Publications by authors named "Thierry Guillaume"

The capacity of human infants to discriminate contrasting speech sounds specializes to the native language by the end of the first year of life, when the first signs of word recognition have also been found, using behavioural measures. The extent of voluntary attentional involvement in such word recognition has not been explored, however, nor do we know what its neural time-course may be. Here we demonstrate that 11-month-old children shift their attention automatically to familiar words within 250 ms of presentation onset by measuring event-related potentials elicited by familiar and unfamiliar words.

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Article Synopsis
  • Access to meaning from spoken language is very fast, but understanding words requires processing at different levels: phonological, grammatical, and semantic.
  • Researchers used event-related potentials (ERPs) to study how native French speakers categorize nouns based on meaning (natural vs. manufactured) and grammatical gender (masculine vs. feminine).
  • Results showed that while semantic categorization triggered brain responses earlier than gender categorization, it took longer to fully process, indicating that understanding meaning is quicker at first but needs more time to resolve than grammatical information.
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Patient studies suggest that speech and environmental sounds are differentially processed by the left and right hemispheres. Here, using functional imaging in normal subjects, we compared semantic processing of spoken words to equivalent processing of environmental sounds, after controlling for low-level perceptual differences. Words enhanced activation in left anterior and posterior superior temporal regions, while environmental sounds enhanced activation in a right posterior superior temporal region.

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Event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging was used to test the involvement of the inferior prefrontal cortex in verbal working memory. Pairs of French nouns were presented to ten native French speakers who had to make semantic or grammatical gender decisions. Verbal working memory involvement was manipulated by making the categorization of the second noun optional.

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Molecules differentially expressed or overexpressed by malignant cells can serve in detecting and tracking of tumor. Additionally, they potentially can be applied in histologic-specific antitumor therapy. Few breast cancer-associated candidate molecules have been identified.

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Objective: High pressures or volumes may increase the risk of barotrauma in the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS).

Methods: The first part of the study analyzed data from a prospective trial of two ventilation strategies in 116 patients with ARDS retrospectively, and ventilatory pressures and volumes were compared in patients with or without pneumothorax. The second part consisted of a literature analysis of prospective trials (14 clinical studies, 2270 patients) describing incidence and risk factors for barotrauma in ARDS patients, and mean values of ventilatory parameters were plotted against incidence of barotrauma.

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