7,263 research outputs found

    Global timing: a conceptual framework to investigate the neural basis of rhythm perception in humans and non-human species

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    Timing cues are an essential feature of music. To understand how the brain gives rise to our experience of music we must appreciate how acoustical temporal patterns are integrated over the range of several seconds in order to extract global timing. In music perception, global timing comprises three distinct but often interacting percepts: temporal grouping, beat, and tempo. What directions may we take to further elucidate where and how the global timing of music is processed in the brain? The present perspective addresses this question and describes our current understanding of the neural basis of global timing perception

    Evaluation de l'efficacité clinique de la prise en charge pédopsychiatrique par l'Antenne d'Intervention dans le Milieu pour Adolescents (AIMA)

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    Contexte : Depuis les années 60, en lien avec la vague de désinstitutionalisation, un peu partout dans le monde, des équipes mobiles ont vu le jour. L'Antenne d'Intervention dans le Milieu pour Adolescents (AIMA) a été fondée en 2005, elle est destinée aux adolescents à haut risque psychopathologique qui échappent au système classique des soins pédopsychiatriques. Etant donné que ce dispositif est amené à se développer, il est souhaitable d'évaluer les résultats obtenus. Méthode : Etude ouverte prospective sur un échantillon comprenant 20 adolescents de 13 à 18 ans suivis par l'AIMA. Des données cliniques et sociodémographiques ont été collectées, différentes échelles ont été utilisées, dont l' « Health of Nation Outcome Scale for Children and Adolescents » (HoNOSCA) et la « Crisis Triage Rating Scale » en évaluation pré-­‐ et post-­‐suivi dans le milieu. L'effet de l'intervention est évalué à travers les données de l'HoNOSCA et de la « Crisis Triage Rating Scale » et nous avons également étudié l'effet dose-­‐réponse. Nous nous sommes intéressés à l'effet des événements de vie indésirables dans l'enfance sur les changements des scores de l'HoNOSCA. Résultats : On retrouve une nette amélioration clinique évaluée par l'HoNOSCA et de certains de ses sous-­‐scores (symptômes et contexte social). Par contre nous n'avons pas observé d'effet dose-­‐ réponse de l'intervention AIMA. L'amélioration de l'HoNOSCA est corrélée avec la diminution de la dangerosité et l'amélioration du réseau de soutien, mais pas avec la capacité à coopérer de l'adolescent. Les adolescents ayant subi plusieurs événements de vie indésirables pendant l'enfance bénéficient de manière significative de l'intervention de l'AIMA. Conclusion : Cette étude est en faveur de l'efficacité clinique de la prise en charge pédopsychiatrique par l'AIMA. Elle suggère que les adolescents ayant été confrontés à des événements de vie indésirables bénéficient grandement de ce type d'intervention. Ces conclusions mériteraient d'être confirmées par d'autres études (plus puissantes) et avec plus de sujets

    Effects of Isolated Hip Abductor Fatigue on Frontal Plane Knee Mechanics

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    Purpose: Anterior cruciate ligament injuries and patellofemoral pain syndrome are both common and significant injuries to the knee that have been associated with hip weakness. Prospective studies have linked the risk of experiencing either injury to alterations in the frontal plane knee angle and moment during activity. These components of knee mechanics are theorized to be affected by hip abductor weakness. The purpose of this study was to identify the effects of isolated hip abductor fatigue-induced weakness on lower extremity kinematics and kinetics in recreationally active women

    Roaring lions and chirruping lemurs: How the brain encodes sound objects in space.

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    The dual-stream model of auditory processing postulates separate processing streams for sound meaning and for sound location. The present review draws on evidence from human behavioral and activation studies as well as from lesion studies to argue for a position-linked representation of sound objects that is distinct both from the position-independent representation within the ventral/What stream and from the explicit sound localization processing within the dorsal/Where stream

    Sensory Entrainment Mechanisms in Auditory Perception: Neural Synchronization Cortico-Striatal Activation.

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    The auditory system displays modulations in sensitivity that can align with the temporal structure of the acoustic environment. This sensory entrainment can facilitate sensory perception and is particularly relevant for audition. Systems neuroscience is slowly uncovering the neural mechanisms underlying the behaviorally observed sensory entrainment effects in the human sensory system. The present article summarizes the prominent behavioral effects of sensory entrainment and reviews our current understanding of the neural basis of sensory entrainment, such as synchronized neural oscillations, and potentially, neural activation in the cortico-striatal system

    Influence of Rhythmic Grouping on Duration Perception: A Novel Auditory Illusion

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    This study investigated a potential auditory illusion in duration perception induced by rhythmic temporal contexts. Listeners with or without musical training performed a duration discrimination task for a silent period in a rhythmic auditory sequence. The critical temporal interval was presented either within a perceptual group or between two perceptual groups. We report the just-noticeable difference (difference limen, DL) for temporal intervals and the point of subjective equality (PSE) derived from individual psychometric functions based on performance of a two-alternative forced choice task. In musically untrained individuals, equal temporal intervals were perceived as significantly longer when presented between perceptual groups than within a perceptual group (109.25% versus 102.5% of the standard duration). Only the perceived duration of the between-group interval was significantly longer than its objective duration. Musically trained individuals did not show this effect. However, in both musically trained and untrained individuals, the relative difference limens for discriminating the comparison interval from the standard interval were larger in the between-groups condition than in the within-group condition (7.3% vs. 5.6% of the standard duration). Thus, rhythmic grouping affected sensitivity to duration changes in all listeners, with duration differences being harder to detect at boundaries of rhythm groups than within rhythm groups. Our results show for the first time that temporal Gestalt induces auditory duration illusions in typical listeners, but that musical experts are not susceptible to this effect of rhythmic grouping.Ellison Medical FoundationNational Science Foundation (U.S.) (PA00P1_131448/1)McGovern Institute for Brain Research at MI

    Coherent vs incoherent interlayer transport in layered metals

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    The magnetic-field, temperature, and angular dependence of the interlayer magnetoresistance of two different quasi-two-dimensional (2D) organic superconductors is reported. For κ\kappa-(BEDT-TTF)2_2I3_3 we find a well-resolved peak in the angle-dependent magnetoresistance at Θ=90\Theta = 90^\circ (field parallel to the layers). This clear-cut proof for the coherent nature of the interlayer transport is absent for β\beta''-(BEDT-TTF)2_2SF5_5CH2_2CF2_2SO3_3. This and the non-metallic behavior of the magnetoresistance suggest an incoherent quasiparticle motion for the latter 2D metal.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. Phys. Rev. B, in pres

    The role of auditory cortices in the retrieval of single-trial auditory-visual object memories.

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    Single-trial encounters with multisensory stimuli affect both memory performance and early-latency brain responses to visual stimuli. Whether and how auditory cortices support memory processes based on single-trial multisensory learning is unknown and may differ qualitatively and quantitatively from comparable processes within visual cortices due to purported differences in memory capacities across the senses. We recorded event-related potentials (ERPs) as healthy adults (n = 18) performed a continuous recognition task in the auditory modality, discriminating initial (new) from repeated (old) sounds of environmental objects. Initial presentations were either unisensory or multisensory; the latter entailed synchronous presentation of a semantically congruent or a meaningless image. Repeated presentations were exclusively auditory, thus differing only according to the context in which the sound was initially encountered. Discrimination abilities (indexed by d') were increased for repeated sounds that were initially encountered with a semantically congruent image versus sounds initially encountered with either a meaningless or no image. Analyses of ERPs within an electrical neuroimaging framework revealed that early stages of auditory processing of repeated sounds were affected by prior single-trial multisensory contexts. These effects followed from significantly reduced activity within a distributed network, including the right superior temporal cortex, suggesting an inverse relationship between brain activity and behavioural outcome on this task. The present findings demonstrate how auditory cortices contribute to long-term effects of multisensory experiences on auditory object discrimination. We propose a new framework for the efficacy of multisensory processes to impact both current multisensory stimulus processing and unisensory discrimination abilities later in time
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