3,483 research outputs found
A neural marker for social bias toward in-group accents
Accents provide information about the speaker's geographical, socio-economic, and ethnic background. Research in applied psychology and sociolinguistics suggests that we generally prefer our own accent to other varieties of our native language and attribute more positive traits to it. Despite the widespread influence of accents on social interactions, educational and work settings the neural underpinnings of this social bias toward our own accent and, what may drive this bias, are unexplored. We measured brain activity while participants from two different geographical backgrounds listened passively to 3 English accent types embedded in an adaptation design. Cerebral activity in several regions, including bilateral amygdalae, revealed a significant interaction between the participants' own accent and the accent they listened to: while repetition of own accents elicited an enhanced neural response, repetition of the other group's accent resulted in reduced responses classically associated with adaptation. Our findings suggest that increased social relevance of, or greater emotional sensitivity to in-group accents, may underlie the own-accent bias. Our results provide a neural marker for the bias associated with accents, and show, for the first time, that the neural response to speech is partly shaped by the geographical background of the listener
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In search of predictive endophenotypes in addiction: insights from preclinical research.
Drug addiction is widely recognized to afflict some but not all individuals by virtue of underlying risk markers and traits involving multifaceted interactions between polygenic and external factors. Remarkably, only a small proportion of individuals exposed to licit and illicit drugs develop compulsive drug-seeking behavior, maintained in the face of adverse consequences and associated detrimental patterns of drug intake involving extended and repeated bouts of binge intoxication, withdrawal and relapse. As a consequence, research has increasingly endeavored to identify distinctive neurobehavioral mechanisms and endophenotypes that predispose individuals to compulsive drug use. However, research in active drug users is hampered by the difficulty in categorizing putatively causal behavioral traits prior to the initiation of drug use. By contrast, research in experimental animals is often hindered by the validity of approaches used to investigate the neural and psychological mechanisms of compulsive drug-seeking habits in humans. Herein, we survey and discuss the principal findings emanating from preclinical animal research on addiction and highlight how specific behavioral endophenotypes of presumed genetic origin (e.g. trait anxiety, novelty preference and impulsivity) differentially contribute to compulsive forms of drug seeking and taking and, in particular, how these differentiate between different classes of stimulant and non-stimulant drugs of abuse.The authors acknowledge funding support from the UK Medical Research Council (grants G9536855; G0701500; G0802729), the Newton-Cambridge Trust and the Wellcome Trust (grant WT109738MA). The Behavioural and Clinical Neuroscience Institute at Cambridge University is supported by a core award from the Medical Research Council (G1000183) and Wellcome Trust (093875/Z/10/Z).This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gbb.1226
Collaboration in neuroscience: the young PI perspective.
Wellcome Trust, University of Cambridge, CIG, Adelis FoundationThis is the final version of the article. It first appeared from Wiley via http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ejn.1322
Modèle stochastique et représentation par graphe pour le suivi spatio-temporel de pathogènes à la surface de feuilles par imagerie
Modèle stochastique et représentation par graphe pour le suivi spatio-temporel de pathogènes à la surface de feuilles par imagerie
Progress towards omnidirectional transformation optics with lenses
We study, theoretically, omni-directional Euclidean transformation-optics (TO) devices comprising planar, light-ray-direction changing, imaging, interfaces. We initially studied such devices in the case when the interfaces are homogeneous, showing that very general transformations between physical and electromagnetic space are possible. We are now studying the case of inhomogeneous interfaces. This case is more complex to analyse, but the inhomogeneous interfaces include ideal thin lenses, which gives rise to the hope that it might be possible to construct practical omni-directional TO devices from lenses alone. Here we report on our progress in this direction
Instrumentation and digital image processing for multimodality imagery applied to seeds and seedlings
Instrumentation and digital image processing for multimodality imagery applied to seeds and seedlings
Suivi automatisé de l’allongement des plantules et intérêt des différentes modalités d’imagerie
Suivi automatisé de l’allongement des plantules et intérêt des différentes modalités d’imagerie
3D multimodal simulation of image acquisition by X-Ray and MRI for validation of seedling measurements with segmentation algorithms
3D multimodal simulation of image acquisition by X-Ray and MRI for validation of seedling measurements with segmentation algorithms
Imagerie thermique pour les sciences du végétal : applications à la détection précoce de pathogènes à la surface des feuilles
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