257 results match your criteria: "Integrative Neuroscience and Cognition Center.[Affiliation]"
Brain Struct Funct
November 2024
Wellcome Centre for Integrative Neuroimaging, Centre for Functional MRI of the Brain (FMRIB), Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences, John Radcliffe Hospital, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
J Cogn Neurosci
January 2024
Université Paris Cité, CNRS, Integrative Neuroscience and Cognition Center, Paris, France.
Visual perception waxes and wanes periodically over time at low frequencies (theta: 4-7 Hz; alpha: 8-13 Hz), creating "perceptual cycles." These perceptual cycles can be induced when stimulating the brain with a flickering visual stimulus at the theta or alpha frequency. Here, we took advantage of the well-known organization of the visual system into retinotopic maps (topographic correspondence between visual and cortical spaces) to assess the spatial organization of induced perceptual cycles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnimals (Basel)
September 2023
Univ Rennes, Normandie Univ, CNRS, EthoS (Éthologie Animale et Humaine)-UMR 6552, 35000 Rennes, France.
(1) Background: Since antiquity, it is considered that sounds influence human emotional states and health. Acoustic enrichment has also been proposed for domestic animals. However, in both humans and animals, effects vary according to the type of sound.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCereb Cortex
October 2023
Department of Biomedical Engineering, National University of Singapore, 4 Engineering Drive 3, Singapore 117583, Singapore.
It is well known that functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is a widely used tool for studying brain activity. Recent research has shown that fluctuations in fMRI data can reflect functionally meaningful patterns of brain activity within the white matter. We leveraged resting-state fMRI from an adolescent population to characterize large-scale white matter functional gradients and their formation during adolescence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInfancy
September 2023
Marian Wright Edelman Institute, San Francisco State University, San Francisco, California, USA.
Although the arms participate in many forms of human locomotion, we know very little about when arm movements emerge during locomotor development. Here we investigated whether newborns would make tactile arm stepping movements when we supported them almost horizontally so their hands touched a surface and blocked their leg movements. Building off prior work showing that newborns make more crawling and air stepping leg movements when exposed to optic flows specifying forward and backward self-translation, we also examined whether newborns would make more tactile arm steps when exposed to forward and backward optic flows compared to a random optic flow that did not specify translation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLearn Mem
September 2023
Institute of Medical Psychology and Behavioral Neurobiology, Eberhard-Karls-Universität, Tübingen 72076, Germany
Performing a motor response to a sensory stimulus creates a memory trace whose behavioral correlates are classically investigated in terms of repetition priming effects. Such stimulus-response learning entails two types of associations that are partly independent: (1) an association between the stimulus and the motor response and (2) an association between the stimulus and the classification task in which it is encountered. Here, we tested whether sleep supports long-lasting stimulus-response learning on a task requiring participants (1) for establishing stimulus-classification associations to classify presented objects along two different dimensions ("size" and "mechanical") and (2) as motor response (action) to respond with either the left or right index finger.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
September 2023
Department of Psychology, Queens University, Kingston, ON, Canada.
Recent theories of cortical organisation suggest features of function emerge from the spatial arrangement of brain regions. For example, association cortex is located furthest from systems involved in action and perception. Association cortex is also 'interdigitated' with adjacent regions having different patterns of functional connectivity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTher Drug Monit
April 2024
Service de Pharmacologie Clinique et Pharmacovigilance, Hôpital de la Timone, Marseille Cedex 5 13385, France.
Background: Therapeutic drug monitoring is recommended for several psychotropic drugs, particularly in sensitive situations such as the peripartum period. This study aimed to develop an ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography-tandem spectrometry method for the simultaneous quantification of 14 psychotropic drugs in human plasma and 4 in breast milk.
Methods: The samples were precipitated with methanol containing the stable isotope-labeled analogs.
Brain
February 2024
Brain and Mind Centre, School of Medical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of Sydney, Sydney 2050, Australia.
Visual hallucinations in Parkinson's disease can be viewed from a systems-level perspective, whereby dysfunctional communication between brain networks responsible for perception predisposes a person to hallucinate. To this end, abnormal functional interactions between higher-order and primary sensory networks have been implicated in the pathophysiology of visual hallucinations in Parkinson's disease, however the precise signatures remain to be determined. Dimensionality reduction techniques offer a novel means for simplifying the interpretation of multidimensional brain imaging data, identifying hierarchical patterns in the data that are driven by both within- and between-functional network changes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTrends Cogn Sci
November 2023
School of Psychology, University of Surrey, Guildford, UK.
Semantic cognition and numerical cognition are dissociable faculties with separable neural mechanisms. However, recent advances in the cortical topography of the temporal and parietal lobes have revealed a common organisational principle for the neural representations of semantics and numbers. We discuss their convergence and divergence through the prism of topography.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Opin Neurobiol
October 2023
Institut des Neurosciences Cognitives et Intégratives d'Aquitaine, CNRS Unité Mixte de Recherche 5287, Université de Bordeaux, 33706 Bordeaux, France. Electronic address:
Neural replicas of the spinal motor commands that drive locomotion have become increasingly recognized as an intrinsic neural mechanism for producing gaze-stabilizing eye movements that counteract the perturbing effects of self-generated head/body motion. By pre-empting reactive signaling by motion-detecting vestibular sensors, such locomotor efference copies (ECs) provide estimates of the sensory consequences of behavioral action. Initially demonstrated in amphibian larvae during spontaneous fictive swimming in deafferented in vitro preparations, direct evidence for a contribution of locomotor ECs to gaze stabilization now extends to the ancestral lamprey and to tetrapod adult frogs and mice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Exp Child Psychol
January 2024
Department of Psychology, University of Milano-Bicocca, 20126 Milan, Italy. Electronic address:
Adults' concurrent processing of numerical and action information yields bidirectional interference effects consistent with a cognitive link between these two systems of representation. This link is in place early in life: infants create expectations of congruency across numerical and action-related stimuli (i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
August 2023
Michael Smith Laboratories, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Growing evidence is demonstrating the connection between the microbiota gut-brain axis and neurodevelopment. Microbiota colonization occurs before the maturation of many neural systems and is linked to brain health. Because of this it has been hypothesized that the early microbiome interactions along the gut-brain axis evolved to promote advanced cognitive functions and behaviors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExp Brain Res
September 2023
High Institute of Sport and Physical Education of Gafsa, Gafsa, Tunisia.
The goal of the present study was to compare the choice of foot of right-footed children with varying strengths of foot preference when performing two tasks of different levels of complexity at three spatial locations. 30 right-footed children were tested. The results showed that the general tendency to use one's preferred foot to interact with an object is more or less pronounced depending on the object's location and the complexity of the task.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMotor variability is a fundamental feature of developing systems allowing motor exploration and learning. In human infants, leg movements involve a small number of basic coordination patterns called locomotor primitives, but whether and when motor variability could emerge from these primitives remains unknown. Here we longitudinally followed 18 infants on 2-3 time points between birth (~4 days old) and walking onset (~14 months old) and recorded the activity of their leg muscles during locomotor or rhythmic movements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neuroeng Rehabil
July 2023
Institute of Psychiatry and Neuroscience of Paris, INSERM U1266, Université Paris Cité, 102-108 Rue de La Santé, 75014, Paris, France.
Objective: To compare the efficacy of Dextrain Manipulandum™ training of dexterity components such as force control and independent finger movements, to dose-matched conventional therapy (CT) post-stroke.
Methods: A prospective, single-blind, pilot randomized clinical trial was conducted. Chronic-phase post-stroke patients with mild-to-moderate dexterity impairment (Box and Block Test (BBT) > 1) received 12 sessions of Dextrain or CT.
bioRxiv
July 2023
Department of Psychology, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA.
The functional properties of the human brain arise, in part, from the vast assortment of cell types that pattern the cortex. The cortical sheet can be broadly divided into distinct networks, which are further embedded into processing streams, or gradients, that extend from unimodal systems through higher-order association territories. Here, using transcriptional data from the Allen Human Brain Atlas, we demonstrate that imputed cell type distributions are spatially coupled to the functional organization of cortex, as estimated through fMRI.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCell Rep
July 2023
Institut du Cerveau-Paris Brain Institute (ICM), Sorbonne Université, Inserm, CNRS, Hôpital Pitié-Salpêtrière, Paris, France. Electronic address:
Sensitivity to numbers is a crucial cognitive ability. The lack of experimental models amenable to systematic genetic and neural manipulation has precluded discovering neural circuits required for numerical cognition. Here, we demonstrate that Drosophila flies spontaneously prefer sets containing larger numbers of objects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychiatry
June 2023
INSERM U1266 Institut de Psychiatrie et Neurosciences de Paris, Paris, France.
Neurophotonics
April 2023
Université Paris Cité, Integrative Neuroscience and Cognition Center, CNRS, Paris, France.
Functional Near-Infrared Spectroscopy (fNIRS) is a non-invasive optical technique that measures cerebral hemodynamics across multiple regions of interest, and thereby characterises brain functional activation. Since its first description in 1993, fNIRS has undergone substantial developments in hardware, analysis techniques, and applications. Thirty years later, this technique is significantly enchancing our understanding in diverse areas of neuroscience research such as neurodevelopment, cognitive neuroscience, psychiatric disorders, neurodegenerative conditions, and brain injury management in intensive care settings.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Hum Behav
August 2023
Aix Marseille Université, CNRS, LPC, Marseille, France.
Cognition
September 2023
Integrative Neuroscience and Cognition Center, CNRS & Université Paris Cité, Paris, France; Department of Social and Developmental Psychology, University of Padua, Padua, Italy; Padova Neuroscience Center, University of Padua, Padua, Italy.
In order to acquire grammar, infants need to extract regularities from the linguistic input. From birth, infants can detect regularities in speech based on identity relations, and show strong neural activation to syllable sequences containing adjacent repetitions of identical syllables (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Pediatr
June 2023
Université Paris Cité, CNRS, Integrative Neuroscience and Cognition Center (INCC), Paris, France.
Aim: To examine the effects of an early home-based 8-week crawling intervention performed by trained therapists on the motor and general development of very premature infants during the first year of life.
Methods: At term-equivalent age, immediately following discharge from the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU), we randomly allocated 44 premature infants born before 32 weeks' gestation without major brain damage to one of three conditions in our intervention study: crawling on a mini-skateboard, the Crawliskate (Crawli), prone positioning control (Mattress), or standard care (Control). The Crawli and Mattress groups received 5 min daily at-home training administered by trained therapists for 8 consecutive weeks upon discharge from the NICU.
Sci Rep
June 2023
Institut des Systèmes Intelligents et de Robotique, ISIR, CNRS, Sorbonne Université, 4 Place Jussieu, 75005, Paris, France.
Information can be perceived from a multiplicity of spatial perspectives, which is central to effectively understanding and interacting with our environment and other people. Interoception, the sense of the physiological state of our body, is also a fundamental component contributing to our perception. However, whether the perception of our inner body signals influences our ability to adopt and flexibly change between different spatial perspectives remains poorly understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Child Lang
September 2024
Department of Human Sciences, University of Verona, Italy.
This study is a validation of the LENA system for the Italian language. In Study 1, to test LENA's accuracy, seventy-two 10-minute samples extracted from daylong LENA recordings were manually transcribed for 12 children longitudinally observed at 1;0 and 2;0. We found strong correlations between LENA and human estimates in the number of Adult Word Count (AWC) and Child Vocalisations Count (CVC) and a weak correlation between LENA and human estimates in Conversational Turns Count (CTC).
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