10 research outputs found
Your mistake is my mistake ... or is it? Behavioural adjustments following own and observed actions in cooperative and competitive contexts
Item does not contain fulltextA social speeded choice-reaction-time task was used to study adaptive behaviours following own and observed actions (errors and correct responses) in cooperative and competitive contexts. After making an erroneous response, the appropriate remedial action to avoid future errors in speeded reaction tasks is to slow down. Consistent with previous results, people indeed slow down following their own errors. Importantly, people who slow down most following own errors also slow down following observed errors in a cooperative situation. In a competitive context, a different pattern was found. People accelerated after errors from their opponent. The current findings demonstrate that the social context determines the way people respond to the errors of others, indicating that the neural systems that control remedial actions are highly flexible. These systems may underlie social adaptive behaviour, enabling people to respond flexibly to other people's actions in a wide variety of social contexts.9 p
Long-term postoperative cognitive dysfunction in the elderly: ISPOCD1 study
Summary Background Long-term postoperative cognitive dysfunction may occur in the elderly. Age may be a risk factor and hypoxaemia and arterial hypotension causative factors. We investigated these hypotheses in an international multicentre study. Methods 1218 patients aged at least 60 years completed neuropsychological tests before and 1 week and 3 months after major non-cardiac surgery. We measured oxygen saturation by continuous pulse oximetry before surgery and throughout the day of and the first 3 nights after surgery. We recorded blood pressure every 3 min by oscillometry during the operation and every 15–30 min for the rest of that day and night. We identified postoperative cognitive dysfunction with neuropsychological tests compared with controls recruited from the UK (n=176) and the same countries as study centres (n=145). Findings Postoperative cognitive dysfunction was present in 266 (25·8% [95% CI 23·1–28·5]) of patients 1 week after surgery and in 94 (9·9% [8·1–12·0]) 3 months after surgery, compared with 3·4% and 2·8%, respectively, of UK controls (
Long-term postoperative cognitive dysfunction in the elderly: ISPOCD1 study
Summary
Background Long-term postoperative cognitive dysfunction
may occur in the elderly. Age may be a risk factor and
hypoxaemia and arterial hypotension causative factors.
We investigated these hypotheses in an international
multicentre study.
Methods 1218 patients aged at least 60 years completed
neuropsychological tests before and 1 week and 3 months
after major non-cardiac surgery. We measured oxygen
saturation by continuous pulse oximetry before surgery and
throughout the day of and the first 3 nights after surgery.
We recorded blood pressure every 3 min by oscillometry
during the operation and every 15–30 min for the rest of
that day and night. We identified postoperative cognitive
dysfunction with neuropsychological tests compared with
controls recruited from the UK (n=176) and the same
countries as study centres (n=145).
Findings Postoperative cognitive dysfunction was present in
266 (25·8% [95% CI 23·1–28·5]) of patients 1 week after
surgery and in 94 (9·9% [8·1–12·0]) 3 months after
surgery, compared with 3·4% and 2·8%, respectively, of
UK controls (
Long-term postoperative cognitive dysfunction in the elderly: ISPOCD1 study
Item does not contain fulltext5 p