36 results match your criteria: "University of Jena School of Medicine[Affiliation]"
Iperception
September 2020
Experimental Aesthetics Group, Institute of Anatomy, Jena University Hospital, University of Jena School of Medicine.
Curvilinearity is a perceptual feature that robustly predicts preference ratings for a variety of visual stimuli. The predictive effect of curved/angular shape overlaps, to a large degree, with regularities in second-order edge-orientation entropy, which captures how independent edge orientations are distributed across an image. For some complex line patterns, edge-orientation entropy is actually a better predictor for what human observers like than curved/angular shape.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIperception
May 2020
Experimental Aesthetics Group, Institute of Anatomy I, University of Jena School of Medicine.
In recent years, there has been an increasing number of studies on objective image properties in visual artworks. Little is known, however, about how these image properties emerge while artists create their artworks. In order to study this matter, I produced five colored abstract artworks by myself and recorded state images at all stages of their creation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIperception
June 2018
Experimental Aesthetics Group, Institute of Anatomy I, University of Jena School of Medicine, Germany; Laboratory of Experimental Psychology, Brain & Cognition, University of Leuven (KU Leuven), Belgium.
Most recent studies in experimental aesthetics have focused on the cognitive processing of visual artworks. In contrast, the perception of formal compositional features of artworks has been studied less extensively. Here, we investigated whether fast and automatic processing of artistic image composition can lead to a stable and consistent aesthetic evaluation when cognitive processing is minimized or absent.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Cell Mol Med
March 2018
Henan Key Laboratory of Medical Tissue Regeneration, Stem Cells & Biotherapy Engineering Research Center of Henan, College of Life Science and Technology, Xinxiang Medical University, Xinxiang, China.
Successful isolation of human endometrial stem cells from menstrual blood, namely menstrual blood-derived endometrial stem cells (MenSCs), has provided enticing alternative seed cells for stem cell-based therapy. MenSCs are enriched in the self-regenerative tissue, endometrium, which shed along the periodic menstrual blood and thus their acquisition involves no physical invasiveness. However, the impact of the storage duration of menstrual blood prior to stem cell isolation, the age of the donor, the number of passages on the self-renewing of MenSCs, the paracrine production of biological factors in MenSCs and expression of adhesion molecules on MenSCs remain elusive.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Neurosci
October 2017
Experimental Aesthetics Group, Institute of Anatomy I, Jena University Hospital, University of Jena School of Medicine, Jena, Germany.
Several statistical image properties have been associated with large subsets of traditional visual artworks. Here, we investigate some of these properties in three categories of art that differ in artistic claim and prestige: (1) Traditional art of different cultural origin from established museums and art collections (oil paintings and graphic art of Western provenance, Islamic book illustration and Chinese paintings), (2) from two museums that collect contemporary artworks of lesser importance (© Museum Of Bad Art [MOBA], Somerville, and Official Bad Art Museum of Art [OBAMA], Seattle), and (3) twentieth century abstract art of Western provenance from two prestigious museums (Tate Gallery and Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen). We measured the following four statistical image properties: the fractal dimension (a measure relating to subjective complexity); self-similarity (a measure of how much the sections of an image resemble the image as a whole), 1st-order entropy of edge orientations (a measure of how uniformly different orientations are represented in an image); and 2nd-order entropy of edge orientations (a measure of how independent edge orientations are across an image).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuroscience
September 2017
College of Life Science and Technology, Henan Key Laboratory of Medical Tissue Regeneration, Xinxiang Medical University, Xinxiang 453003, China; Institute of Anatomy I, University of Jena School of Medicine, Jena University Hospital, Jena 07743, Germany; College of Biomedical Engineering, Xinxiang Medical University, Xinxiang 453003, China. Electronic address:
Few researchers have investigated the direction of commissural axon projections on the contralateral side of the vertebrate embryonic spinal cord, especially for comparison between its different regions. In this study, pCAGGS-GFP plasmid expression was limited to different regions of the chicken embryonic spinal cord (cervical, anterior limb, anterior thorax, posterior thorax and posterior limb) at E3 using in ovo electroporation with modified electrodes and optimal electroporation conditions. Then open-book technique was performed at E6 to analyze the direction of axon projections in different spinal cord regions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVision Res
April 2017
Laboratory of Experimental Psychology, Brain & Cognition, University of Leuven (KU Leuven), Tiensestraat 102, B-3000 Leuven, Belgium. Electronic address:
We asked whether "good composition" or "visual rightness" of artworks manifest themselves in a particular arrangement of basic image features, such as oriented luminance edges. Specifically, we analysed the layout of edge orientations in images from a collection of >1600 paintings of Western provenance by comparing pairwise the orientation of each edge in an image with the orientations of all other edges in the same image. From the resulting orientation histograms, we calculated Shannon entropy and parallelism (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Comp Neurol
May 2017
Institute of Anatomy I, University of Jena School of Medicine, Jena University Hospital, Jena, Germany.
Pax3 is a transcription factor that belongs to the paired box family. In the developing spinal cord it is expressed in the dorsal commissural neurons, which project ascending axons contralaterally to form proper spinal cord-brain circuitry. While it has been shown that Pax3 induces cell aggregation in vitro, little is known about the role of Pax3 in cell aggregation and spinal circuit formation in vivo.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Cell Mol Med
May 2017
College of Life Science and Technology, Henan Key Laboratory of Medical Tissue Regeneration, Xinxiang Medical University, Xinxiang, China.
Niemann-Pick disease, type C1 (Npc1), is an atypical lysosomal storage disorder caused by autosomal recessive inheritance of mutations in Npc1 gene. In the Npc1 mutant mice (Npc1 ), the initial manifestation is enlarged spleen, concomitant with free cholesterol accumulation. Telocytes (TCs), a novel type of interstitial cell, exist in a variety of tissues including spleen, presumably thought to be involved in many biological processes such as nursing stem cells and recruiting inflammatory cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
July 2016
Experimental Aesthetics Group, Institute of Anatomy I, University of Jena School of Medicine, Jena University Hospital Jena, Germany.
One of the major challenges in experimental aesthetics is the uncertainty of the terminology used in experiments. In this study, we recorded terms that are spontaneously used by participants to describe abstract artworks and studied their relation to the second-order statistical image properties of the same artworks (Experiment 1). We found that the usage frequency of some structure-describing terms correlates with statistical image properties, such as PHOG Self-Similarity, Anisotropy and Complexity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Hum Neurosci
January 2016
Experimental Aesthetics Group, Institute of Anatomy I, University of Jena School of Medicine, Jena University Hospital Jena, Germany.
J Comp Neurol
April 2016
Institute of Anatomy I, University of Jena School of Medicine, Jena University Hospital, D-07743, Jena, Germany.
Pax3 and Pax7 are closely related transcription factors that are widely expressed in the developing nervous system and somites. In the CNS, both genes are expressed in the dorsal part of the neural tube during development. Pax3 and Pax7 are involved in the sonic hedgehog (Shh) signaling pathway and are inhibited by Shh overexpression.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Hum Neurosci
May 2015
Experimental Aesthetics Group, Institute of Anatomy I, University of Jena School of Medicine, Jena University Hospital Jena, Germany.
In this work, I propose a model of visual aesthetic experience that combines formalist and contextual aspects of aesthetics. The model distinguishes between two modes of processing. First, perceptual processing is based on the intrinsic form of an artwork, which may or may not be beautiful.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBr J Psychol
November 2014
Experimental Aesthetics Group, Institute of Anatomy I, University of Jena School of Medicine, Jena, Germany.
This article is a commentary on 'Ten years of a model of aesthetic appreciation and aesthetic judgments: The aesthetic episode - developments and challenges in empirical aesthetics' (Leder & Nadal, 2014, this issue). It focuses on the importance of beauty in aesthetic appreciation and aesthetic judgments. Beauty is considered as a formal inherent property of visual stimuli that has the potential to elicit visual pleasure by direct sensory stimulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Neuroanat
April 2014
Institute of Anatomy I, University of Jena School of Medicine - Jena University Hospital Jena, Germany.
Classic cadherins belong to the family of cadherin genes and play important roles in neurogenesis, neuron migration, and axon growth. In the present study, we compared the expression patterns of 10 classic cadherins (Cdh2, Cdh4, Cdh6, Cdh7, Cdh8, Cdh9, Cdh11, Cdh12, Cdh18, and Cdh20) in the developing chicken spinal cord (SP) by in situ hybridization. Our results indicate that each of the investigated cadherins exhibits a spatially restricted and temporally regulated pattern of expression.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Hum Neurosci
April 2014
Experimental Aesthetics Group, Institute of Anatomy I, Jena University Hospital, University of Jena School of Medicine Jena, Germany.
In this study, we combined the behavioral and objective approach in the field of empirical aesthetics. First, we studied the perception of beauty by investigating shifts in evaluation on perceived beauty of abstract artworks (Experiment 1). Because the participants showed heterogeneous individual preferences for the paintings, we divided them into seven clusters for the test.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIperception
December 2013
Institute of Anatomy I, Jena University Hospital, University of Jena School of Medicine, Teichgraben 7, 07740 Jena, Germany; and DFG Research Unit Person Perception, University of Jena, Leutragraben 1, 07743 Jena, Germany; e-mail:
We studied the neural coding of facial attractiveness by investigating effects of adaptation to attractive and unattractive human faces on the perceived attractiveness of veridical human face pictures (Experiment 1) and art portraits (Experiment 2). Experiment 1 revealed a clear pattern of contrastive aftereffects. Relative to a pre-adaptation baseline, the perceived attractiveness of faces was increased after adaptation to unattractive faces, and was decreased after adaptation to attractive faces.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
November 2013
Experimental Aesthetics Group, Institute of Anatomy I, University of Jena School of Medicine, Jena University Hospital Jena, Germany.
Frames provide a visual link between artworks and their surround. We asked how image properties change as an observer zooms out from viewing a painting alone, to viewing the painting with its frame and, finally, the framed painting in its museum environment (museum scene). To address this question, we determined three higher-order image properties that are based on histograms of oriented luminance gradients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
November 2013
Experimental Aesthetics Group, Institute of Anatomy I, University of Jena School of Medicine, Jena University Hospital Jena, Germany.
Most visual advertisements are designed to attract attention, often by inducing a pleasant impression in human observers. Accordingly, results from brain imaging studies show that advertisements can activate the brain's reward circuitry, which is also involved in the perception of other visually pleasing images, such as artworks. At the image level, large subsets of artworks are characterized by specific statistical image properties, such as a high self-similarity and intermediate complexity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Hum Neurosci
April 2013
Experimental Aesthetics Group, Institute of Anatomy I, University of Jena School of Medicine, Jena University Hospital Jena, Germany.
The spatial characteristics of letters and their influence on readability and letter identification have been intensely studied during the last decades. There have been few studies, however, on statistical image properties that reflect more global aspects of text, for example properties that may relate to its aesthetic appeal. It has been shown that natural scenes and a large variety of visual artworks possess a scale-invariant Fourier power spectrum that falls off linearly with increasing frequency in log-log plots.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGene Expr Patterns
September 2013
Institute of Anatomy I, University of Jena School of Medicine, Jena University Hospital, Teichgraben 7, D-07743 Jena, Germany.
The expression of the chicken delta-protocadherin (Pcdh) subfamily was investigated in the developing feather buds of the chicken. The expression profiles of the eight investigated Pcdhs in the cells and tissues of the feather buds differ from each other. Pcdh1, Pcdh7, Pcdh8 and Pcdh10 are differentially expressed in the epidermis of the feather bud.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDev Genes Evol
November 2012
Institute of Anatomy I, University of Jena School of Medicine, Jena University Hospital, Jena, Germany.
Housekeeping genes are widely used as internal controls for gene expression normalization for western blotting, northern blotting, RT-PCR, etc. They are generally thought to be expressed in all cells of the organism at similar levels because it is assumed that these genes are required for the maintenance of basic cellular function as constitutive genes. However, real-time RT-PCR experiments revealed that their expression may vary depending on the developmental stage, type of tissue examined, experimental condition, and so on.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Anat
June 2012
Institute of Anatomy I, University of Jena School of Medicine, Jena University Hospital, Teichgraben 7, D-07743 Jena, Germany.
During the period of 2004-2005, a group of anatomists and historians investigated the origin of dead bodies received by the anatomical institute of the University of Jena in the Third Reich. Between 1933 and 1945, the institute received the bodies of 203 executed persons, most of whom had been sentenced to death for relatively minor offenses or opposition to National Socialist (NS) regulations. Moreover, the institute received about 200 bodies of possible "euthanasia" victims from nearby nursing homes and mental institutions, and several dozen dead bodies of forced laborers from Eastern Europe.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Comp Neurol
May 2012
Institute of Anatomy I, University of Jena School of Medicine, Jena University Hospital, D-07743 Jena, Germany.
Protocadherins constitute the largest subfamily of cadherin genes and are widely expressed in the nervous system. In the present study, we cloned eight members of the delta-protocadherin subfamily of cadherins (Pcdh1, Pcdh7, Pcdh8, Pcdh9, Pcdh10, Pcdh17, Pcdh18, and Pcdh19) from the chicken, and investigated their expression in the developing chicken spinal cord by in situ hybridization. Our results showed that each of the investigated delta-protocadherins exhibits a spatially restricted and temporally regulated pattern of expression.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDev Dyn
September 2011
Institute of Anatomy I, University of Jena School of Medicine, Jena University Hospital, Jena, Germany.
The expression of seven members of the ADAM family was investigated by in situ hybridization in the developing feather buds of chicken. The expression profiles of the ADAMs in the cells and tissues of the feather buds differ from each other. ADAM9, ADAM10, and ADAM17 are expressed in the epidermis of the feather bud, whereas ADAM23 expression is restricted to the bud crest, with a distribution similar to that of sonic hedgehog.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF