298 results match your criteria: "Institute of Neuroscience (IoNS)[Affiliation]"

An objective and sensitive electrophysiological marker of word semantic categorization impairment in Alzheimer's disease.

Clin Neurophysiol

December 2024

Université de Lorraine, CNRS, IMoPA, 29 Avenue du Maréchal de Lattre de Tassigny, F-54000 Nancy, France; Université de Lorraine, CHRU-Nancy, Service de Neurologie, 29 Avenue du Maréchal de Lattre de Tassigny, F-54000 Nancy, France. Electronic address:

Objective: Combining electroencephalographic (EEG) recording and fast periodic visual stimulation (FPVS) to provide an implicit, objective and sensitive electrophysiological measure of semantic word categorization impairment in Alzheimer's Disease (AD).

Methods: Twenty-five AD patients and 25 matched elderly healthy controls were tested with a validated FPVS-EEG paradigm in which different written words of the same semantic category (cities) appear at a fixed frequency of 4 words per second (4 Hz) for 70 seconds. Words from a different semantic category (animal) appear every 4 stimuli (i.

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Background: Pain is the leading cause of disability and reduced quality of life worldwide. Despite the increasing burden for patients and healthcare systems, pain research remains underfunded and under focused. Having stakeholders identify and prioritize areas that need urgent attention in the field will help focus funding topics, reduce 'research waste', improve the effectiveness of pain research and therapy and promote the uptake of research evidence.

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Background: Identifying the subset of patients at risk for developing persistent pain after surgery is clinically important as they could benefit from targeted prevention measures. In this prospective study, we investigated if the preoperative assessment of the individual susceptibility to developing experimentally induced secondary hyperalgesia is associated with post-thoracotomy pain at 2 months.

Methods: Forty-one patients scheduled to undergo a posterolateral thoracotomy were recruited before surgery and followed prospectively for 2 months.

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ILAE neonatal seizure framework to aide in determining etiology.

Epileptic Disord

November 2024

Clinical Neuroscience, UCL GOS Institute of Child Health and Department of Clinical Neurophysiology, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK.

Objective: To employ the neonatal seizure framework developed by the International League Against Epilepsy (ILAE) Neonatal Task force to assess its usefulness in determining the etiology of neonatal seizures.

Methods: The members of the ILAE Neonatal Task Force evaluated 157 seizures from 146 neonates to determine internal validity and associations between semiology and a specific etiology.

Results: Provoked neonatal electrographic and electroclinical seizures were due to multiple etiologies.

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Dissociable Effects of Urgency and Evidence Accumulation during Reaching Revealed by Dynamic Multisensory Integration.

eNeuro

December 2024

Institute of Information and Communication Technologies, Electronics and Applied Mathematics (ICTEAM), Université Catholique de Louvain, Louvain-la-Neuve 1348, Belgium

When making perceptual decisions, humans combine information across sensory modalities dependent on their respective uncertainties. However, it remains unknown how the brain integrates multisensory feedback during movement and which factors besides sensory uncertainty influence sensory contributions. We performed two reaching experiments on healthy adults to investigate whether movement corrections to combined visual and mechanical perturbations scale with visual uncertainty.

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Light exerts multiple non-image-forming biological effects on physiology including the stimulation of alertness and cognition. However, the subcortical circuitry underlying the stimulating impact of light is not established in humans. We used 7 Tesla functional magnetic resonance imaging to assess the impact of variations in light illuminance on the regional activity of the hypothalamus while healthy young adults (N=26; 16 women; 24.

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Our intuitive sense of number allows rapid estimation for the number of objects (numerosity) in a scene. How does the continuous nature of neural information processing create a discrete representation of number? A neurocomputational model with divisive normalization explains this process and existing data; however, a successful model should not only explain existing data but also generate novel predictions. Here, we experimentally test novel predictions of this model to evaluate its merit for explaining mechanisms of numerosity perception.

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How visual experience shapes body representation.

Cognition

January 2025

Institute of Neuroscience (IoNS), Université Catholique de Louvain, Belgium; Institute for Research in Psychological Sciences (IPSY), Université Catholique de Louvain, Belgium; HES-SO Valais-Wallis, The Sense Innovation and Research Center, Switzerland. Electronic address:

We do not have a veridical representation of our body in our mind. For instance, tactile distances of equal measure along the medial-lateral axis of our limbs are generally perceived as larger than those running along the proximal-distal axis. This anisotropy in tactile distances reflects distortions in body-shape representation, such that the body parts are perceived as wider than they are.

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Look out for the ball: visual processing for efficient ball catching.

J Neurophysiol

November 2024

Institute of Information, Communication Technologies and Applied Mathematics (ICTEAM), University of Louvain (UCLouvain), Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium.

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Humans preferentially rely on horizontal cues when recognizing face identity. The reasons for this preference are largely elusive. Past research has proposed the existence of two main sources of face identity information: shape and surface reflectance.

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Task-dependent coarticulation of movement sequences.

Elife

September 2024

Institute for Information and Communication Technologies, Electronics and Applied Mathematics (ICTEAM), Université Catholique de Louvain, Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium.

Article Synopsis
  • Everyday activities often combine individual actions into sequences, traditionally thought to be managed by a single motor command as proposed by classical theories.
  • Recent studies indicate that elements of these sequences may be executed independently, suggesting that both separate and coarticulated sequences can arise from the same underlying control system depending on task instructions.
  • Our human experiments in a two-reach sequence task support this model, showing that feedback mechanisms play a crucial role in coordinating actions, particularly in how the second action responds to the first under different conditions.
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Article Synopsis
  • The Social Odor Scale (SOS) is a 12-item questionnaire designed to assess how people perceive social odors from others, focusing on romantic partners, familiar people, and strangers.
  • The study aimed to validate the SOS in several languages (French, English, Dutch, Swedish, Chinese) and found that its structure remained consistent across these translations.
  • Results revealed differences in social odor awareness by language group, with Swedish participants showing the least awareness and Chinese participants the most, while geographical factors also influenced scores, linking higher latitudes to lower social odor awareness.
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  • Seizures trigger both sympathetic and parasympathetic autonomic symptoms, with the vagus nerve playing a crucial role in relaying information between the brain and organs, potentially aiding in seizure detection.
  • The study successfully developed a VENG detection algorithm that identified 65% of induced seizures in a rat model, demonstrating a mean detection delay of about 25 seconds but also highlighting that some seizures went undetected due to variability in detection parameters.
  • Statistical analysis revealed differences in brain wave activity (Delta, Theta, Beta bands) between detected and undetected seizures, indicating distinct seizure patterns may influence how autonomic responses are activated; however, the lack of respiration data points to future research needs.
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How pre-analytical conditions impact glucose measurement and (gestational) diabetes diagnosis: A real-world stability study and a call for harmonization.

Clin Chim Acta

August 2024

Department of Laboratory Medicine, Clinique St-Pierre, Ottignies, Belgium; Department of Laboratory Medicine, Cliniques Universitaires Saint-Luc, Bruxelles, Belgium. Electronic address:

Background And Aims: Since 2023, guidelines of the AACC/ADA recommend the use of citrate buffer-containing tubes as a first option for glucose measurement. This study aims to assess the pre-analytical stability of glucose under various conditions (room temperature (RT) or at 4 °C) and the potential real-world impact of introducing these tubes on (gestational) diabetes and IFG prevalence.

Materials And Methods: 25 healthy volunteers were sampled to assess glucose stability across time, at 4 °C and at RT, before and following centrifugation.

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Identifying responders to vagus nerve stimulation based on microstructural features of thalamocortical tracts in drug-resistant epilepsy.

Neurotherapeutics

September 2024

Epilepsy and Neurostimulation Lab, Institute of Neuroscience (IoNS), Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Catholic University of Louvain, 1200, Brussels, Belgium; Center for Refractory Epilepsy, Cliniques Universitaires Saint-Luc (CUSL), Department of Neurology, 1200, Brussels, Belgium.

Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates how Vagus Nerve Stimulation (VNS) can help treat Drug-Resistant Epilepsy (DRE) by examining the role of thalamocortical tracts in the brain's response to the treatment.
  • Using advanced MRI techniques, researchers analyzed the microstructural features of thalamocortical tracts in 18 DRE patients, identifying differences between those who responded to VNS and those who did not.
  • A Support Vector Machine model showed a high classification accuracy (94.12%), indicating that certain structural brain characteristics are associated with treatment outcomes, with clinical factors not significantly enhancing the predictive ability.
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Background: Alterations in higher-order social cognition are well documented in individuals with severe alcohol use disorder (SAUD). However, the basic mechanisms underpinning them are not well understood. This knowledge gap hampers the development of targeted therapeutic interventions.

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There are currently no established biomarkers for predicting the therapeutic effectiveness of Vagus Nerve Stimulation (VNS). Given that neural desynchronization is a pivotal mechanism underlying VNS action, EEG synchronization measures could potentially serve as predictive biomarkers of VNS response. Notably, an increased brain synchronization in delta band has been observed during sleep-potentially due to an activation of thalamocortical circuitry, and interictal epileptiform discharges are more frequently observed during sleep.

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Electrophysiological responses of audiovisual integration from infancy to adulthood.

Brain Cogn

August 2024

Neurodevelopmental Optical Imaging Laboratory (LION Lab), Sainte-Justine University Hospital Research Centre, Montreal, QC, Canada; Cerebrum, Department of Psychology, University of Montreal, Montreal, Qc, Canada. Electronic address:

Our ability to merge information from different senses into a unified percept is a crucial perceptual process for efficient interaction with our multisensory environment. Yet, the developmental process underlying how the brain implements multisensory integration (MSI) remains poorly known. This cross-sectional study aims to characterize the developmental patterns of audiovisual events in 131 individuals aged from 3 months to 30 years.

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Bimanual coordinated motor skill learning in patients with a chronic cerebellar stroke.

Exp Brain Res

June 2024

Stroke Unit, Motor Learning Lab, Neurology Department, CHU UCL Namur (Godinne)/UCLouvain, Yvoir, Belgium.

Cerebellar strokes induce coordination disorders that can affect activities of daily living. Evidence-based neurorehabilitation programs are founded on motor learning principles. The cerebellum is a key neural structure in motor learning.

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Objectives: We systematically reviewed the reliability and measurement error of exercise-induced hypoalgesia (EIH) in pain-free adults and in adults with musculoskeletal (MSK) pain.

Methods: We searched EMBASE, PUBMED, SCOPUS, CINAHL, and PSYCINFO from inception to November 2021 (updated in February 2024). In addition, manual searches of the grey literature were conducted in March 2022, September 2023, and February 2024.

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Finger-counting plays a crucial role in grounding and establishing mathematics, one of the most abstract domains of human cognition. While the combination of visual and proprioceptive information enables the coordination of finger movements, it was recently suggested that the emergence of finger-counting primarily relies on visual cues. In this study, we aimed to directly test this assumption by examining whether explicit finger-counting training (through tactile stimulation) may assist visually impaired children in overcoming their difficulties in learning mathematics.

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Empathy in family medicine postgraduate education: A mixed studies systematic review.

Med Teach

March 2024

Department of Family Medicine, School of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, McGill University, Montreal, Canada.

Purpose: Empathy is an important construct in patient-physician relationships, particularly critical in family physicians' daily practice. We aimed to understand how empathy has been conceived and integrated into family medicine postgraduate training.

Materials And Methods: Medline, PsyINFO, and Embase were searched in this systematic mixed studies systematic review.

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This study investigates the dose-dependent EEG effects of Vagus Nerve Stimulation (VNS) in patients with drug-resistant epilepsy. This research examines how varying VNS intensities impacts EEG power spectrum and synchronization in a cohort of 28 patients. Patients were categorized into responders, partial-responders, and non-responders based on seizure frequency reduction.

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The ability to reliably discriminate vocal expressions of emotion is crucial to engage in successful social interactions. This process is arguably more crucial for blind individuals, since they cannot extract social information from faces and bodies, and therefore chiefly rely on voices to infer the emotional state of their interlocutors. Blind have demonstrated superior abilities in several aspects of auditory perception, but research on their ability to discriminate vocal features is still scarce and has provided unclear results.

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