49 results match your criteria: "Aix Marseille University and CNRS[Affiliation]"

Do pet dogs () follow ostensive and non-ostensive human gaze to distant space and to objects?

R Soc Open Sci

July 2017

Clever Dog Lab, Comparative Cognition, Messerli Research Institute, University of Veterinary Medicine, Vienna, Medical University of Vienna, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.

Dogs are renowned for being skilful at using human-given communicative cues such as pointing. Results are contradictory, however, when it comes to dogs' following human gaze, probably due to methodological discrepancies. Here we investigated whether dogs follow human gaze to one of two food locations better than into distant space even after comparable pre-training.

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Structural Properties of Double-Walled Carbon Nanotubes Driven by Mechanical Interlayer Coupling.

ACS Nano

May 2017

Laboratoire d'Etude des Microstructures, ONERA-CNRS , BP 72, 92322 Châtillon Cedex, France.

Structural identification of double-walled carbon nanotubes (DWNTs) is presented through a robust procedure based on the latest generation of transmission electron microscope, making possible a statistical analysis based on numerous nano-objects. This approach reveals that inner and outer tubes of DWNTs are not randomly oriented, suggesting the existence of a mechanical coupling between the two concentric walls. With the support of atomic-scale modeling, we attribute it to the presence of incommensurate domains whose structures depend on the diameters and helicities of both tubes and where inner tubes try to achieve a local stacking orientation to reduce strain effects.

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The present theoretical study, performed using density-functional theory and Boltzmann transport theory formalisms, shows that under 2.246 % isotropic tensile strain, the two energy-lowest conduction bands of MgSi overlap. The two, threefold-degenerated orbitals become a unique, sixfold-degenerated orbital.

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Introduction: The purpose of this study was to compare satisfaction, clinical scores, and complications of patients operated on anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR) in outpatient setting compared to patients operated in the conventional hospitalization.

Patients And Methods: This prospective non-randomized study compared 30 patients (mean age 31 ± 9 years) operated on outpatient setting for an isolated ACLR matched 1:1 according to age, gender, body mass index, delay to surgery, and preoperative clinical score (IKDC) to 30 patients operated for an ACLR in our conventional hospitalization department during the same period. All the patients were operated on by the same surgeon.

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Third and fifth graders (Experiment 1) and fifth and seventh graders (Experiment 2) accomplished computational estimation tasks in which they provided estimates to two-digit arithmetic problems (e.g., 34+68).

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Orthographic processing deficits in developmental dyslexia: Beyond the ventral visual stream.

Neuroimage

March 2016

Laboratoire De Psychologie Cognitive, Brain And Language Research Institute, Aix-Marseille University and CNRS, Marseille, France. Electronic address:

Fast effortless reading has been associated with the Visual Word Form Area (VWFA), a region in the ventral visual stream that specializes in the recognition of letter strings. Several neuroimaging studies of dyslexia revealed an underactivation of this region. However, most of these studies used reading tasks and/or were carried out on adults.

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Size Dependent Phase Diagrams of Nickel-Carbon Nanoparticles.

Phys Rev Lett

November 2015

Centre Interdisciplinaire de Nanoscience de Marseille, Aix-Marseille University and CNRS, Campus de Luminy, Case 913, F-13288 Marseille, France.

The carbon rich phase diagrams of nickel-carbon nanoparticles, relevant to catalysis and catalytic chemical vapor deposition synthesis of carbon nanotubes, are calculated for system sizes up to about 3 nm (807 Ni atoms). A tight binding model for interatomic interactions drives the grand canonical Monte Carlo simulations used to locate solid, core shell and liquid stability domains, as a function of size, temperature, and carbon chemical potential or concentration. Melting is favored by carbon incorporation from the nanoparticle surface, resulting in a strong relative lowering of the eutectic temperature and a phase diagram topology different from the bulk one.

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Estimating duration depends on the sequential integration (accumulation) of temporal information in working memory. Using fMRI, we directly compared the accumulation of information in temporal versus spatial domains. Participants estimated either the duration or distance of the dynamic trajectory of a moving dot or, in a control condition, a static line stimulus.

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Background: The filamentous cyanobacterium Nostoc sp. strain PCC 7120 can fix N2 when combined nitrogen is not available. Furthermore, it has to cope with reactive oxygen species generated as byproducts of photosynthesis and respiration.

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Aging mechanisms in amorphous phase-change materials.

Nat Commun

June 2015

1] I. Institute of Physics (IA), RWTH Aachen University, 52056 Aachen, Germany [2] JARA FIT and JARA HPC, RWTH Aachen University, 52062 Aachen, Germany.

Aging is a ubiquitous phenomenon in glasses. In the case of phase-change materials, it leads to a drift in the electrical resistance, which hinders the development of ultrahigh density storage devices. Here we elucidate the aging process in amorphous GeTe, a prototypical phase-change material, by advanced numerical simulations, photothermal deflection spectroscopy and impedance spectroscopy experiments.

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Genetic approaches of the Fe-S cluster biogenesis process in bacteria: Historical account, methodological aspects and future challenges.

Biochim Biophys Acta

June 2015

Laboratoire de Chimie Bactérienne, UMR7283 Aix-Marseille University and CNRS, Institut de Microbiologie de la Méditerranée, 31 Chemin Joseph Aiguier, 13009 Marseille, France. Electronic address:

Since their discovery in the 50's, Fe-S cluster proteins have attracted much attention from chemists, biophysicists and biochemists. However, in the 80's they were joined by geneticists who helped to realize that in vivo maturation of Fe-S cluster bound proteins required assistance of a large number of factors defining complex multi-step pathways. The question of how clusters are formed and distributed in vivo has since been the focus of much effort.

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Age effects on transfer index performance and executive control in baboons (Papio papio).

Front Psychol

March 2014

Aix-Marseille University and CNRS Marseille, France ; Laboratoire de Psychologie Cognitive, Aix-Marseille University Marseille, France ; Federation de Recherche 3C, Aix-Marseille University Marseille, France ; Brain and Language Research Institute Aix-en-Provence, France.

Reversal performance in the transfer index (TI) task is known to improve from prosimians to apes, suggesting that this task is a marker of cognitive evolution within the primate taxa (Rumbaugh, 1970). However, the cognitive processes recruited by this task remain unclear. In the present study, 19 socially-housed baboons (Papio papio) from 1.

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Functional neuro-anatomy of egocentric versus allocentric space representation.

Neurophysiol Clin

January 2014

University of Geneva, Faculty of Medicine, Neurology and Cognitive Imaging Laboratory, Geneva, Switzerland.

Introduction: The functional neuroanatomy of the egocentric and allocentric representations of space remains poorly studied with neuroimaging. Here we aim to determine brain structures subserving two different kinds of spatial representations centred on the main axis of either the body or the external scene.

Method: Sixteen healthy participants evaluated the alignment of a bar relative to the middle of their body (Ego) or relative to another stimulus (Allo) during functional MRI.

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Within the evolutionary framework about the origin of human handedness and hemispheric specialization for language, the question of expression of population-level manual biases in nonhuman primates and their potential continuities with humans remains controversial. Nevertheless, there is a growing body of evidence showing consistent population-level handedness particularly for complex manual behaviors in both monkeys and apes. In the present article, within a large comparative approach among primates, we will review our contribution to the field and the handedness literature related to two particular sophisticated manual behaviors regarding their potential and specific implications for the origins of hemispheric specialization in humans: bimanual coordinated actions and gestural communication.

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Does central fatigue explain reduced cycling after complete sleep deprivation?

Med Sci Sports Exerc

December 2013

1Exercise Physiology Laboratory, University of Lyon, Saint-Etienne, FRANCE; 2Cognitive Psychology Laboratory and 3C Research Federation, Aix-Marseille University and CNRS, Marseille, FRANCE; 3HP2 Laboratory, Joseph Fourier University, Grenoble, FRANCE; and 4U1042, INSERM, Grenoble, FRANCE.

Purpose: Sleep deprivation (SD) is characterized by reduced cognitive capabilities and endurance exercise performance and increased perceived exertion (RPE) during exercise. The combined effects of SD and exercise-induced changes in neuromuscular function and cognition are unknown. This study aimed to determine whether central fatigue is greater with SD, and if so, whether this corresponds to diminished cognitive and physical responses.

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The epidemiology of human polyomaviruses KI (KIPyV) and WU (WUPyV) in healthy populations is described poorly in the literature. The frequency of KIPyV and WUPyV viraemia was evaluated in a cohort of blood donors from south-eastern France. Plasma samples (n=640) were investigated for the presence of KIPyV/WUPyV DNA using a conserved real-time PCR detection system (VP2 gene).

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Emotion processing in words: a test of the neural re-use hypothesis using surface and intracranial EEG.

Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci

May 2014

Laboratoire de Psychologie Cognitive, Fédération de Recherche 3C, Brain and Language Research Institute, Aix-Marseille University and CNRS, 3 place Victor Hugo, 13331 Marseille, France.

This study investigates the spatiotemporal brain dynamics of emotional information processing during reading using a combination of surface and intracranial electroencephalography (EEG). Two different theoretical views were opposed. According to the standard psycholinguistic perspective, emotional responses to words are generated within the reading network itself subsequent to semantic activation.

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Neuropsychological investigations of patients with Parkinson's disease, schizophrenia, or attention deficit disorder converge with psychopharmacological studies in animals and healthy volunteers to implicate dopamine (DA) pathways in timing. In parallel, single-cell recording and functional neuroimaging studies have highlighted the importance of basal ganglia, prefrontal cortex, and supplementary motor area (SMA) for timing. In a placebo-controlled, within-subject design, we combined event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging with a DA manipulation (acute phenylalanine/tyrosine depletion; APTD) in healthy volunteers to pinpoint the neuroanatomical and functional substrates of the DA modulation of timing.

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The uptake and adsorption enthalpy of carbon dioxide at 0.2 bar have been studied in three different topical porous MOF samples, HKUST-1, UiO-66(Zr), and MIL-100(Fe), after having been pre-equilibrated under different relative humidities (3, 10, 20, 40%) of water vapor. If in the case of microporous UiO-66, CO(2) uptake remained similar whatever the relative humidity, and correlations were difficult for microporous HKUST-1 due to its relative instability toward water vapor.

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Orthographic processing in baboons (Papio papio).

Science

April 2012

CNRS and Aix-Marseille University Laboratoire de Psychologie Cognitive, Fédération de Recherche 3C, Brain and Language Research Institute, Aix-Marseille University and CNRS, Marseille, France.

Skilled readers use information about which letters are where in a word (orthographic information) in order to access the sounds and meanings of printed words. We asked whether efficient processing of orthographic information could be achieved in the absence of prior language knowledge. To do so, we trained baboons to discriminate English words from nonsense combinations of letters that resembled real words.

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Unlabelled: BACKGROUND/STUDY CONTEXT: A goal of language and aging research is to determine the nature of change in language-processing skills. In this study the authors examine the role of age and use of cues (e.g.

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A saccadic choice task (Kirchner & Thorpe, 2006) was used to measure word processing speed in peripheral vision. To do so, word targets were accompanied by distractor stimuli, which were random strings of consonants presented in the contralateral visual field. Participants were also tested with the animal stimuli of Kirchner and Thorpe's original study.

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The basic reciprocity between individual parts and collective organization constitutes a key scientific question spanning the biological and social sciences. Such reciprocity is accompanied by the absence of direct linkages between levels of description giving rise to what is often referred to as the aggregation or nonequivalence problem between levels of analysis. This issue is encountered both in neuroscience and economics.

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Studying cognitive brain functions by functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) requires appropriate stimulation devices that do not interfere with the magnetic fields. Since the emergence of fMRI in the 90s, a number of stimulation devices have been developed for the visual and auditory modalities. Only few devices, however, have been developed for the somesthesic modality.

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