keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38556645/midlife-speech-perception-deficits-impact-of-extended-high-frequency-hearing-peripheral-neural-function-and-cognitive-abilities
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Chhayakanta Patro, Angela Monfiletto, Aviya Singer, Nirmal Kumar Srinivasan, Srikanta Kumar Mishra
OBJECTIVES: The objectives of the present study were to investigate the effects of age-related changes in extended high-frequency (EHF) hearing, peripheral neural function, working memory, and executive function on speech perception deficits in middle-aged individuals with clinically normal hearing. DESIGN: We administered a comprehensive assessment battery to 37 participants spanning the age range of 20 to 56 years. This battery encompassed various evaluations, including standard and EHF pure-tone audiometry, ranging from 0...
April 1, 2024: Ear and Hearing
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38556553/transmembrane-proteins-with-unknown-function-tmems-as-ion-channels-electrophysiological-properties-structure-and-pathophysiological-roles
#22
REVIEW
Hyunji Kang, C Justin Lee
A transmembrane (TMEM) protein with an unknown function is a type of membrane-spanning protein expressed in the plasma membrane or the membranes of intracellular organelles. Recently, several TMEM proteins have been identified as functional ion channels. The structures and functions of these proteins have been extensively studied over the last two decades, starting with TMEM16A (ANO1). In this review, we provide a summary of the electrophysiological properties of known TMEM proteins that function as ion channels, such as TMEM175 (KEL ), TMEM206 (PAC), TMEM38 (TRIC), TMEM87A (GolpHCat), TMEM120A (TACAN), TMEM63 (OSCA), TMEM150C (Tentonin3), and TMEM43 (Gapjinc)...
April 1, 2024: Experimental & Molecular Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38553823/rational-inattention-a-new-theory-of-neurodivergent-information-seeking
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Samuel David Jones, Manon Wyn Jones, Kami Koldewyn, Gert Westermann
This paper presents rational inattention as a new, transdiagnostic theory of information seeking in neurodevelopmental conditions that have uneven cognitive and socio-emotional profiles, including developmental language disorder (DLD), dyslexia, dyscalculia and autism. Rational inattention holds that the optimal solution to minimizing epistemic uncertainty is to avoid imprecise information sources. The key theoretical contribution of this report is to endogenize imprecision, making it a function of the primary neurocognitive difficulties that have been invoked to explain neurodivergent phenotypes, including deficits in auditory perception, working memory, procedural learning and the social brain network...
March 29, 2024: Developmental Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38552908/hearing-fearful-prosody-impairs-visual-working-memory-maintenance
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
François Thiffault, Justine Cinq-Mars, Benoît Brisson, Isabelle Blanchette
Interference by distractors has been associated multiple times with diminished visual and auditory working memory (WM) performance. Negative emotional distractors in particular lead to detrimental effects on WM. However, these associations have only been seen when distractors and items to maintain in WM are from the same sensory modality. In this study, we investigate cross-modal interference on WM. We invited 20 participants to complete a visual change-detection task, assessing visual WM (VWM), while hearing emotional (fearful) and neutral auditory distractors...
March 27, 2024: International Journal of Psychophysiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38552384/quantitative-analysis-of-visually-normal-eeg-reveals-spectral-power-abnormalities-in-temporal-lobe-epilepsy
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maria Celeste Bonacci, Ilaria Sammarra, Maria Eugenia Caligiuri, Miriam Sturniolo, Iolanda Martino, Patrizia Vizza, Pierangelo Veltri, Antonio Gambardella
OBJECTIVE: To compare quantitative spectral parameters of visually-normal EEG between Mesial Temporal Lobe Epilepsy (MTLE) patients and healthy controls (HC). METHOD: We enrolled 26 MTLE patients and 26 HC. From each recording we calculated total power of all frequency bands and determined alpha-theta (ATR) and alpha-delta (ADR) power ratios in different brain regions. Group-wise differences between spectral parameters were investigated (p < 0.05). To test for associations between spectral-power and cognitive status, we evaluated correlations between neuropsychological tests and quantitative EEG (qEEG) metrics...
March 28, 2024: Clinical Neurophysiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38550790/intrinsic-functional-connectivity-strength-of-superagers-in-the-default-mode-and-salience-networks-insights-from-adni
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Haley E Keenan, Alexis Czippel, Sepideh Heydari, Jodie R Gawryluk, Erin L Mazerolle
There exists a group of older individuals who appear to be resistant to age-related memory decline. These "SuperAgers" have been shown to demonstrate preservation of cortical thickness and functional connectivity strength across the cortex which positively correlates with memory performance. Over the last decade, roughly 30 articles have been published regarding SuperAgers; however, to our knowledge, no replications of these studies have been published. The current study sought to conceptually replicate Zhang and colleagues' (2020) findings that SuperAgers demonstrate stronger intrinsic functional connectivity within the default mode (DMN) and salience networks (SN), and that connectivity strength within these networks correlates with memory performance...
2024: Aging brain
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38549287/alpha-band-dynamics-of-hearing-aid-wearers-performing-the-repeat-recall-test-rrt
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Christopher Slugocki, Francis Kuk, Petri Korhonen
This study measured electroencephalographic activity in the alpha band, often associated with task difficulty, to physiologically validate self-reported effort ratings from older hearing-impaired listeners performing the Repeat-Recall Test (RRT)-an integrative multipart assessment of speech-in-noise performance, context use, and auditory working memory. Following a single-blind within-subjects design, 16 older listeners (mean age = 71 years, SD = 13, 9 female) with a moderate-to-severe degree of bilateral sensorineural hearing loss performed the RRT while wearing hearing aids at four fixed signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs) of -5, 0, 5, and 10 dB...
2024: Trends in Hearing
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38540094/functional-connectivity-of-language-related-cerebellar-regions-is-reduced-in-schizophrenia-patients
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marco Marino, Margherita Biondi, Dante Mantini, Chiara Spironelli
Schizophrenia (SZ) is a widespread psychiatric disorder that is traditionally characterized by positive and negative symptoms. However, recent focus has shifted to cognitive deficits as a crucial aspect. The cerebellum, conventionally tied to motor coordination, is now recognized as pivotal in the pathophysiology of SZ cognitive impairments. Proposed disruptions in the cortico-cerebellar-thalamic-cortico circuit contribute to these deficits. Despite evidence of cerebellar abnormalities, within-cerebellum functional connectivity is often overlooked...
February 21, 2024: Biomedicines
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38538194/does-intensity-matter-a-randomized-crossover-study-of-the-role-of-acute-exercise-intensity-on-cognitive-performance-and-motor-speed-and-accuracy
#29
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
Michael J Larson, Alexandra M Muir, Reilly O Reid, Kaylie A Carbine, Harrison Marsh, Hunter LaCouture, Chance McCutcheon, Bruce W Bailey
There is a well-recognized, yet nuanced, positive relationship between acute physical activity and cognitive function. However, the precise impact of exercise intensity remains ambiguous. We tested learning and memory, working memory and processing speed, and motor speed and accuracy across three distinct exercise intensities. A sample of 207 participants (100 female) between 18 and 44 years (mean age: 22.5±3.7years) completed all study procedures. Utilizing a within-subjects, cross-over design, participants completed moderate (35% VO2 Max), vigorous (70% VO2 Max), and sedentary (no exercise) conditions...
2024: Progress in Brain Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38526127/perceptual-organization-and-task-demands-jointly-shape-auditory-working-memory-capacity
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Abigail L Noyce, Leonard Varghese, Samuel R Mathias, Barbara G Shinn-Cunningham
Listeners performed two different tasks in which they remembered short sequences comprising either complex tones (generally heard as one melody) or everyday sounds (generally heard as separate objects). In one, listeners judged whether a probe item had been present in the preceding sequence. In the other, they judged whether a second sequence of the same items was identical in order to the preceding sequence. Performance on the first task was higher for everyday sounds; performance on the second was higher for complex tones...
March 1, 2024: JASA express letters
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38518200/prior-incarceration-and-performance-on-immediate-and-delayed-verbal-recall-tests-results-from-national-longitudinal-study-of-adolescent-to-adult-health-parent-study
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alexander Testa, Dylan B Jackson, Meghan Novisky, Kyle T Ganson, Jason M Nagata, Jack Tsai
OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to investigate the cognitive functioning of formerly incarcerated older adults compared to their never-incarcerated counterparts, focusing on immediate and delayed verbal recall. METHODS: Data are from 2,003 respondents who participated in the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health - Parent Study (AHPS) (ages 47-82; mean age 62). AHPS participants were administered word recall memory exercises to the parent respondent from the Rey Auditory-Verbal administered Learning Test, including (a) 90-second (immediate or short-term verbal memory), (b) 60-second recall tests (delayed or long-term verbal memory), and (c) combined word recall on the 90- and 60-second tests...
March 22, 2024: Journals of Gerontology. Series B, Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38517175/effects-of-accelerated-intermittent-theta-burst-stimulation-in-modulating-brain-of-alzheimer-s-disease
#32
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
Hua Lin, Junhua Liang, Qianqian Wang, Yuxuan Shao, Penghui Song, Siran Li, Yang Bai
Intermittent theta-burst stimulation (iTBS) is emerging as a noninvasive therapeutic strategy for Alzheimer's disease (AD). Recent advances highlighted a new accelerated iTBS (aiTBS) protocol, consisting of multiple sessions per day and higher overall pulse doses, in brain modulation. To examine the possibility of applying the aiTBS in treating AD patients, we enrolled 45 patients in AD at early clinical stages, and they were randomly assigned to either receive real or sham aiTBS. Neuropsychological scores were evaluated before and after treatment...
March 1, 2024: Cerebral Cortex
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38515548/twenty-years-of-blast-induced-neurotrauma-current-state-of-knowledge
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tarun Sachdeva, Shailesh G Ganpule
Blast-induced neurotrauma (BINT) is an important injury paradigm of neurotrauma research. This short communication summarizes the current knowledge of BINT. We divide the BINT research into several broad categories-blast wave generation in laboratory, biomechanics, pathology, behavioral outcomes, repetitive blast in animal models, and clinical and neuroimaging investigations in humans. Publications from 2000 to 2023 in each subdomain were considered. The analysis of the literature has brought out salient aspects...
2024: Neurotrauma reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38510428/reduced-white-matter-maturation-in-the-central-auditory-system-of-children-living-with-hiv
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Joanah Madzime, Marcin Jankiewicz, Ernesta M Meintjes, Peter Torre, Barbara Laughton, Andre J W van der Kouwe, Martha Holmes
INTRODUCTION: School-aged children experience crucial developmental changes in white matter (WM) in adolescence. The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) affects neurodevelopment. Children living with perinatally acquired HIV (CPHIVs) demonstrate hearing and neurocognitive impairments when compared to their uninfected peers (CHUUs), but investigations into the central auditory system (CAS) WM integrity are lacking. The integration of the CAS and other brain areas is facilitated by WM fibers whose integrity may be affected in the presence of HIV, contributing to neurocognitive impairments...
2024: Front Neuroimaging
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38504872/neurocomputational-mechanisms-underlying-perception-and-sentience-in-the-neocortex
#35
REVIEW
Andrew S Johnson, William Winlow
The basis for computation in the brain is the quantum threshold of "soliton," which accompanies the ion changes of the action potential, and the refractory membrane at convergences. Here, we provide a logical explanation from the action potential to a neuronal model of the coding and computation of the retina. We also explain how the visual cortex operates through quantum-phase processing. In the small-world network, parallel frequencies collide into definable patterns of distinct objects. Elsewhere, we have shown how many sensory cells are meanly sampled from a single neuron and that convergences of neurons are common...
2024: Frontiers in Computational Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38504050/warning-before-misinformation-exposure-modulates-memory-encoding
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jessica M Karanian, Ayanna K Thomas, Elizabeth Race
Exposure to misleading information after witnessing an event can impair future memory reports about the event. This pervasive form of memory distortion, termed the misinformation effect, can be significantly reduced if individuals are warned about the reliability of post-event information before exposure to misleading information. The present fMRI study investigated whether such prewarnings improve subsequent memory accuracy by influencing encoding-related neural activity during exposure to misinformation. We employed a repeated retrieval misinformation paradigm in which participants watched a crime video (Witnessed Event), completed an initial test of memory, listened to a post-event auditory narrative that contained consistent, neutral, and misleading details (Post-Event Information), and then completed a final test of memory...
March 19, 2024: Cognitive, Affective & Behavioral Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38503494/monosynaptic-rabies-tracing-reveals-sex-and-age-dependent-dorsal-subiculum-connectivity-alterations-in-an-alzheimer-s-disease-mouse-model
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Qiao Ye, Gocylen Gast, Erik George Wilfley, Hanh Huynh, Chelsea Hays, Todd C Holmes, Xiangmin Xu
The subiculum (SUB), a hippocampal formation structure, is among the earliest brain regions impacted in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Towards a better understanding of AD circuit-based mechanisms, we mapped synaptic circuit inputs to dorsal SUB using monosynaptic rabies tracing in the 5xFAD mouse model by quantitatively comparing the circuit connectivity of SUB excitatory neurons in age-matched controls and 5xFAD mice at different ages for both sexes. Input-mapped brain regions include hippocampal subregions (CA1, CA2, CA3), medial septum and diagonal band (MS-DB), retrosplenial cortex (RSC), SUB, post subiculum (postSUB), visual cortex (Vis), auditory cortex (Aud), somatosensory cortex (SS), entorhinal cortex (EC), thalamus, perirhinal cortex (Prh), ectorhinal cortex (Ect) and temporal association cortex (TeA)...
March 19, 2024: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38501921/relationship-between-cognitive-abilities-and-basic-auditory-processing-in-young-adults
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Akshay R Maggu, Bhamini Sharma
PURPOSE: The diagnosis of auditory processing disorder (APD) is controversial particularly due to the influence of higher order factors of language and cognition on the diagnostic APD testing. As a result, there might be a need for testing for other domains (e.g., cognition) along with conducting the diagnostic APD testing to rule out the influence of other domains. In order to make recommendations on whether cognitive testing is needed along with the auditory processing testing, as a starting point, the current study was conducted to examine the relationship between cognitive abilities and basic auditory processing in young adults...
March 19, 2024: American Journal of Audiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38501317/differential-cognitive-effects-of-unilateral-subthalamic-nucleus-deep-brain-stimulation-for-parkinson-s-disease
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Victor A Del Bene, Roy C Martin, Sarah A Brinkerhoff, Joseph W Olson, Matthew J Nelson, Dario Marotta, Christopher L Gonzalez, Kelly A Mills, Vidyulata Kamath, Gary Cutter, Chris P Hurt, Melissa Wade, Frank G Robinson, J Nicole Bentley, Barton L Guthrie, Robert T Knight, Harrison C Walker
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to investigate the cognitive effects of unilateral directional versus ring subthalamic nucleus deep brain stimulation (STN DBS) in patients with advanced Parkinson's disease. METHODS: We examined 31 participants who underwent unilateral STN DBS (left n = 17; right n = 14) as part of an National Institutes of Health (NIH)-sponsored randomized, double-blind, crossover study contrasting directional versus ring stimulation...
March 19, 2024: Annals of Neurology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38494888/associations-of-hearing-loss-and-structural-changes-in-specific-cortical-regions-a-mendelian-randomization-study
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Xiaoduo Liu, Lubo Shi, Enze Li, Shuo Jia
INTRODUCTION: Previous studies have suggested a correlation between hearing loss (HL) and cortical alterations, but the specific brain regions that may be affected are unknown. METHODS: Genome-wide association study (GWAS) data for 3 subtypes of HL phenotypes, sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL), conductive hearing loss, and mixed hearing loss, were selected as exposures, and GWAS data for brain structure-related traits were selected as outcomes. The inverse variance weighted method was used as the main estimation method...
March 1, 2024: Cerebral Cortex
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