92 results match your criteria: "BCBL - Basque Center on Cognition[Affiliation]"

Functional correlates of response inhibition in impulse control disorders in Parkinson's disease.

Neuroimage Clin

January 2022

Neuroscience Area, CIMA, University of Navarra, Av. de Pío XII 55, 31008 Pamplona, Spain; Department of Neurology, Clínica Universidad de Navarra, Universidad de Navarra, Av. de Pío XII 36, 31008 Pamplona, Spain. Electronic address:

Impulse control disorder is a prevalent side-effect of Parkinson's disease (PD) medication, with a strong negative impact on the quality of life of those affected. Although impulsivity has classically been associated with response inhibition deficits, previous evidence from PD patients with impulse control disorder (ICD) has not revealed behavioral dysfunction in response inhibition. In this study, 18 PD patients with ICD, 17 PD patients without this complication, and 15 healthy controls performed a version of the conditional Stop Signal Task during functional magnetic resonance imaging.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Comprehension of Morse Code Predicted by Item Recall From Short-Term Memory.

J Speech Lang Hear Res

September 2021

Departments of Psychology, Neuroscience, Communication Science and Disorders, Center for the Neural Basis of Cognition, and Learning Research and Development Center, University of Pittsburgh, PA.

Purpose Morse code as a form of communication became widely used for telegraphy, radio and maritime communication, and military operations, and remains popular with ham radio operators. Some skilled users of Morse code are able to comprehend a full sentence as they listen to it, while others must first transcribe the sentence into its written letter sequence. Morse thus provides an interesting opportunity to examine comprehension differences in the context of skilled acoustic perception.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Context is critical for conceptual processing, but the mechanism underpinning its encoding and reinstantiation during abstract concept processing is unclear. Context may be especially important for abstract concepts-we investigated whether episodic context is recruited differently when processing abstract compared with concrete concepts. Experiments 1 and 2 presented abstract and concrete words in arbitrary contexts at encoding (Experiment 1: red/green colored frames; Experiment 2: male/female voices).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The visual field region where a stimulus evokes a neural response is called the receptive field (RF). Analytical tools combined with functional MRI (fMRI) can estimate the RF of the population of neurons within a voxel. Circular population RF (pRF) methods accurately specify the central position of the pRF and provide some information about the spatial extent (diameter) of the RF.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Data-science ready, multisite, human diffusion MRI white-matter-tract statistics.

Sci Data

November 2020

Department of Psychology, Stanford University, 450 Jane Stanford Way, Jordan Hall Building, 94305, Stanford, California, USA.

The white matter tracts in the living human brain are critical for healthy function, and the diffusion MRI measured in these tracts is correlated with diverse behavioral measures. The technical skills required to analyze diffusion MRI data are complex: data acquisition requires MRI sequence development and acquisition expertise, analyzing raw-data into meaningful summary statistics requires computational neuroimaging and neuroanatomy expertise. The human white matter study field will advance faster if the tract summaries are available in plain data-science-ready format for non-diffusion MRI experts, such as statisticians, computer graphic researchers or data scientists in general.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Functional specialization and plasticity are fundamental organizing principles of the brain. Since the mid-1800s, certain cognitive functions have been known to be lateralized, but the provenance and flexibility of hemispheric specialization remain open questions. Language is a uniquely human phenomenon that requires a delicate balance between neural specialization and plasticity, and language learning offers the perfect window to study these principles in the human brain.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Changes in electrophysiological static and dynamic human brain functional architecture from childhood to late adulthood.

Sci Rep

November 2020

Laboratoire de Cartographie Fonctionnelle du Cerveau (LCFC), UNI-ULB Neuroscience Institute, Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB), 1070, Brussels, Belgium.

This magnetoencephalography study aimed at characterizing age-related changes in resting-state functional brain organization from mid-childhood to late adulthood. We investigated neuromagnetic brain activity at rest in 105 participants divided into three age groups: children (6-9 years), young adults (18-34 years) and healthy elders (53-78 years). The effects of age on static resting-state functional brain integration were assessed using band-limited power envelope correlation, whereas those on transient functional brain dynamics were disclosed using hidden Markov modeling of power envelope activity.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Picture naming tasks are currently the gold standard for identifying and preserving language-related areas during awake brain surgery. With multilingual populations increasing worldwide, patients frequently need to be tested in more than one language. There is still no reliable testing instrument, as the available batteries have been developed for specific languages.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Attunement theories of speech perception development suggest that native-language exposure is one of the main factors shaping infants' phonemic discrimination capacity within the second half of their first year. Here, we focus on the role of acoustic-perceptual salience and language-specific experience by assessing the discrimination of acoustically subtle Basque sibilant contrasts. We used the infant-controlled version of the habituation procedure to assess discrimination in 6- to 7-month and 11- to 12-month-old infants who varied in their amount of exposure to Basque and Spanish.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Early dissociation of numbers and letters in the human brain.

Cortex

September 2020

BCBL - Basque Center on Cognition, Brain and Language, Paseo Mikeletegi, 69, Donostia-San Sebastián, 2009, Spain; Ikerbasque, Basque Foundation for Science, María Díaz Haroko Kalea, 3, 48013, Bilbao, Bizkaia, Spain; Departamento de Lengua Vasca y Comunicación, Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea/Universidad del País Vasco, Leioa, 48940, Bizkaia, Spain.

Numbers and letters are culturally created symbols which are learned through repeated training. This experience leads to a functional specialization of the perceptual system of our brain. Recent evidence suggests a neural dissociation between these two symbols.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Bilingualism is a powerful experiential factor, and its effects have been proposed to extend beyond the linguistic domain by boosting the development of executive functioning skills. Crucially, recent findings suggest that this effect can be detected in bilingual infants before their first birthday indicating that it emerges as a result of early bilingual exposure and the experience of negotiating two linguistic systems in infants' environment. However, these conclusions are based on only two research studies from the last decade (Comishen, Bialystok, & Adler, 2019; Kovács & Mehler, 2009), so to date, there is a lack of evidence regarding their replicability and generalizability.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) allowed the spatial characterization of the resting-state verbal language network (vLN). While other resting-state networks (RSNs) were matched with their electrophysiological equivalents at rest and could be spectrally defined, such correspondence is lacking for the vLN. This magnetoencephalography (MEG) study aimed at defining the spatio-spectral characteristics of the neuromagnetic intrinsic functional architecture of the vLN.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Through the Human Connectome Project (HCP) our understanding of the functional connectome of the healthy brain has been dramatically accelerated. Given the pressing public health need, we must increase our understanding of how connectome dysfunctions give rise to disordered mental states. Mental disorders arising from high levels of negative emotion or from the loss of positive emotional experience affect over 400 million people globally.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Recent neurophysiological theories propose that the cerebral hemispheres collaborate to resolve the complex temporal nature of speech, such that left-hemisphere (or bilateral) gamma-band oscillatory activity would specialize in coding information at fast rates (phonemic information), whereas right-hemisphere delta- and theta-band activity would code for speech's slow temporal components (syllabic and prosodic information). Despite the relevance that neural entrainment to speech might have for reading acquisition and for core speech perception operations such as the perception of intelligible speech, no study had yet explored its development in young children. In the current study, speech-brain entrainment was recorded via EEG in a cohort of children at three different time points since they were 4-5 to 6-7 years of age.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Novel word learning deficits in infants at family risk for dyslexia.

Dyslexia

February 2020

The MARCS Institute for Brain, Behaviour and Development, Western Sydney University, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.

Children of reading age diagnosed with dyslexia show deficits in reading and spelling skills, but early markers of later dyslexia are already present in infancy in auditory processing and phonological domains. Deficits in lexical development are not typically associated with dyslexia. Nevertheless, it is possible that early auditory/phonological deficits would have detrimental effects on the encoding and storage of novel lexical items.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Humans quickly adapt to variations in the speech signal. Adaptation may surface as , a learning effect driven by error-minimisation between a visual face and an ambiguous auditory speech signal, or as , a contrastive aftereffect driven by the acoustic clarity of the sound. Here, we examined whether these aftereffects occur for vowel identity and voice gender.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Rationale: In Parkinson's disease (PD), spatial covariance analysis of F-FDG PET data has consistently revealed a characteristic PD-related brain pattern (PDRP). By quantifying PDRP expression on a scan-by-scan basis, this technique allows objective assessment of disease activity in individual subjects. We provide a further validation of the PDRP by applying spatial covariance analysis to PD cohorts from the Netherlands (NL), Italy (IT), and Spain (SP).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Impulse control disorders related to alterations in the mesocorticolimbic dopamine network occur in Parkinson's disease (PD). Our objective was to investigate the functional neural substrates of reward processing and inhibitory control in these patients.

Methods: Eighteen PD patients with impulse control disorders, 17 without this complication, and 18 healthy controls performed a version of the Iowa Gambling Task during functional magnetic resonance scanning under 3 conditions: positive, negative, and mixed feedback.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Written sentence context effects on acoustic-phonetic perception: fMRI reveals cross-modal semantic-perceptual interactions.

Brain Lang

December 2019

Department of Cognitive, Linguistic & Psychological Sciences, Brown University, United States; Brown Institute for Brain Science, Brown University, United States.

This study examines cross-modality effects of a semantically-biased written sentence context on the perception of an acoustically-ambiguous word target identifying neural areas sensitive to interactions between sentential bias and phonetic ambiguity. Of interest is whether the locus or nature of the interactions resembles those previously demonstrated for auditory-only effects. FMRI results show significant interaction effects in right mid-middle temporal gyrus (RmMTG) and bilateral anterior superior temporal gyri (aSTG), regions along the ventral language comprehension stream that map sound onto meaning.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This functional magnetic resonance imaging study established that different portions of the ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (vlPFC) support reactive and proactive language control processes during multilingual word retrieval. The study also examined whether proactive language control consists in the suppression of the nontarget lexicon. Healthy multilingual volunteers participated in a task that required them to name pictures alternately in their dominant and less-dominant languages.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Math and reading involve distributed brain networks and have both shared (e.g. encoding of visual stimuli) and dissociated (e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Replication and generalization in applied neuroimaging.

Neuroimage

November 2019

Department of Psychology, Stanford University, 450 Serra Mall, Jordan Hall Building, 94305, Stanford, CA, USA.

There is much interest in translating neuroimaging findings into meaningful clinical diagnostics. The goal of scientific discoveries differs from clinical diagnostics. Scientific discoveries must replicate under a specific set of conditions; to translate to the clinic we must show that findings using purpose-built scientific instruments will be observable in clinical populations and instruments.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Speech perception is influenced by vision through a process of audiovisual integration. This is demonstrated by the McGurk illusion where visual speech (for example /ga/) dubbed with incongruent auditory speech (such as /ba/) leads to a modified auditory percept (/da/). Recent studies have indicated that perception of the incongruent speech stimuli used in McGurk paradigms involves mechanisms of both general and audiovisual speech specific mismatch processing and that general mismatch processing modulates induced theta-band (4-8 Hz) oscillations.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Vocabulary learning is better achieved by children facing a teacher than when presented to the same teacher through video (so-called "video deficit" effect), which has significant implications for toddlers' education. Since millions of adults also learn new vocabulary when acquiring a second language (L2), it is important to explore whether adults suffer from "video deficit" effects, as children do. In the present study, we report two experiments in which Spanish native late learners of English were involved in a vocabulary learning task.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Delayed development of phonological constancy in toddlers at family risk for dyslexia.

Infant Behav Dev

November 2019

The MARCS Institute for Brain, Behaviour and Development, Western Sydney University, Penrith, Australia.

Phonological constancy refers to infants' ability to disregard variations in the phonetic realisation of speech sounds that do not indicate lexical contrast, e.g., when listening to accented speech.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF