1,162 research outputs found

    Modulation of Saccadic Curvature by Spatial Memory and Associative Learning

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    The way the eye travels during a saccade typically does not follow a straight line but rather shows some curvature instead. Converging empirical evidence has demonstrated that curvature results from conflicting saccade goals when multiple stimuli in the visual periphery compete for selection as the saccade target (Van der Stigchel, Meeter, & Theeuwes, 2006). Curvature away from a competing stimulus has been proposed to result from the inhibitory deselection of the motor program representing the saccade towards that stimulus (Sheliga, Riggio, & Rizzolatti, 1994; Tipper, Howard, & Houghton, 2000). For example, if participants are instructed to perform a saccade towards a defined target stimulus and to ignore a simultaneously presented nearby distractor stimulus, a saccade landing on the target typically exhibits curvature away from the distractor (e. g. Doyle & Walker, 2001). The present thesis reports how trajectories of saccadic eye movements are affected by spatial memory and associative learning. The final objective was to explore if the curvature effect can be used to investigate associative learning in an experimental paradigm where competing saccade targets are retrieved from associative memory rather than being sensory events. The thesis incorporates manuscripts on the following working steps to accomplish this objective: The first manuscript presents the computer software that was written in order to derive measure of saccadic curvature from the recorded eye movement traces. The second manuscript replicates and extends prior reports on the effect of (non-associative) spatial working memory on saccade deviations (Theeuwes, Olivers, & Chizk, 2005). The third manuscript uses a novel associative learning task to demonstrate that changes in saccadic curvature during associative learning comply with the acquisition and extinction of competing associations as predicted by the Rescorla-Wagner model (Rescorla & Wagner, 1972), originally put forward to explain classical conditioning in animals

    Valproate-associated reversible encephalopathy in a 3-year-old girl with Pallister-Killian syndrome

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    Valproic acid (VPA) is considered to be a drug of first choice for the therapy of generalized and focal epilepsies, including special epileptic syndromes. The drug is usually well tolerated, rare serious complications may occur in some patients, including hemorrhagic pancreatitis, coagulapathies, bone marrow suppression, VPA-induced hepatotoxicity and encephalopathy. We report a case of VPA-associated encephalopathy without hyperammonemia in a 3-year-old girl with Pallister-Killian-Syndrom, combined with a mild hepatopathy and thrombopathy. After withdrawal of VPA, the clinical symptoms and the electroencephalography-alterations vanished rapidly

    Context modulation of learned attention deployment

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    In three experiments, we investigated the contextual control of attention in human discrimination learning. In each experiment, participants initially received discrimination training in which the cues from Dimension A were relevant in Context 1 but irrelevant in Context 2, whereas the cues from Dimension B were irrelevant in Context 1 but relevant in Context 2. In Experiment 1, the same cues from each dimension were used in Contexts 1 and 2, whereas in Experiments 2 and 3, the cues from each dimension were changed across contexts. In each experiment, participants were subsequently shifted to a transfer discrimination involving novel cues from either dimension, to assess the contextual control of attention. In Experiment 1, measures of eye gaze during the transfer discrimination revealed that Dimension A received more attention than Dimension B in Context 1, whereas the reverse occurred in Context 2. Corresponding results indicating the contextual control of attention were found in Experiments 2 and 3, in which we used the speed of learning (associability) as an indirect marker of learned attentional changes. Implications of our results for current theories of learning and attention are discussed

    Quantification and Statistical Analysis of Structural Similarities in Dialectological Area-Class Maps

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    Some of the main aims of dialectology have always been the division of a given geographic space into areas where different dialects are spoken, the detection of dialect boundaries, and the investigation of the strength of these boundaries. For this purpose, a sub-discipline of dialectology, „dialectometry‟, has introduced the method of counting or measuring the differences between lects spoken at different locations. (For a concise overview of dialectometric methods, see, for example, HEERINGA 2004, 9–24.) The higher the number or degree of differences between two locations are, the higher is the chance that they are placed in two disjoint dialect areas. This implies, however, that each pair of locations sometimes exhibits agreement, sometimes disagreement, even within one dialect area. Otherwise, there would only be completely disjoint, mutually unintelligible lects. Instead, we find that while some of the variants fit neatly into the dialect areas, others show somewhat divergent or even completely different geographical distributions. Consequently, the distributions of single variants must be considered more than mere deviations from one underlying pattern as represented by the dialect areas; in fact, they differ so greatly from one another that they need to be studied, too.The project is funded by the DFG (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft)

    Towards A Practical JCJ / Civitas Implementation

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    Internet voting continues to enjoy wide interest from both research and practice. Among the Internet voting schemes developed over the last decades, JCJ / Civitas stands out from the masses due to its innovative approach to resist voter coercion. To achieve its ambitious goal, the scheme builds upon particularly restrictive assumptions and an abstract credential handling rendering the scheme impractical for real-world use. At ARES 2012, Neumann and Volkamer presented a proposal which implements several of these assumptions (voter-side assumptions) and the credential handling by the use of smart cards. While addressing these practical shortcomings of JCJ / Civitas, their proposal did not take performance into account, and accordingly its performance has not been evaluated. In the present work, we revise the ARES proposal from a performance perspective in a security-invariant manner. Based on the herein proposed revisions, we are able to conclude that the revised ARES proposal is feasible to be used in real-world elections

    Screening for language disorders in stroke: german validation of the language screening test (last)

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    Background: Screening of aphasia in acute stroke is crucial for directing patients to early language therapy. The Language Screening Test (LAST), originally developed in French, is a validated language screening test that allows detection of a language deficit within a few minutes. The aim of the present study was to develop and validate two parallel German versions of the LAST. Methods: The LAST includes subtests for naming, repetition, automatic speech, and comprehension. For the translation into German, task constructs and psycholinguistic criteria for item selection were identical to the French LAST. A cohort of 101 stroke patients were tested, all of whom were native German speakers. Validation of the LAST was based on (1) analysis of equivalence of the German versions, which was established by administering both versions successively in a subset of patients, (2) internal validity by means of internal consistency analysis, and (3) external validity by comparison with the short version of the Token Test in another subset of patients. Results: The two German versions were equivalent as demonstrated by a high intraclass correlation coefficient of 0.91. Furthermore, an acceptable internal structure of the LAST was found (Cronbach's α = 0.74). A highly significant correlation (r = 0.74, p < 0.0001) between the LAST and the short version of the Token Test indicated good external validity of the scale. Conclusion: The German version of the LAST, available in two parallel versions, is a new and valid language screening test in stroke

    Transcranial magnetic stimulation in the treatment of adolescent depression: a systematic review and meta-analysis of aggregated and individual-patient data from uncontrolled studies.

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    Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) is a non-invasive treatment for adolescent major depressive disorder (MDD). Existing evidence on the efficacy of TMS in adolescent MDD awaits quantitative synthesis. A systematic literature search was conducted, and data from eligible studies were synthesized using random-effects models. Treatment-covariate interactions were examined in exploratory analyses of individual-patient data (IPD). Systematic search of the literature yielded 1264 hits, of which 10 individual studies (2 randomized trials) were included for quantitative synthesis of mainly uncontrolled studies. Individual patient data (IPD) were available from five trials (all uncontrolled studies). Quantitative synthesis of aggregated data revealed a statistically significant negative overall standardized mean change (pooled SMCC = 2.04, 95% CI [1.46; 2.61], SE = 0.29, p < .001), as well as a significant overall treatment response rate (Transformed Proportion = 41.30%, 95% CI [31.03; 51.57], SE = 0.05; p < 0.001), considering data from baseline to post-treatment. Exploratory IPD analyses suggests TMS might be more effective in younger individuals and individuals with more severe depression, and efficacy might be enhanced with certain treatment modality settings, including higher number of TMS sessions, longer treatment durations, and unilateral and not bilateral stimulation. Existing studies exhibit methodological shortcomings, including small-study effects and lack of control group, blinding, and randomization-compromising the credibility of the present results. To date, two randomized controlled trials on TMS in adolescent depression have been published, and the only large-scale randomized trial suggests TMS is not more effective than sham stimulation. Future large-scale, randomized, and sham-controlled trials are warranted. Future trials should ensure appropriate selection of patients for TMS treatment and guide precision medicine approaches for stimulation protocols

    A test for a difference in the associability of blocked and uninformative cues in human predictive learning

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    In human predictive learning, blocking, A+ AB+, and a simple discrimination, UX+ VX–, result in a stronger response to the blocked, B, than the uninformative cue, X (where letters represent cues and + and – represent different outcomes). To assess whether these different treatments result in more attention being paid to blocked than uninformative cues, Stage 1 in each of three experiments generated two blocked cues, B and E, and two uninformative cues, X and Y. In Stage 2, participants received two simple discriminations: either BX+ EX– and BY+ EY–, or BX+ BY– and EX+ EY–. If more attention is paid to blocked than uninformative cues, then the first pair of discriminations will be solved more readily than the second pair. In contrast to this prediction, both discriminations were acquired at the same rate. These results are explained by the theory of Mackintosh, by virtue of the assumption that learning is governed by an individual rather than a common error term

    Four-Wave Mixing in Landau-Quantized Graphene

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    International audienceFor Landau-quantized graphene, featuring an energy spectrum consisting of a series of nonequidis-tant Landau levels, theory predicts a giant resonantly-enhanced optical nonlinearity. We verify the nonlinearity in a degenerate time-integrated four-wave mixing (FWM) experiment in the mid-infrared spectral range, involving the Landau levels LL −1 , LL 0 and LL 1. A rapid dephasing of the optically induced microscopic polarization on a timescale shorter than the pulse duration (∼4 ps) is observed, while a complementary pump-probe experiment under the same experimental conditions reveals a much longer lifetime of the induced population. The FWM signal shows the expected field dependence with respect to lowest order perturbation theory for low fields. Saturation sets in for fields above ∼ 6 kV/cm. Furthermore, the resonant behavior and the order of magnitude of the third-order susceptibility are in agreement with theoretical calculations
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