186 research outputs found
Temporal and spatial neural dynamics in the perception of basic emotions from complex scenes
The different temporal dynamics of emotions are critical to understand their evolutionary role in the regulation of interactions with the surrounding environment. Here, we investigated the temporal dynamics underlying the perception of four basic emotions from complex scenes varying in valence and arousal (fear, disgust, happiness and sadness) with the millisecond time resolution of Electroencephalography (EEG). Event-related potentials were computed and each emotion showed a specific temporal profile, as revealed by distinct time segments of significant differences from the neutral scenes. Fear perception elicited significant activity at the earliest time segments, followed by disgust, happiness and sadness. Moreover, fear, disgust and happiness were characterized by two time segments of significant activity, whereas sadness showed only one long-latency time segment of activity. Multidimensional scaling was used to assess the correspondence between neural temporal dynamics and the subjective experience elicited by the four emotions in a subsequent behavioral task. We found a high coherence between these two classes of data, indicating that psychological categories defining emotions have a close correspondence at the brain level in terms of neural temporal dynamics. Finally, we localized the brain regions of time-dependent activity for each emotion and time segment with the low-resolution brain electromagnetic tomography. Fear and disgust showed widely distributed activations, predominantly in the right hemisphere. Happiness activated a number of areas mostly in the left hemisphere, whereas sadness showed a limited number of active areas at late latency. The present findings indicate that the neural signature of basic emotions can emerge as the byproduct of dynamic spatiotemporal brain networks as investigated with millisecond-range resolution, rather than in time-independent areas involved uniquely in the processing one specific emotion. Keywords: basic emotions, EEG, LORETA, ERP, IAPS, time, rapid perceptio
Meta-analytic clustering of the insular cortex: Characterizing the meta-analytic connectivity of the insula when involved in active tasks
The human insula has been parcellated on the basis of resting state functional connectivity and diffusion tensor imaging. Little is known about the organization of the insula when involved in active tasks. We explored this issue using a novel meta-analytic clustering approach. We queried the BrainMap database asking for papers involving normal subjects that recorded activations in the insular cortex, retrieving 1305 papers, involving 22,872 subjects and a total of 2957 foci. Data were analyzed with several different methodologies, some of which expressly designed for this work. We used meta-analytic connectivity modeling and meta-analytic clustering of data obtained from the BrainMap database. We performed cluster analysis to subdivide the insula in areas with homogeneous connectivity, and density analysis of the activated foci using Voronoi tessellation. Our results confirm and extend previous findings obtained investigating the resting state connectivity of the anterior–posterior and left–right insulae. They indicate, for the first time, that some blocks of the anterior insula play the role of hubs between the anterior and the posterior insulae, as confirmed by their activation in several different paradigms. This finding supports the view that the network to which the anterior insula belongs is related to saliency detection. The insulae of both sides can be parcellated in two clusters, the anterior and the posterior: the anterior is characterized by an attentional pattern of connectivity with frontal, cingulate, parietal, cerebellar and anterior insular highly connected areas, whereas the posterior is characterized by a more local connectivity pattern with connections to sensorimotor, temporal and posterior cingulate areas. This antero–posterior subdivision, better characterized on the right side, results sharper with the connectivity based clusterization than with the behavioral based clusterization. The circuits belonging to the anterior insula are very homogeneous and their blocks in multidimensional scaling of MACM-based profiles are in central position, whereas those belonging to the posterior insula, especially on the left, are located at the periphery and sparse, thus suggesting that the posterior circuits bear a more heterogeneous connectivity. The anterior cluster is mostly activated by cognition, whereas the posterior is mostly activated by interoception, perception and emotion
Multivariate analysis of brain metabolism reveals chemotherapy effects on prefrontal cerebellar system when related to dorsal attention network
BACKGROUND: Functional brain changes induced by chemotherapy are still not well characterized. We used a novel approach with a multivariate technique to analyze brain resting state [(18) F]FDG-PET in patients with lymphoma, to explore differences on cerebral metabolic glucose rate between chemotherapy-treated and non-treated patients. METHODS: PET/CT scan was performed on 28 patients, with 14 treated with systemic chemotherapy. We used a support vector machine (SVM) classification, extracting the mean metabolism from the metabolic patterns, or networks, that discriminate the two groups. We calculated the correct classifications of the two groups using the mean metabolic values extracted by the networks. RESULTS: The SVM classification analysis gave clear-cut patterns that discriminate the two groups. The first, hypometabolic network in chemotherapy patients, included mostly prefrontal cortex and cerebellar areas (central executive network, CEN, and salience network, SN); the second, which is equal between groups, included mostly parietal areas and the frontal eye field (dorsal attention network, DAN). The correct classification membership to chemotherapy or not chemotherapy-treated patients, using only one network, was of 50% to 68%; however, when all the networks were used together, it reached 80%. CONCLUSIONS: The evidenced networks were related to attention and executive functions, with CEN and SN more specialized in shifting, inhibition and monitoring, DAN in orienting attention. Only using DAN as a reference point, indicating the global frontal functioning before chemotherapy, we could better classify the subjects. The emerging concept consists in the importance of the investigation of brain intrinsic networks and their relations in chemotherapy cognitive induced changes
Identification of medium mass (A=60-80) ejectiles from 15 MeV/nucleon peripheral heavy-ion collisions with the MAGNEX large-acceptance spectrometer
An approach to identify medium-mass ejectiles from peripheral heavy-ion
reactions in the energy region of 15 MeV/nucleon is developed for data obtained
with a large acceptance magnetic spectrometer. This spectrometer is equipped
with a focal plane multidetector, providing position, angle, energy loss and
residual energy of the ions along with measurement of the time-of-flight. Ion
trajectory reconstruction is performed at high order and ion mass is obtained
with a resolution of better than 1/150. For the unambiguous particle
identification however, the reconstruction of both the atomic number Z and the
ionic charge q of the ions is critical and it is suggested, within this work,
to be performed prior to mass identification. The new proposed method was
successfully applied to MAGNEX spectrometer data, for identifying neutron-rich
ejectiles related to multinucleon transfer generated in the 70Zn+ 64Ni
collision at 15 MeV/nucleon. This approach opens up the possibility of
employing heavy-ion reactions with medium-mass beams below the Fermi energy
(i.e., in the region 15-25 MeV/nucleon) in conjunction with large acceptance
ray tracing spectrometers, first, to study the mechanism(s) of nucleon transfer
in these reactions and, second, to produce and study very neutron-rich or even
new nuclides in previously unexplored regions of the nuclear landscape.Comment: 6 pages, 6figure
Characterization of a gas detector prototype based on Thick-GEM for the MAGNEX focal plane detector
A new gas detector prototype for the upgrade of the focal plane detector of
the MAGNEX large-acceptance magnetic spectrometer has been developed and tested
in view of the NUMEN project. It has been designed to operate at low gas
pressure for detecting medium to heavy ions in the energy range between 15 and
60 AMeV. It is a drift chamber based on Multi-layer Thick-GEM (M-THGEM) as
electron multiplication technology. Tests with two different M-THGEM layouts
have been performed using both a radioactive -particle source and
accelerated heavy-ion beams. The characterization of the detector in terms of
measured currents that flow through the electrodes as a function of different
parameters, including applied voltages, gas pressure and rate of incident
particle, is described. The gain and ion backflow properties have been studied
Inflammatory macrophages reprogram to immunosuppression by reducing mitochondrial translation
Acute inflammation can either resolve through immunosuppression or persist, leading to chronic inflammation. These transitions are driven by distinct molecular and metabolic reprogramming of immune cells. The anti-diabetic drug Metformin inhibits acute and chronic inflammation through mechanisms still not fully understood. Here, we report that the anti-inflammatory and reactive-oxygen-species-inhibiting effects of Metformin depend on the expression of the plasticity factor ZEB1 in macrophages. Using mice lacking Zeb1 in their myeloid cells and human patient samples, we show that ZEB1 plays a dual role, being essential in both initiating and resolving inflammation by inducing macrophages to transition into an immunosuppressed state. ZEB1 mediates these diverging effects in inflammation and immunosuppression by modulating mitochondrial content through activation of autophagy and inhibition of mitochondrial protein translation. During the transition from inflammation to immunosuppression, Metformin mimics the metabolic reprogramming of myeloid cells induced by ZEB1. Mechanistically, in immunosuppression, ZEB1 inhibits amino acid uptake, leading to downregulation of mTORC1 signalling and a decrease in mitochondrial translation in macrophages. These results identify ZEB1 as a driver of myeloid cell metabolic plasticity, suggesting that targeting its expression and function could serve as a strategy to modulate dysregulated inflammation and immunosuppression.The study was conducted at IDIBAPS’ Centre de
Recerca Biomèdica Cellex building, which was partly funded by the
Cellex Foundation. The different parts of this study were independently
funded by grants to AP from the Leo Foundation (LF-OC-19-000166), the
Catalan Agency for Management of University and Research Grants
(AGAUR) (2017-SGR-1174 and 2021-SGR-01328), and the Spanish State
Research Agency (AEI) of the Ministry of Science and Innovation
(MICINN) (PID2020-116338RB-I00) as part of MICINN’s National Scientific
and Technical Research and Innovation 2021-2023 Plan, which is cofinanced by the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) of the
European Union Commission. AB is a recipient of a PhD scholarship from
AGAUR (FI Program, 2021 FI_B 00514
Study of single-nucleon transfer reactions in the 18O+48Ti collision at 275 MeV
The study of single-nucleon transfer reactions for the 18O+48Ti system was pursued at the energy of 275 MeV as part of a more systematic study which is undertaken within the NUMEN and NURE experimental campaigns. The aim is to measure the complete set of available reaction network which are characterized by the same initial and final-state wavefunctions as the more suppressed double charge exchange reactions. Understanding the degree of competition between successive nucleon transfer and double charge exchange reactions is crucial for the description of the meson-exchange mechanism. In this respect, angular distribution measurements for one- and twonucleon transfer reactions for the 18O+48Ti system were carried out at theMAGNEX facility of INFN-LNS in Catania. An overview of the data analysis for the 48Ti(18O,19F)47Sc and 48Ti(18O,17O)49Ti reactions will be presented
Background estimate in heavy-ion two-body reactions measured by the MAGNEX spectrometer
The MAGNEX magnetic spectrometer is nowadays used in the experimental measurements of rare quasi-elastic reactions between heavy ions at intermediate energy within the NUMEN project. The small cross sections involved in such processes under the large yields due to competitive reaction channels have motivated an accurate control of the background sources. In such view, the not ideal particle identification could introduce spurious contributions which have been identified and evaluated in the present analysis
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