keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37829821/prefrontal-dysfunction-in-post-covid-19-hyposmia-an-eeg-fnirs-study
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Livio Clemente, Marianna La Rocca, Nicola Quaranta, Lucia Iannuzzi, Eleonora Vecchio, Antonio Brunetti, Eleonora Gentile, Michele Dibattista, Simona Lobasso, Vitoantonio Bevilacqua, Sebastiano Stramaglia, Marina de Tommaso
INTRODUCTION: Subtle cognitive dysfunction and mental fatigue are frequent after severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection, characterizing the so-called long COVID-19 syndrome. This study aimed to correlate cognitive, neurophysiological, and olfactory function in a group of subjects who experienced acute SARS-CoV-2 infection with persistent hyposmia at least 12 weeks before the observation. METHODS: For each participant (32 post-COVID-19 patients and 16 controls), electroencephalography (EEG) and functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) data were acquired using an integrated EEG-fNIRS system during the execution of a P300 odd-ball task and a Stroop test...
2023: Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37823446/effects-of-virtual-reality-working-memory-task-difficulty-on-the-passive-processing-of-irrelevant-auditory-stimuli
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Farooq Kamal, Melanie Segado, Vincent Gagnon Shaigetz, Maxime Perron, Brian Lau, Claude Alain, Nusrat Choudhury
The virtual reality (VR) environment is claimed to be highly immersive. Participants may thus be potentially unaware of their real, external world. The present study presented irrelevant auditory stimuli while participants were engaged in an easy or difficult visual working memory (WM) task within the VR environment. The difficult WM task should be immersive and require many cognitive resources, thus few will be available for the processing of task-irrelevant auditory stimuli. Sixteen young adults wore a 3D head-mounted VR device...
December 6, 2023: Neuroreport
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37817398/cognitive-control-impairment-in-ax-continuous-performance-test-in-patients-with-schizophrenia-a-pilot-eeg-study
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Bing Li, Chao-Meng Liu, Li-Na Wang, Wen-Qing Jin, Wei-Gang Pan, Wen Wang, Yan-Ping Ren, Xin Ma, Yi-Lang Tang
OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to investigate the mechanism of cognitive control impairment in patients with schizophrenia (SPs) using electroencephalogram (EEG). METHODS: A total of 17 SPs and 17 healthy controls (HCs) were included in this study. We measured the EEG activity, whereas they performed the AX-continuous performance test which consisted of the preparatory phase and the response phase. The MATRICS Consensus Cognitive Battery (MCCB) was used for cognitive function, and the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) was used for clinical symptom assessment...
October 10, 2023: Brain and Behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37757954/successful-alpha-neurofeedback-training-enhances-working-memory-updating-and-event-related-potential-activity
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lu Shen, Yali Jiang, Feng Wan, Yixuan Ku, Wenya Nan
Neurofeedback (NF) is a promising method to self-regulate human brain activity for cognition enhancement. Due to the unclear results of alpha NF training on working memory updating as well as the impact of feedback modality on NF learning, this study aimed to understand further the underlying neural mechanism of alpha NF training effects on working memory updating, where the NF learning was also compared between visual and auditory feedback modalities. A total of 30 participants were assigned to Visual NF, Auditory NF, and Control groups...
September 26, 2023: Neurobiology of Learning and Memory
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37702253/the-role-of-distractors-in-rapid-serial-visual-presentation-reveals-the-mechanism-of-attentional-blink-by-eeg-based-univariate-and-multivariate-analyses
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Zong Meng, Qi Chen, Liqin Zhou, Liang Xu, Antao Chen
Attentional blink pertains to the performance of participants with a severe decline in identifying the second target presented after the first target reported correctly within 200-500 ms in a rapid serial visual presentation. The current study was conducted to investigate the neural mechanism of the effect of the distractor (D1) that immediately follows first target to attentional blink by altering whether D1 was substituted with a blank with electroencephalography recording. The results showed that D1 interfered with the attentional enhancement and working memory encoding in both single-target rapid serial visual presentation task and dual-target rapid serial visual presentation task, which were mainly manifested in delayed and attenuated P3a and diminished P3b of first target...
September 12, 2023: Cerebral Cortex
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37663965/a-proposed-new-japanese-classification-of-synchronous-peritoneal-metastases-from-colorectal-cancer-a-multi-institutional-prospective-observational-study-conducted-by-the-japanese-society-for-cancer-of-the-colon-and-rectum
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hirotoshi Kobayashi, Kenjiro Kotake, Masayasu Kawasaki, Yukihide Kanemitsu, Yusuke Kinugasa, Hideki Ueno, Kotaro Maeda, Takeshi Suto, Michio Itabashi, Kimihiko Funahashi, Heita Ozawa, Fumikazu Koyama, Shingo Noura, Hideyuki Ishida, Masayuki Ohue, Tomomichi Kiyomatsu, Soichiro Ishihara, Keiji Koda, Hideo Baba, Kenji Kawada, Yojiro Hashiguchi, Takanori Goi, Yuji Toiyama, Naohiro Tomita, Eiji Sunami, Yoshito Akagi, Jun Watanabe, Kenichi Hakamada, Goro Nakayama, Kenichi Sugihara, Yoichi Ajioka
AIM: To establish a new Japanese classification of synchronous peritoneal metastases from colorectal cancer. METHODS: This multi-institutional, prospective, observational study enrolled patients who underwent surgery for colorectal cancer with synchronous peritoneal metastases. Overall survival rates were compared according to the various models using objective indicators. Each model was evaluated by Akaike's information criterion (AIC). The region of peritoneal metastases was evaluated by the peritoneal cancer index (PCI)...
September 2023: Annals of Gastroenterological Surgery
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37638454/effects-of-anodal-tdcs-on-electroencephalography-correlates-of-cognitive-control-in-mild-to-moderate-traumatic-brain-injury
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nickolas Mertens, James Cavanagh, Emma Brandt, Violet Fratzke, Jacqueline Story-Remer, Rebecca Rieger, J Kevin Wilson, Darbi Gill, Richard Campbell, Davin K Quinn
BACKGROUND: Transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) may provide a potential therapy for cognitive deficits caused by traumatic brain injury (TBI), yet its efficacy and mechanisms of action are still uncertain. OBJECTIVE: We hypothesized that anodal tDCS over the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) would boost the influence of a cognitive training regimen in a mild-to-moderate TBI (mmTBI) sample. Cognitive enhancement was measured by examining event-related potentials (ERPs) during cognitive control tasks from pre- to post-treatment...
2023: NeuroRehabilitation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37598242/effects-of-interstimulus-interval-and-significance-on-electrodermal-and-central-measures-of-the-phasic-orienting-reflex-or-in-a-dishabituation-task
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Robert J Barry, Genevieve Z Steiner-Lim, Adele E Cave, Frances M De Blasio, Brett MacDonald
Although the P300 event-related potential (ERP) is the most likely central measure of Sokolov's Orienting Reflex (OR), there are few systematic comparisons with the skin conductance response (SCR), the "gold standard" electrodermal OR measure. We examine habituation, stimulus significance, and inter-stimulus interval (ISI) effects in SCRs and components of the P300 from single-trial ERPs in an auditory dishabituation paradigm. Single trial ERP components were separated by temporal principal components analysis, and five components of the P300 were examined as potential phasic OR measures: P3a, P3b, Novelty P3, and two Slow Waves (SW1, SW2)...
August 19, 2023: Scientific Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37500495/longitudinal-evidence-for-attenuated-local-global-deviance-detection-as-a-precursor-of-working-memory-decline
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yi-Fang Hsu, Chia-An Tu, Tristan A Bekinschtein, Jarmo A Hämäläinen
From the perspective of predictive coding, normal aging is accompanied by decreased weighting of sensory inputs and increased reliance on predictions, resulting in the attenuation of prediction errors in older age. Recent EEG research further revealed that the age-related shift from sensorium to predictions is hierarchy-selective, as older brains show little reduction in lower-level but significant suppression in higher-level prediction errors. Moreover, the disrupted propagation of prediction errors from the lower-level to the higher-level seems to be linked to deficient maintenance of information in working memory...
July 27, 2023: ENeuro
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37499357/radical-cystectomy-in-the-treatment-of-invasive-bladder-cancer-long-term-results-in-1-054-patients
#30
John P Stein, Gary Lieskovsky, Richard Cote, Susan Groshen, An-Chen Feng, Stuart Boyd, Eila Skinner, Bernard Bochner, Duriayai Thangathurai, Maged Mikhail, Derek Raghavan, DonaldG Skinner
PURPOSE: To evaluate our long-term experience with patients treated uniformly with radical cystectomy and pelvic lymph node dissection for invasive bladder cancer and to describe the association of the primary bladder tumor stage and regional lymph node status with clinical outcomes. PATIENTS AND METHODS: All patients undergoing radical cystectomy with bilateral pelvic iliac lymphadenectomy, with the intent to cure, for transitional-cell carcinoma of the bladder between July 1971 and December 1997, with or without adjuvant radiation or chemotherapy, were evaluated...
August 1, 2023: Journal of Clinical Oncology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37482132/p3a-amplitude-to-trauma-related-stimuli-reduced-after-successful-trauma-focused-ptsd-treatment
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gail D Tillman, Elizabeth Ellen Morris, Christina Bass, Mary Turner, Kelsey Watson, Jared T Brooks, Tyler Rawlinson, F Andrew Kozel, Michael A Kraut, Michael A Motes, John Jr Hart
An elevated P3a amplitude to trauma-related stimuli is strongly associated with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), yet little is known about whether this response to trauma-related stimuli is affected by treatment that decreases PTSD symptoms. As an analysis of secondary outcome measures from a randomized controlled trial, we investigated the latency and amplitude changes of the P3a in responses in a three-condition oddball visual task that included trauma-related (combat scenes) and trauma-unrelated (threatening animals) distractors...
July 21, 2023: Biological Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37481230/effects-of-transcutaneous-auricular-vagus-nerve-stimulation-on-p300-magnitudes-and-salivary-alpha-amylase-during-an-auditory-oddball-task
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Martina D'Agostini, Andreas M Burger, Valentina Jelinčić, Andreas von Leupoldt, Ilse Van Diest
Transcutaneous auricular vagus nerve stimulation (taVNS) is a non-invasive neurostimulation technique that is thought to modulate noradrenergic activity. Previous studies have demonstrated inconsistent effects of taVNS on noradrenergic activity, which is possibly due to insufficient statistical power, suboptimal stimulation parameter settings, and data collection procedures. In this preregistered within-subject experiment, 44 healthy participants received taVNS and sham (earlobe) stimulation during two separate experimental sessions...
July 20, 2023: Biological Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37406367/mismatch-negativity-predicts-initial-auditory-based-targeted-cognitive-training-performance-in-a-heterogeneous-population-across-psychiatric-disorders
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yash B Joshi, Christopher E Gonzalez, Juan L Molina, Laura R MacDonald, Jenny Min Din, Jessica Minhas, Taylor Leposke, Bethany Nordberg, Francesca Li, Jo Talledo, Joyce Sprock, Neal R Swerdlow, Gregory A Light
Auditory-based targeted cognitive training (ATCT) programs are emerging pro-cognitive therapeutic interventions which aim to improve auditory processing to attenuate cognitive impairment in a "bottom up" manner. Biomarkers of early auditory information processing (EAIP) like mismatch negativity (MMN) and P3a have been used successfully to predict gains from a full 40 h course of ATCT in schizophrenia (SZ). Here we investigated the ability of EAIP biomarkers to predict ATCT performance in a group of subjects (n = 26) across SZ, MDD, PTSD and GAD diagnoses...
April 20, 2023: Psychiatry Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37379567/detecting-emotional-prosody-in-real-words-electrophysiological-evidence-from-a-modified-multifeature-oddball-paradigm
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Chieh Kao, Yang Zhang
PURPOSE: Emotional voice conveys important social cues that demand listeners' attention and timely processing. This event-related potential study investigated the feasibility of a multifeature oddball paradigm to examine adult listeners' neural responses to detecting emotional prosody changes in nonrepeating naturally spoken words. METHOD: Thirty-three adult listeners completed the experiment by passively listening to the words in neutral and three alternating emotions while watching a silent movie...
June 28, 2023: Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research: JSLHR
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37362419/impact-of-acute-psychosocial-stress-on-attentional-control-in-humans-a-study-of-evoked-potentials-and-pupillary-response
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
F Rojas-Thomas, C Artigas, G Wainstein, Juan-Pablo Morales, M Arriagada, D Soto, A Dagnino-Subiabre, J Silva, V Lopez
Psychosocial stress has increased considerably in our modern lifestyle, affecting global mental health. Deficits in attentional control are cardinal features of stress disorders and pathological anxiety. Studies suggest that changes in the locus coeruleus-norepinephrine system could underlie the effects of stress on top-down attentional control. However, the impact of psychosocial stress on attentional processes and its underlying neural mechanisms are poorly understood. This study aims to investigate the effect of psychosocial stress on attentional processing and brain signatures...
July 2023: Neurobiology of Stress
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37262036/the-impact-of-a-rosemary-containing-drink-on-event-related-potential-neural-markers-of-sustained-attention
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Leigh Martin Riby, Sheridan Edwards, Heather McDonald, Mark Moss
BACKGROUND: Research suggests that the ingestion or aroma of rosemary enhances cognitive ability in both rodents and humans. However, how rosemary facilitates cognition and the precise therapeutic impacts on information processing remains unclear. HYPOTHESIS/PURPOSE: This pilot study used the temporal precision of event-related potentials (ERPs) to examine the cognitive-enhancing benefits of a rosemary drink. Neural markers of sustained attention were used as indices to explore whether rosemary facilitates concentration in general or the allocation of resources to task-relevant information only...
2023: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37239238/somatosensory-event-related-potential-as-an-electrophysiological-correlate-of-endogenous-spatial-tactile-attention-prospects-for-electrotactile-brain-computer-interface-for-sensory-training
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marija Novičić, Andrej M Savić
Tactile attention tasks are used in the diagnosis and treatment of neurological and sensory processing disorders, while somatosensory event-related potentials (ERP) measured by electroencephalography (EEG) are used as neural correlates of attention processes. Brain-computer interface (BCI) technology provides an opportunity for the training of mental task execution via providing online feedback based on ERP measures. Our recent work introduced a novel electrotactile BCI for sensory training, based on somatosensory ERP; however, no previous studies have addressed specific somatosensory ERP morphological features as measures of sustained endogenous spatial tactile attention in the context of BCI control...
May 5, 2023: Brain Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37209002/neural-signatures-of-memory-gain-through-active-exploration-in-an-oculomotor-auditory-learning-task
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stefanie Sturm, Jordi Costa-Faidella, Iria SanMiguel
Active engagement improves learning and memory, and self- versus externally generated stimuli are processed differently: perceptual intensity and neural responses are attenuated. Whether the attenuation is linked to memory formation remains unclear. This study investigates whether active oculomotor control over auditory stimuli-controlling for movement and stimulus predictability-benefits associative learning, and studies the underlying neural mechanisms. Using EEG and eye tracking we explored the impact of control during learning on the processing and memory recall of arbitrary oculomotor-auditory associations...
May 20, 2023: Psychophysiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37179855/the-electrophysiological-characteristics-of-social-exclusion-the-perspective-of-close-and-distant-relationships
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Pengcheng Zhang, Min Zhu, Jingjing Hu, Xiangping Gao
The sources of social exclusion are very wide, ranging from the closest people to strangers. However, current studies mainly reveal the electrophysiological characteristics of social exclusion by means of binary comparison between social exclusion and social inclusion, and lack of in-depth analysis of the differences caused by different sources of exclusion. In this study, a static passing ball paradigm system including close and distant relationship identity information was used to reveal the electrophysiological characteristics of individuals when they were excluded by people with different close and distant relationships...
2023: Frontiers in Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37150485/dopaminergic-and-norepinephrinergic-modulation-of-endogenous-event-related-potentials-a-systematic-review-and-meta-analysis
#40
REVIEW
Claire V Warren, Charlotte F Kroll, Bruno Kopp
Event-related potentials (ERPs) represent the cortical processing of sensory, motor or cognitive functions invoked by particular events or stimuli. A current theory posits that the catecholaminergic neurotransmitters dopamine (DA) and norepinephrine (NE) modulate a number of endogenous ERPs during various cognitive processes. This manuscript aims to evaluate a leading neurotransmitter hypothesis with a systematic overview and meta-analysis of pharmacologic DA and NE manipulation of specific ERPs in healthy subjects during executive function...
August 2023: Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews
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