We evaluated the elastin and collagen content through the detection of their cross-links in aneurysmal and non-aneurysmal abdominal aortic walls.
Materials And Methods: in 26 human abdominal aortic aneurysm specimens obtained during surgery and in 24 autopsy control samples of non-aneurysmal abdominal aorta the tissue content of elastin and collagen cross-links were measured by HPLC.
J Chromatogr B Biomed Sci Appl
March 1999
An accurate method for the determination of collagen to study its distribution and turn-over in different tissues is described. 5-Hydroxylysine (5Hylys) is an amino acid that is apparently present in no other protein except collagen and, as it is metabolised only to a minor degree compared with 4-hydroxyproline (4Hypro), it has been suggested as a better marker of the collagen metabolism. Interest in this amino acid has increased recently because the levels of 5Hylys in urine and in different tissues may offer a new basis for detecting pathologies of the collagen molecule.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe aim of this study was to investigate the biochemical basis of biomechanical and morphological alterations of upper esophageal sphincter, which have been reported in patients with Zenker's diverticulum. 4-L-Hydroxyproline (4-Hyp) (collagen), isodesmosine (Ides), and desmosine (Des) (elastin) contents were measured in samples of cricopharyngeal muscle (CPM) and muscularis propria of the esophagus below the CPM. The specimens were collected from seven patients operated for Zenker's diverticulum and eight cadavers, without esophageal and connective tissue disease, 4-Hyp was assayed colorimetrically, Ides and Des by high-performance liquid chromatography.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlterations of the connective tissue in the varicose vein wall have been noted by several investigators; however, the cause of the vein dilatation has still not been established. The aim of this study was to find a biochemical explanation to the development of varices by evaluating sensitive biochemical markers of collagen and elastin in the varicose vein wall. 4-L-Hydroxyproline (HYP), as a marker of collagen content, and desmosine (DES) and isodesmosine (IDES), as markers of elastin, were measured in 47 macroscopically dilated and 32 nondilated segments of 20 varicose saphenous veins collected from 20 patients with varices.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chromatogr B Biomed Appl
June 1994
A chromatographic method for the determination of pyridinoline (Pyr) and deoxypyridinoline (Dpyr) in serum and plasma is described. The analytical procedure involved plasma or serum purification by ultrafiltration (20,000 relative molecular mass cut-off) under centrifugation at 2500 g for 4 h, as an innovative step. Analysis was done by isocratic high-performance liquid chromatography with fluorescence detection.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo study why the symptoms of abdominal bloating occurring in a number of patients after jejuno-ileal bypass for morbid obesity become resistant to antibiotics, we used a method which combined a hydrogen breath test after lactulose with an X-ray examination of the abdomen after barium. Ten operated patients with bloating symptoms resistant to antibiotics, ten operated patients without symptoms or with pre-existing symptoms, that had remitted after antibiotic treatment and ten nonoperated obese controls were investigated. There was a significant correlation between post-surgical symptoms persisting after antibiotics and the exhalation of large amounts of hydrogen of colonic origin (> 100 parts per million) after lactulose.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSince the metabolic activity of the colonic flora plays a definite role in colon cancer and an increased incidence of this disease is reported after cholecystectomy, we studied the metabolic activity of the colonic flora in a group of postcholecystectomy patients and matched controls by measuring, as representative end products of the bacterial metabolism, their fecal bile acids (BA), fecal 3-methylindole (SK) and indole (IN), and respiratory methane and hydrogen. Patients had significantly higher SK and lower IN, and, among BA, higher lithocholic (LCA) and chenodeoxycholic acid concentrations and LCA/deoxycholic acid ratio in the stools than controls. Similar differences from controls were reported for colon cancer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo study the effect of intraperitoneal S(-)sulpiride (1-15 mg/kg), R(+)sulpiride (5-10 mg/kg), metoclopramide (1-15 mg/kg), cisapride (10 mg/kg) and domperidone (5-10 mg/kg) on intestinal progression, rats were given the test drug followed by oral lactulose. Their hydrogen excretion was used to calculate the small bowel transit time (SBTT) and maximum peak time (MPT). Metoclopramide (7.
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