7 research outputs found
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No Influence of Musicianship on the Effect of Contralateral Stimulation on Frequency Selectivity.
The efferent system may control the gain of the cochlea and thereby influence frequency selectivity. This effect can be assessed using contralateral stimulation (CS) applied to the ear opposite to that used to assess frequency selectivity. The effect of CS may be stronger for musicians than for nonmusicians. To assess whether this was the case, psychophysical tuning curves (PTCs) were compared for 12 musicians and 12 nonmusicians. The PTCs were measured with and without a 60-dB sound pressure level (SPL) pink-noise CS, using signal frequencies of 2 and 4 kHz. The sharpness of the PTCs was quantified using the measure Q10, the signal frequency divided by the PTC bandwidth measured 10 dB above the level at the tip. Q10 values were lower in the presence of the CS, but this effect did not differ significantly for musicians and nonmusicians. The main effect of group (musicians vs. nonmusicians) on the Q10 values was not significant. Overall, these results do not support the idea that musicianship enhances contralateral efferent gain control as measured using the effect of CS on PTCs
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The effect of musicianship, contralateral noise, and ear of presentation on the detection of changes in temporal fine structure.
Musicians are better than non-musicians at discriminating changes in the fundamental frequency (F0) of harmonic complex tones. Such discrimination may be based on place cues derived from low resolved harmonics, envelope cues derived from high harmonics, and temporal fine structure (TFS) cues derived from both low and high harmonics. The present study compared the ability of highly trained violinists and non-musicians to discriminate changes in complex sounds that differed primarily in their TFS. The task was to discriminate harmonic (H) and frequency-shifted inharmonic (I) tones that were bandpass filtered such that the components were largely or completely unresolved. The effect of contralateral noise and ear of presentation was also investigated. It was hypothesized that contralateral noise would activate the efferent system, helping to preserve the neural representation of envelope fluctuations in the H and I stimuli, thereby improving their discrimination. Violinists were significantly better than non-musicians at discriminating the H and I tones. However, contralateral noise and ear of presentation had no effect. It is concluded that, compared to non-musicians, violinists have a superior ability to discriminate complex sounds based on their TFS, and this ability is unaffected by contralateral stimulation or ear of presentation
Pitch syntax violations are linked to greater skin conductance changes, relative to timbral violations : the predictive role of the reward system in perspective of cortico-subcortical loops
According to contemporary opinion emotional reactions to syntactic violations are due
to surprise as a result of the general mechanism of prediction. The classic view is
that, the processing of musical syntax can be explained by activity of the cerebral
cortex. However, some recent studies have indicated that subcortical brain structures,
including those related to the processing of emotions, are also important during the
processing of syntax. In order to check whether emotional reactions play a role in the
processing of pitch syntax or are only the result of the general mechanism of prediction,
the comparison of skin conductance levels reacting to three types of melodies were
recorded. In this study, 28 subjects listened to three types of short melodies prepared
in Musical Instrument Digital Interface Standard files (MIDI) - tonally correct, tonally
violated (with one out-of-key - i.e., of high information content), and tonally correct
but with one note played in a different timbre. The BioSemi ActiveTwo with two passive
Nihon Kohden electrodes was used. Skin conductance levels were positively correlated
with the presented stimuli (timbral changes and tonal violations). Although changes in
skin conductance levels were also observed in response to the change in timbre, the
reactions to tonal violations were significantly stronger. Therefore, despite the fact that
timbral change is at least as equally unexpected as an out-of-key note, the processing
of pitch syntax mainly generates increased activation of the sympathetic part of the
autonomic nervous system. These results suggest that the cortico–subcortical loops
(especially the anterior cingulate - limbic loop) may play an important role in the
processing of musical syntax
Habitat - idea, sztuka, filozofia
Publikacja recenzowana / Peer-reviewed publicationZE WSTĘPU: Architektura a habitat. Wyzwaniem na dziś nie jest chyba tylko kształt architektonicznych ikon, ale to jak w najbliższej przyszłości projektanci, architekci i urbaniści mają sobie radzić z problemami demograficznymi, socjalnymi i ekonomicznymi. Zapewne habitat będzie się zmieniał i przybierał coraz to inne formy, które zharmonizowane zostaną jako proekologiczny organizm współgrający z wszystkimi samowystarczającymi systemami. Znaczącą jednak funkcję pełnić będzie zawsze sztuka budowania miejsc i nieodłączną w tym znaczeniu formą i funkcją. Łącząc piękno, piękno życia i przeżywania, piękno naturalne i stworzone przez człowieka, będziemy mieli zawsze moralny obowiązek ochrony i pomnażania tego piękna. Ta wielka kompozycja o nieograniczonej liczbie możliwości i wariantów będzie udziałem Nowego Człowieka solidarnie budującego i przeżywającego Nową Postać Świata
CMV Serostatus of Donor-Recipient Pairs Influences the Risk of CMV Infection/Reactivation in HSCT Patients
CMV donor/recipient serostatus was analyzed in 200 patients allografted in our institution from unrelated (122 patients) donors and 78 sibling donors in the years 2002–2011 in relation to posttransplant complications. On a group basis independently of the CMV serostatus of donor-recipient pairs sibling transplantations and those from unrelated donors that matched 10/10 at allele level had a similar rate of CMV reactivation (17/78 versus 19/71, P=ns). The rate of CMV reactivation/infection was higher in patients grafted from donors accepted at the lower level of matching than 10/10 (18/38 versus 36/149, P=0.008). The incidence of aGvHD followed frequencies of CMV reactivation in the tested groups, being 40/156 and 25/44 in patients grafted from sibling or unrelated donors that 10/10 matched and in those grafted from donors taht HLA mismatched, respectively (P=0.001). Regarding the rate of reactivation in both groups seropositive patients receiving a transplant from seronegative donors had more frequently CMV reactivation as compared to those with another donor-recipient matching CMV serostatus constellation (22/43 versus 32/143, P=0<0.001). Multivariate analysis revealed that seropositivity of recipients with concomitant seronegativity of donors plays an independent role in the CMV reactivation/infection (OR=2.669, P=0.037; OR=5.322, P=0.078; OR=23.034, P=0.023 for optimally matched and mismatched patients and the whole group of patients, resp.)
Anti-CMV-IgG Positivity of Donors Is Beneficial for alloHSCT Recipients with Respect to the Better Short-Term Immunological Recovery and High Level of CD4+CD25high Lymphocytes
Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation from anti-cytomegalovirus immunoglobulin G (anti-CMV-IgG) positive donors facilitated immunological recovery post-transplant, which may indicate that chronic CMV infection has an effect on the immune system. This can be seen in the recipients after reconstitution with donor lymphocytes. We evaluated the composition of lymphocytes at hematologic recovery in 99 patients with hematologic malignancies post hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). Anti-CMV-IgG seropositivity of the donor was associated with higher proportions of CD4+ (227.963 ± 304.858 × 106 vs. 102.050 ± 17.247 × 106 cells/L, p = 0.009) and CD4+CD25high (3.456 ± 0.436 × 106 vs. 1.589 ± 0.218 × 106 cells/L, p = 0.003) lymphocytes in the blood at hematologic recovery. The latter parameter exerted a diverse influence on the risk of acute graft-versus-host disease (GvHD) if low (1.483 ± 0.360 × 106 vs. 3.778 ± 0.484 × 106 cells/L, p < 0.001) and de novo chronic GvHD (cGvHD) if high (3.778 ± 0.780 × 106 vs. 2.042 ± 0.261 × 106 cells/L, p = 0.041). Higher values of CD4+ lymphocytes in patients who received transplants from anti-CMV-IgG-positive donors translated into a reduced demand for IgG support (23/63 vs. 19/33, p = 0.048), and these patients also exhibited reduced susceptibility to cytomegalovirus (CMV), Epstein–Barr virus (EBV) and/or human herpes 6 virus (HHV6) infection/reactivation (12/50 vs. 21/47, p = 0.032). Finally, high levels (³0.4%) of CD4+CD25high lymphocytes were significantly associated with better post-transplant survival (56% vs. 38%, four-year survival, p = 0.040). Donors who experience CMV infection/reactivation provide the recipients with lymphocytes, which readily reinforce the recovery of the transplanted patients’ immune system