In the human thalamic ventralis lateralis nucleus the responses of 184 single units to verbally ordered voluntary movements and some somatosensory stimulations were studied by microelectrode recording technique during 38 stereotactic operations on parkinsonian patients. The tests were carried out on the same previously examined population of neurons classified into two groups, named A- and B-types according to the functional criteria of their intrinsic structure of spontaneous activity patterns. The evaluation of the responses of these units during functionally different phases of a voluntary movement (preparation, initiation, execution, after-effect) by means of the principal component analysis and correlation techniques confirmed the functional differences between A- and B-types of neurons and their polyvalent convergent nature. Four main conclusions emerge from the studies. (1) The differences of the patterns of A- and B-unit responses during the triggering and the execution phases of a voluntary movement indicate the functionally different role of these two cell types in the mechanisms of motor signal transmission. (2) The universal non-specific form of anticipatory A- and B-unit responses during the movement preparation and initiation of various kinds of voluntary movements reflect the integrative "triggering" processes connected with the processing and programming of some generalized parameters of a motor signal and not with the performance of a certain forthcoming motor act. (3) The expressed intensity of these "triggered" non-specific processes in the anterior parts of the ventralis lateralis nucleus indicates their relation not only to the motor but to the cognitive attentional functions forming a verbally ordered voluntary movement. (4) The appearance of the transient cross-correlations between the activities of adjacent A- and B-cells and also the synchronization of their 5 +/- 1 Hz frequency during and/or after motor test performances point to the contribution of these two populations to central mechanisms of the voluntary movement and the parkinsonian tremor. The functional role of two A- and B-cell types is discussed with references to the central mechanisms of verbally ordered voluntary movements and the parkinsonian tremor.
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JMIR Form Res
January 2025
Department of Psychology, The University of Texas at San Antonio, San Antonio, TX, United States.
Background: Perception-related errors comprise most diagnostic mistakes in radiology. To mitigate this problem, radiologists use personalized and high-dimensional visual search strategies, otherwise known as search patterns. Qualitative descriptions of these search patterns, which involve the physician verbalizing or annotating the order he or she analyzes the image, can be unreliable due to discrepancies in what is reported versus the actual visual patterns.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Exp Psychol Gen
January 2025
Department of Psychology, Psychology and Neuroscience, Cognition Research Unit, University of Liege.
Most models of verbal working memory (WM) consider attention as an important determinant of WM. The detailed nature of attentional processes and the different dimensions of verbal WM they support remains, however, poorly investigated. The present study distinguished between attentional capacity (scope of attention) and attentional control (control of attention) and examined their respective role for two fundamental dimensions of verbal WM: the retention of item versus serial order information and the simple versus complex nature of WM tasks.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol
January 2025
Department of Audiology, Faculty of Health Science, Istanbul Aydin University, Istanbul, Turkey. Electronic address:
Objective: The primary aim of this study was to examine the relationship between parental attitudes and language development in preschool children with cochlear implants. In addition, the study aimed to examine parental attitudes in relation to socio-demographic and cochlear implant related variables.
Methods: This study is based on the relational survey model.
J Voice
January 2025
School of Medicine - University of São Paulo (FM-USP), Speech Therapy, Physiotherapy and Occupational Therapy Department, São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil. Electronic address:
Objective: To systematically assess the current state of speech-language-hearing (SLH) practices in health services addressing vocal care for transgender individuals, aiming to identify key themes and gaps in the existing body of knowledge.
Methods: This scoping review was based on the Joanna Briggs Institute manual and followed the recommendations of the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses-Extension for Scoping Reviews. It was registered with the Open Science Framework Open Source 10.
Children are often instructed to "use their words" to communicate their emotions, which requires them to quickly access words that best describe their feelings. Adults vary in their ability to bring both nonemotion and emotion words to mind (two capacities called and ). However, no studies have examined how emotion fluency emerges across development, despite the fact that mastering emotion language is an important developmental task.
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