Publications by authors named "V Bataller Monfort"

Previous researches have shown that the inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) is involved in time and numerosity processing. This study aimed at examining (i) interval timing and (ii) interaction between duration and numerosity processing in four drug-resistant epileptic patients with postoperative lesions in the IFG in comparison with thirteen healthy controls. The duration reproduction and discrimination tasks performed in the sub- and supra-second ranges did not reveal any significant differences between patients and controls.

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The supplementary motor area (SMA) has been shown to be involved in interval timing but its precise role remains a matter of debate. The present study was aimed at examining, by means of intracerebral EEG recordings, the time course of the activity in this structure, as well as in other functionally connected cortical (frontal, cingulate, insular and temporal) areas, during a visual time reproduction task. Four patients undergoing stereo-electroencephalography (SEEG) for presurgical investigation of refractory focal epilepsy were enrolled.

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Evidence from extreme environments suggests that there are relationships between difficulties of adaptation and psychological factors such as personality. In the framework of microgravity research on humans, the aim of this exploratory study was to investigate inter-individual differences of parabonauts on the basis of quality of adaptation to the physical demands of parabolic flights. The personality characteristics of two groups of parabonauts with a different quality of adaptation (an Adaptive group, = 7, and a Maladaptive group, = 15) were assessed using the Sensation Seeking Scale, Brief COPE, and MSSQ-Short.

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Background: Working memory is the most impaired cognitive domain in the acute phase of stroke. In a context where anxiety is highly prevalent, close attention must be paid to anxiety which could mimic mild to moderate working memory impairments. This is the first study to assess the contribution of state anxiety (the currently experienced level of anxiety) to the working memory (verbal, visuospatial) in patients with first-ever acute stroke without severe cognitive impairment.

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This case report on an epileptic patient suffering from a focal lesion at the junction of the right anterior insular cortex (AIC) and the adjacent inferior frontal cortex (IFC) provides the first evidence that damage to this brain region impairs temporal performance in a visual time reproduction task in which participants had to reproduce the presentation duration (3, 5 and 7s) of emotionally-neutral and -negative pictures. Strikingly, as compared to a group of healthy subjects, the AIC/IFC case considerably overestimated reproduction times despite normal variability. The effect was obtained in all duration and emotion conditions.

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