Orienting attention in time enables us to prepare for forthcoming perception and action (e.g., estimating the duration of a yellow traffic light when driving). While temporal orienting can facilitate performance on simple tasks, its influence on complex tasks involving response conflict is unclear. Here, we adapted the flanker paradigm to a choice-reaching task where participants used a computer mouse to reach to the left or right side of the screen, as indicated by the central arrow presented with either the congruent or incongruent flankers. We assessed the effects of temporal orienting by manipulating goal-driven temporal expectation (using probabilistic variations in target timing) and stimulus-driven temporal priming (using sequential repetitions versus switches in target timing). We tested how temporal orienting influenced the dynamics of response conflict resolution. Recent choice-reaching studies have indicated that under response conflict, delayed movement initiation captures the response threshold adjustment process, whereas increased curvature toward the incorrect response captures the degree of coactivation of the response alternatives during the controlled response selection process. Both temporal expectation and priming reduced the initiation latency regardless of response conflict, suggesting that both lowered response thresholds independently of response conflict. Notably, temporal expectation, but not temporal priming, increased the curvature toward the incorrect response on incongruent trials. These results suggest that temporal orienting generally increases motor preparedness, but goal-driven temporal orienting particularly interferes with response conflict resolution, likely through its influence on response thresholds. Overall, our study highlights the interplay between temporal orienting and cognitive control in goal-directed action.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3758/s13414-020-02235-4 | DOI Listing |
Commun Biol
March 2025
College of Computer Science, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China.
It is widely accepted that biological motion (BM) perception involves the posterior superior temporal sulcus (pSTS). Yet, how individual neurons and neural circuits in pSTS encode BM remains unclear. Here we combined electrophysiological recordings with neural network modeling to elucidate BM computations in two subregions of pSTS.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: To investigate the association of local ciliary body morphology with the haptic position and peripheral vault.
Methods: This retrospective observational study included 95 eyes of 59 patients treated with the EVO Implantable Collamer Lens (ICL) (STAAR Surgical). Ciliary body morphology parameters (ciliary process length [CPL], ciliary sulcus width [CSW], and scleral spur-ciliary process distance [SCD]), the relative position of ICL haptic to the ciliary process, the haptic-related parameters (the final tip point of ICL haptic [ftICL haptic] and lowest point of ICL haptic), and peripheral vault in the location of each haptic were measured with ultrasound biomicroscopy 3 months after surgery.
J Microbio Robot
March 2025
Department of Physics, Indian Institute Of Science, Bangalore, 560012 Karnataka India.
Unlabelled: Cells are building blocks of living systems. Spatio-temporal mapping of local biophysical changes within cells can lead to novel insights into various biological events. As demonstrated in previous works, successful internalization, controlled manipulation, bio-compatibility, and surface-functionalization capabilities make the helical magnetic nanobots, an ideal candidate for local intracellular measurements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnalyzing single-cell dynamics is crucial for understanding developmental biology, cancer biology, and other complex biological processes. This analysis depends on accurately detecting and tracking individual cells across both spatial and temporal scales, with live-cell imaging serving as a key tool. However, extracting reliable dynamic information from live-cell imaging data remains a significant challenge.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) is well known for its ability to induce synaptic plasticity, yet its impact on structural and functional remodeling within stimulated networks remains unclear. This study investigates the cellular and network-level mechanisms of rTMS-induced plasticity using a clinically approved 600-pulse intermittent theta burst stimulation (iTBS600) protocol applied to organotypic brain tissue cultures.
Methods: We applied iTBS600 to entorhino-hippocampal organotypic tissue cultures and conducted a 24-hour analysis using c-Fos immunostaining, whole-cell patch-clamp recordings, time-lapse imaging of dendritic spines, and calcium imaging.
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