29 results on '"Strang N"'
Search Results
2. Short-term effects of ophthalmic topical 0.01% atropine on the ocular surface, pupil size, and subsequent subjective quality of vision in young myopic Chinese adults.
- Author
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Mingze Li, Yimeng Chen, Jiayan Chen, Guanghao Qin, Liangzhe Li, Wei He, Sile Yu, Xingru He, Pazo, Emmanuel Eric, and Ling Xu
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- 2024
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3. The link between social comparison orientation and domain-specific risk-taking: exploring the mediating role of two dimensions of trait competitiveness.
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Yuqian Wang, Elliot, Andrew J., Derrington, Edmund, and Yansong Li
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SOCIAL comparison ,RISK-taking behavior ,COLLEGE students - Abstract
Introduction: Our recent research has demonstrated that social comparison orientation of ability (SCO-ability) is an antecedent of trait competitiveness (TC), and TC mediates the relation between SCO-ability and domain-specific risktaking. TC is a multi-dimensional trait, therefore we sought to expand on prior research by examining whether SCO-ability predicted two distinct dimensions of TC: hypercompetitive orientation (HCO) and self-development competitive orientation (SDCO). Methods: We investigated how these different dimensions of TC mediated the relation between SCO-ability and both overall and domain-specific risk-taking in two correlational studies of 622 college students (313 males, mean age = 22.10, SD = 2.35) and 717 adult workers (368 males, mean age = 27.92, SD = 5.11). Results: We found that SCO-ability positively predicted HCO. Together, SCOability and HCO predicted overall risk-taking and risk-taking in the recreational and ethical domains in both samples. HCO mediated the relation between SCOability and both overall risk-taking and risk-taking in the recreational and ethical domains. Additionally, SCO-ability positively predicted SDCO. SCO-ability and SDCO mainly predicted risk-taking in the recreational domain in both studies. SDCO mediated the relation between SCO-ability and risk-taking only in the recreational domain. Discussion: Collectively, the findings above advance our understanding of the relation between competition and risk-taking by using differentiated measures of TC (HCO and SDCO). Our findings suggest that HCO is more strongly related to risk-taking than SDCO, thereby refining the possible role of SCO-ability and TC in predicting overall risk-taking and domain-specific risk-taking. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Potential application of traditional Chinese medicine in age-related macular degeneration--focusing on mitophagy.
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Yujia Yu, Gaofeng Wang, Yong Liu, and Zhaoru Meng
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MACULAR degeneration ,CHINESE medicine ,MITOGEN-activated protein kinase phosphatases ,RHODOPSIN ,VISION disorders ,PROTEIN kinases - Abstract
Retinal pigment epithelial cell and neuroretinal damage in age-related macular degeneration (AMD) can lead to serious visual impairments and blindness. Studies have shown that mitophagy, a highly specialized cellular degradation system, is implicated in the pathogenesis of AMD. Mitophagy selectively eliminates impaired or non-functioning mitochondria via several pathways, such as the phosphatase and tensin homolog-induced kinase 1/Parkin, BCL2-interacting protein 3 and NIP3-like protein X, FUN14 domain-containing 1, and AMP-activated protein kinase pathways. This has a major impact on the maintenance of mitochondrial homeostasis. Therefore, the regulation of mitophagy could be a promising therapeutic strategy for AMD. Traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) uses natural products that could potentially prevent and treat various diseases, such as AMD. This review aims to summarize recent findings on mitophagy regulation pathways and the latest progress in AMD treatment targeting mitophagy, emphasizing methods involving TCM. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Role of traditional Chinese medicine in age-related macular degeneration: exploring the gut microbiota's influence.
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Yujia Yu, Yong Liu, and Zhaoru Meng
- Abstract
The pathogenesis of age-related macular degeneration (AMD), a degenerative retinopathy, remains unclear. Administration of anti-vascular endothelial growth factor agents, antioxidants, fundus lasers, photodynamic therapy, and transpupillary warming has proven effective in alleviating symptoms; however, these interventions cannot prevent or reverse AMD. Increasing evidence suggests that AMD risk is linked to changes in the composition, abundance, and diversity of the gutmicrobiota (GM). Activation of multiple signaling pathways by GM metabolites, including lipopolysaccharides, oxysterols, short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), and bile acids (BAs), influences retinal physiology. Traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), known for itsmulti-component andmulti-target advantages, can help treat AMDby altering GM composition and regulating the levels of certain substances, such as lipopolysaccharides, reducing oxysterols, and increasing SCFA and BA contents. This reviewexplores the correlation between GMand AMD and interventions for the two to provide new perspectives on treating AMD with TCM. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Chinese medicine, Qijudihuang pill, mediates cholesterol metabolism and regulates gut microbiota in high-fat diet-fed mice, implications for age-related macular degeneration.
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Yanqun Cao, Ibrahim, Khalid S., Xing Li, Wong, Aileen, Yi Wu, Xu-Dong Yu, Xinzhi Zhou, Zhoujin Tan, Zhiming He, Craft, John A., and Xinhua Shu
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MACULAR degeneration ,CHOLESTEROL metabolism ,GUT microbiome ,CHINESE medicine ,OLDER people ,RETINAL injuries - Abstract
Background: Traditional Chinese Medicines have been used for thousands of years but without any sound empirical basis. One such preparation is the Qijudihuang pill (QP), a mixture of eight herbs, that has been used in China for the treatment of various conditions including age-related macular degeneration (AMD), the most common cause of blindness in the aged population. In order to explain the mechanism behind the effect ofQP, we used an AMDmodel of high-fat diet (HFD) fed mice to investigate cholesterol homeostasis, oxidative stress, inflammation and gut microbiota. Methods: Mice were randomly divided into three groups, one group was fed with control diet (CD), the other two groups were fed with high-fat-diet (HFD). One HFD group was treated with QP, both CD and the other HFD groups were treated with vehicles. Tissue samples were collected after the treatment. Cholesterol levels in retina, retinal pigment epithelium (RPE), liver and serum were determined using a commercial kit. The expression of enzymes involved in cholesterol metabolism, inflammation and oxidative stress was measured with qRT-PCR. Gut microbiota was analyzed using 16S rRNA sequencing. Results: In the majority of the lipid determinations, analytes were elevated by HFD but thiswas reversed by QP. Cholesterol metabolism including the enzymes of bile acid (BA) formationwas suppressed by HFD but again thiswas reversed by QP. BAs play amajor role in signaling between host andmicrobiome and this is disrupted by HFD resulting in major changes in the composition of colonic bacterial communities. Associated with these changes are predictions of the metabolic pathway complexity and abundance of individual pathways. These concerned substrate breakdowns, energy production and the biosynthesis of proinflammatory factors but were changed back to control characteristics by QP. Conclusion: We propose that the ability of QP to reverse these HFD-induced effects is related to mechanisms acting to lower cholesterol level, oxidative stress and inflammation, and to modulate gut microbiota. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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7. Multistable perception elicits compensatory alpha activity in older adults.
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Küçük, Kurtuluş Mert, Wienke, Annika S., Mathes, Birgit, and Başar-Eroğlu, Canan
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ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY ,SENSORY perception ,MANN Whitney U Test ,T-test (Statistics) ,AGING ,RESEARCH funding ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
Multistable stimuli lead to the perception of two or more alternative perceptual experiences that spontaneously reverse from one to the other. This property allows researchers to study perceptual processes that endogenously generate and integrate perceptual information. These endogenous processes appear to be slowed down around the age of 55 where participants report significantly lower perceptual reversals. This study aimed to identify neural correlates of this aging effect during multistable perception utilizing a multistable version of the stroboscopic alternative motion paradigm (SAM: endogenous task) and a control condition (exogenous task). Specifically, age-related differences in perceptual destabilization and maintenance processes were examined through alpha responses. Electroencephalography (EEG) of 12 older and 12 young adults were recorded during SAM and control tasks. Alpha band activity (8-14 Hz) was obtained by wavelet-transformation of the EEG signal and analyzed for each experimental condition. Endogenous reversals induced gradual decrease in posterior alpha activity in young adults which is a replication of previous studies' findings. Alpha desynchronization was shifted to anterior areas and prevalent across the cortex except the occipital area for older adults. Alpha responses did not differ between the groups in the control condition. These findings point to recruitment of compensatory alpha networks for maintenance of endogenously generated percepts. Increased number of networks responsible for maintenance might have extended the neural satiation duration and led to decreased reversal rates in older adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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8. Kinetic pupillary size using Pentacam in myopia.
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Kaixiu Li, Xiaoqi Li, Qun Wang, Liqiang Wang, and Yifei Huang
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MYOPIA ,REFRACTIVE errors ,CHINESE people - Abstract
Purpose: To compare if the kinetic pupillary changes differs between high myopia (HM) and low/moderate myopia by Pentacam. Setting: Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) General Hospital, Beijing, China. Design: Comparative study. Methods: In this cross-sectional retrospective study, 44 eyes of 44 patients were recruited in the Refractive Surgery Center of Chinese PLA General Hospital. Eyes were divided into two groups according to the refractive error: low/moderate myopia (22 eyes; -2.99 ± 1.09 D) and HM (22 eyes, -12.93 ± 3.44 D). At the beginning of the experiment, we made trials of scanning one false pupil by Pentacam. All patients underwent the Pentacam examination three times. Pupillary diameters (PD) during the scan process and other parameters were measured using the Pentacam. Coefficient variations of PD (CV) during the different scanning periods were analyzed comparatively between the two groups. Results: Pentacam once time output 25 Scheimpflug images, with 13 ones during the period from 1st to 1.5th s and 12 ones during the period from 2.5th to 3rd s after the scanning onset. For the spatial order on all the 25 meridians, 13 Scheimpflug images came out when the Pentacam rotated from 60° to 153° meridians and the remaining 12 Scheimpflug images from 161° to 245° meridians. Among pupillary parameters, no statistical significance existed in PD25, PD13, and PD12 (pupil diameter's mean from all, former 13 and remaining 12 of 25 Scheimpflug images, respectively) (P > 0.05) between the two groups. However, there were statistically significant differences in CV25 and CV13 (coefficient variation of the pupil diameters from all and former 13 of 25 images, respectively) (P < 0.001), with no statistical significance in CV12 (coefficient variation of the pupil diameters from remaining 12 of 25 images) between both groups. Conclusion: Twenty-five Scheimpflug images on Pentacam had the temporal and the spatial orders. CV in eyes with HM was lower than that in eyes with low/moderate myopia in a certain period of the Pentacam scan. Kinetic pupillary size in HM changed more slowly than that in low/moderate myopia during some scanning period analogous to the phasic response of the pupil reflex. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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9. Metabolomics of various samples advancing biomarker discovery and pathogenesis elucidation for diabetic retinopathy.
- Author
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Xiaohui Du, Le Yang, Ling Kong, Ye Sun, Kunshuang Shen, Ying Cai, Hui Sun, Bo Zhang, Sifan Guo, Aihua Zhang, and Xijun Wang
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DIABETIC retinopathy ,G protein coupled receptors ,VITREOUS humor ,AQUEOUS humor ,METABOLOMICS ,METABOLIC disorders - Abstract
Diabetic retinopathy (DR) is a universal microvascular complication of diabetes mellitus (DM), which is the main reason for global sight damage/loss in middleaged and/or older people. Current clinical analyses, like hemoglobin A1c, possess some importance as prognostic indicators for DR severity, but no effective circulating biomarkers are used for DR in the clinic currently, and studies on the latent pathophysiology remain lacking. Recent developments in omics, especially metabolomics, continue to disclose novel potential biomarkers in several fields, including but not limited to DR. Therefore, based on the overview of metabolomics, we reviewed progress in analytical technology of metabolomics, the prominent roles and the current status of biomarkers in DR, and the update of potential biomarkers in various DR-related samples via metabolomics, including tear as well as vitreous humor, aqueous humor, retina, plasma, serum, cerebrospinal fluid, urine, and feces. In this review, we underscored the in-depth analysis and elucidation of the common biomarkers in different biological samples based on integrated results, namely, alanine, lactate, and glutamine. Alanine may participate in and regulate glucose metabolism through stimulating N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors and subsequently suppressing insulin secretion, which is the potential pathogenesis of DR. Abnormal lactate could cause extensive oxidative stress and neuroinflammation, eventually leading to retinal hypoxia and metabolic dysfunction; on the other hand, high-level lactate may damage the structure and function of the retinal endothelial cell barrier via the G protein-coupled receptor 81. Abnormal glutamine indicates a disturbance of glutamate recycling, which may affect the activation of Müller cells and proliferation via the PPP1CA-YAP-GS-Gln-mTORC1 pathway. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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10. Simulations to Assess the Performance of Multifactor Risk Scores for Predicting Myopia Prevalence in Children and Adolescents in China.
- Author
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Wang, Hong, Li, Liansheng, Wang, Wencan, Wang, Hao, Zhuang, Youyuan, Lu, Xiaoyan, Zhang, Guosi, Wang, Siyu, Lin, Peng, Chen, Chong, Bai, Yu, Chen, Qi, Chen, Hao, Qu, Jia, and Xu, Liangde
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DISEASE risk factors ,MYOPIA ,TEENAGERS ,VISION disorders ,POPULATION of China ,AGE of onset - Abstract
Background: Myopia is the most common visual impairment among Chinese children and adolescents. The purpose of this study is to explore key interventions for myopia prevalence, especially for early-onset myopia and high myopia. Methods: Univariate and multivariate analyses were conducted to evaluate potential associations between risk factor exposure and myopia. LASSO was performed to prioritize the risk features, and the selected leading factors were used to establish the assembled simulation model. Finally, two forecasting models were constructed to predict the risk of myopia and high myopia. Results: Children and adolescents with persistently incorrect posture had a high risk of myopia (OR 7.205, 95% CI 5.999–8.652), which was 2.8 times higher than that in students who always maintained correct posture. In the cohort with high myopia, sleep time of less than 7 h per day (OR 9.789, 95% CI 6.865–13.958), incorrect sitting posture (OR 8.975, 95% CI 5.339–15.086), and siblings with spherical equivalent <−6.00 D (OR 8.439, 95% CI 5.420–13.142) were the top three risk factors. The AUCs of integrated simulation models for myopia and high myopia were 0.8716 and 0.8191, respectively. Conclusion: The findings illustrate that keeping incorrect posture is the leading risk factor for myopia onset, while the onset age of myopia is the primary factor affecting high myopia progression. The age between 8 and 12 years is the crucial stage for clinical intervention, especially for children with parental myopia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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11. Exploration of the Specific Pathology of HXMM Tablet Against Retinal Injury Based on Drug Attack Model to Network Robustness.
- Author
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Xi, Yujie, Miao, Yan, Zhou, Rui, Wang, Maolin, Zhang, Fangbo, Li, Yu, Zhang, Yi, Yang, Hongjun, and Guo, Feifei
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CELL death ,RETINAL injuries ,VASCULAR endothelial growth factors ,PATHOLOGY ,DIABETIC retinopathy ,DRUG development - Abstract
Retinal degenerative diseases are related to retinal injury because of the activation of the complement cascade, oxidative stress-induced cell death mechanisms, dysfunctional mitochondria, chronic neuroinflammation, and production of the vascular endothelial growth factor. Anti-VEGF therapy demonstrates remarkable clinical effects and benefits in retinal degenerative disease patients. Hence, new drug development is necessary to treat patients with severe visual loss. He xue ming mu (HXMM) tablet is a CFDA-approved traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) for retinal degenerative diseases, which can alleviate the symptoms of age-related macular degeneration (AMD) and diabetic retinopathy (DR) alone or in combination with anti-VEGF agents. To elucidate the mechanisms of HXMM, a quantitative evaluation algorithm for the prediction of the effect of multi-target drugs on the disturbance of the disease network has been used for exploring the specific pathology of HXMM and TCM precision positioning. Compared with anti-VEGF agents, the drug disturbance of HXMM on the functional subnetwork shows that HXMM reduces the network robustness on the oxidative stress subnetwork and inflammatory subnetwork to exhibit the anti-oxidation and anti-inflammation activity. HXMM provides better protection to ARPE-19 cells against retinal injury after H
2 O2 treatment. HXMM can elevate GSH and reduce LDH levels to exhibit antioxidant activity and suppress the expression of IL-6 and TNF-α for anti-inflammatory activity, which is different from the anti-VEGF agent with strong anti-VEGF activity. The experimental result confirmed the accuracy of the computational prediction. The combination of bioinformatics prediction based on the drug attack on network robustness and experimental validation provides a new strategy for precision application of TCM. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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12. Effect of 0.01% Atropine on Accommodation in Myopic Teenagers.
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Li, Huixia, Zhang, Liying, Tian, Hong, Zhang, Song, Zhang, Xueyan, Zhang, Han, Chen, Yujing, Qi, Wenping, Wu, Xiaoying, Jiang, Hongmei, Yang, Hailong, Yang, Yajun, Liu, Lei, and Zhang, Guisen
- Subjects
ATROPINE ,EYE drops ,TEENAGERS ,INTRAOCULAR pressure ,EYE diseases - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of the study is to evaluate the effects of 0.01% atropine eye drops on accommodative system parameters among teenagers with low myopia. Methods: Ninety-five myopic teenagers [39 boys (8.69 ± 2.473) and 56 girls (8.54 ± 2.054) aged 5–17 years] with no history of eye disease were enrolled. Biometric and accommodative system parameters were evaluated before and at 1 week, 1 month, 3 months, and 6 months of 0.01% atropine eye drop instillation. Results: Participants without accommodative demand at 6 months demonstrated insignificant changes after the atropine instillation (all p > 0.05). Nevertheless, there were significant differences in accommodative sensitivity, accommodative amplitude, accommodative responsiveness, and negative relative accommodation (NRA) at 3 months compared with baseline after atropine instillation (all p < 0.05). Except spherical equivalent refraction, cornea thickness, intraocular pressure, and axial length were stable after the 0.01% atropine instillation (all p > 0.05). Conclusion: Morphologically, current measurements suggested that 0.01% atropine had favorable reduction of accommodation for childhood low myopia over a half-year period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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13. How Cues of Being Watched Promote Risk Seeking in Fund Investment in Older Adults.
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Li, Meijia and Peng, Huamao
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OLDER people ,MUTUAL funds ,FRAMES (Social sciences) ,AGE differences ,GAMBLING behavior - Abstract
Social cues, such as being watched, can subtly alter fund investment choices. This study aimed to investigate how cues of being watched influence decision-making, attention allocation, and risk tendencies. Using decision scenarios adopted from the "Asian Disease Problem," we examined participants' risk tendency in a financial scenario when they were watched. A total of 63 older and 66 younger adults participated. Eye tracking was used to reveal the decision-maker's attention allocation (fixations and dwell time per word). The results found that both younger and older adults tend to seek risk in the loss frame than in the gain frame (i.e., framing effect). Watching eyes tended to escalate reckless gambling behaviors among older adults, which led them to maintain their share in the depressed fund market, regardless of whether the options were gain or loss framed. The eye-tracking results revealed that older adults gave less attention to the sure option in the eye condition (i.e., fewer fixations and shorter dwell time). However, their attention was maintained on the gamble options. In comparison, images of "watching eyes" did not influence the risk seeking of younger adults but decreased their framing effect. Being watched can affect financial risk preference in decision-making. The exploration of the contextual sensitivity of being watched provides us with insight into developing decision aids to promote rational financial decision-making, such as human-robot interactions. Future research on age differences still requires further replication. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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14. Socioeconomic Status and Risk-Taking Behavior Among Chinese Adolescents: The Mediating Role of Psychological Capital and Self-Control.
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Jia, Xiaoshan, Zhu, Haidong, Sun, Guiqin, Meng, Huanlei, and Zhao, Yuqian
- Abstract
Risk-taking behavior is particularly widespread during adolescence, and negatively impacts the healthy growth and social adaptation of adolescents. Utilizing problem-behavior theory (PBT) and the family stress model (FSM), the current study examined the relationship between socioeconomic status (SES) and adolescents' risk-taking behavior, as well as the mediating role of psychological capital and self-control. A total of 1,156 Chinese adolescent students (M
age = 15.51, 48% boys) completed a series of questionnaires anonymously. The results showed that: (1) Socioeconomic status was negatively correlated with adolescents' risk-taking behavior; (2) Both psychological capital and self-control mediated the relationship between SES and adolescents' risk-taking behavior independently; and (3) Psychological capital and self-control also mediated the relationship between SES and the risk-taking behavior of adolescents sequentially. This study reveals the internal mechanism of risk-taking behavior during adolescence and provides theoretical support and empirical evidence for preventing and reducing such behavior in this age group. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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15. Development and Psychometric Properties of the Synthetic Drug Dependence Scale in a Chinese Sample.
- Author
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Li, Mei-Ting, Zhang, Jun, Zhang, Dong-Cheng, Che, Qing-Qing, Liu, Ze-Lan, Yang, Pei-Wen, Luo, Xin-Wei, and Cai, Tai-Sheng
- Subjects
SYNTHETIC drugs ,DRUG addiction ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,STANDARD deviations ,DRUG abuse treatment - Abstract
Objective: In contrast to the drug situation in the rest of the world, synthetic drugs, rather than traditional drugs, have been the dominant abused drugs in China since 2019. However, the public misconception that synthetic drugs are not as addictive as traditional drugs, such as opioids and the scarcity of specific measurement instruments, have hindered the clinical diagnosis and treatment of synthetic drug abusers, thus the development of a localized instrument to evaluate dependence on synthetic drugs is in urgently needed. Method: Using a sample of 618 Chinese synthetic drug abusers (Mean age = 34.69 years; 44.17% female), the present study developed and examined the psychometric properties of a self-reporting instrument, the Synthetic Drug Dependence Scale (SDDS), which consists of four subscales: physical dependence, psychological dependence, health injury, and social function injury. Results: The SDDS revealed a three-factor model structure (weighted root mean square residual (WRMR) = 0.876, comparative fit index (CFI) = 0.965, Tucker–Lewis index (TLI) = 0.953, and Root mean square error of approximation (RMSEA) = 0.070), with good internal consistency (composite reliability = 0.912, alfa = 0.801) and convergent validity. Elevated scores on the SDDS were associated with a higher level of reward sensitivity, punishment sensitivity, and stronger impulsivity. Interestingly, psychological dependence was the only significant predictor (p < 0.05) of criterion variables compared with the other three subscales, implying the important role of psychological factors in synthetic drugs dependence. Adequate measurement equivalence across sex, age (18–30 and 31–57 years old), and employment group (employed and unemployed) was also established. Conclusion: The SDDS appears to be an effective and reliable instrument that could be used to further investigate the characteristics of synthetic and traditional drug dependence, promoting a deeper understanding of the physical and psychological roles in drug dependence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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16. Does Creativity Influence Visual Perception? - An Event-Related Potential Study With Younger and Older Adults.
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Csizmadia, Petra, Czigler, István, Nagy, Boglárka, and Gaál, Zsófia Anna
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VISUAL perception ,OLDER people ,EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) ,COGNITIVE ability - Abstract
We do not know enough about the cognitive background of creativity despite its significance. Using an active oddball paradigm with unambiguous and ambiguous portrait paintings as the standard stimuli, our aim was to examine whether: creativity in the figural domain influences the perception of visual stimuli; any stages of visual processing; or if healthy aging has an effect on these processes. We investigated event related potentials (ERPs) and applied ERP decoding analyses in four groups: younger less creative; younger creative; older less creative; and older creative adults. The early visual processing did not differ between creativity groups. In the later ERP stages the amplitude for the creative compared with the less creative groups was larger between 300 and 500 ms. The stimuli types were clearly distinguishable: within the 300–500 ms range the amplitude was larger for ambiguous rather than unambiguous paintings, but this difference in the traditional ERP analysis was only observable in the younger, not elderly groups, who also had this difference when using decoding analysis. Our results could not prove that visual creativity influences the early stage of perception, but showed creativity had an effect on stimulus processing in the 300–500 ms range, in indexing differences in top-down control, and having more flexible cognitive control in the younger creative group. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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17. Brain Activation Induced by Myopic and Hyperopic Defocus From Spectacles.
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Kang, Meng-Tian, Wang, Bo, Ran, An-Ran, Gan, Jiahe, Du, Jialing, Yusufu, Mayinuer, Liang, Xintong, Li, Shi-Ming, and Wang, Ningli
- Subjects
FRONTAL lobe ,TEMPORAL lobe ,FUNCTIONAL magnetic resonance imaging ,PARIETAL lobe ,CEREBRAL circulation - Abstract
Purpose: To assess neural changes in perceptual effects induced by myopic defocus and hyperopic defocus stimuli in ametropic and emmetropic subjects using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Methods: This study included 41 subjects with a mean age of 26.0 ± 2.9 years. The mean spherical equivalence refraction was −0.54 ± 0.51D in the emmetropic group and −3.57 ± 2.27D in the ametropic group. The subjects were instructed to view through full refractive correction, with values of +2.00D to induce myopic defocus state and −2.00D to induce hyperopic defocus state. This was carried over in three random sessions. Arterial spin labeling (ASL) perfusion was measured using fMRI to obtain quantified regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF). Behavioral tests including distant visual acuity (VA) and contrast sensitivity (CS), were measured every 5 min for 30 min. Results: Myopic defocus induced significantly greater rCBF increase in four cerebral regions compared with full correction: right precentral gyrus, right superior temporal gyrus, left inferior parietal lobule, and left middle temporal gyrus (P < 0.001). The differences were less significant in low myopes than emmetropes. In the hyperopic defocus session, the increased responses of rCBF were only observed in the right and left precentral gyrus. Myopic defocused VA and CS improved significantly within 5 min and reached a plateau shortly after. Conclusion: This study revealed that myopic defocus stimuli can significantly increase blood perfusion in visual attention-related cerebral regions, which suggests a potential direction for future investigation on the relationship between retinal defocus and its neural consequences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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18. Investigation of the Relationship Between Subjective Symptoms of Visual Fatigue and Visual Functions.
- Author
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Zheng, Fuhao, Hou, Fang, Chen, Ruru, Mei, Jianhui, Huang, Pingping, Chen, Bingzhen, and Wang, Yuwen
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CONTRAST sensitivity (Vision) ,BINOCULAR vision ,RANDOM measures ,FACTOR analysis ,EDUCATIONAL tests & measurements ,ANISOMETROPIA ,EYE diseases - Abstract
Purpose: To investigate whether the severity of symptoms of visual fatigue might be associated with clinical visual measures and basic visual functions, such as accommodation, vergence, and contrast sensitivity. Methods: In this study, 104 students were recruited (25 males, 79 females, Age 23.4 ± 2.5) for this study. Those with high myopia, strabismus, anisometropia, eye disease or history of ophthalmological surgery were excluded. The included subjects completed a questionnaire that assesses the severity of visual fatigue. Then, binocular accommodative facility, vergence facility and contrast sensitivity using a quick contrast sensitivity function approach were measured in a random sequence. Next, the correlations between each symptom of visual fatigue in the questionnaire and accommodative facility, vergence facility and contrast sensitivity were examined. Results: Factor analysis indicated that visual fatigue, as captured by the scores of a subset of the questionnaire items, could be strongly related to binocular accommodative facility and binocular contrast sensitivity, but not to vergence facility. We also found that binocular accommodative facility and contrast sensitivity at high spatial frequencies are related. Conclusion: Our findings suggest that visual fatigue is related to the ability of human observers to encode visual details through their binocular vision. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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19. Blur Detection Sensitivity Increases in Children Using Orthokeratology.
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Xu, Jingjing, Tao, Chunwen, Mao, Xinjie, Lu, Xin, Bao, Jinhua, Drobe, Björn, and Chen, Hao
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ORTHOKERATOLOGY ,OPTICAL aberrations ,VISUAL acuity - Abstract
Purpose: To investigate changes in blur detection sensitivity in children using orthokeratology (Ortho-K) and explore the relationships between blur detection thresholds (BDTs) and aberrations and accommodative function. Methods: Thirty-two children aged 8–14 years old who underwent Ortho-K treatment participated in and completed this study. Their BDTs, aberrations, and accommodative responses (ARs) were measured before and after a month of Ortho-K treatment. A two forced-choice double-staircase procedure with varying extents of blur in three images (Tumbling Es, Lena, and Street View) was used to measure the BDTs. The participants were required to judge whether the images looked blurry. The BDT of each of the images (BDT_Es, BDT_Lena, and BDT_Street) was the average value of the last three reversals. The accommodative lag was quantified by the difference between the AR and the accommodative demand (AD). Changes in the BDTs, aberrations, and accommodative lags and their relationships were analyzed. Results: After a month of wearing Ortho-K lenses, the children's BDT_Es and BDT_Lena values decreased, the aberrations increased significantly (for all, P ≤0.050), and the accommodative lag decreased to a certain extent [T(31) = 2.029, P = 0.051]. Before Ortho-K treatment, higher-order aberrations (HOAs) were related to BDT_Lena (r = 0.463, P = 0.008) and the accommodative lag was related to BDT_Es (r = −0.356, P = −0.046). After one month, no significant correlations were found between the BDTs and aberrations or accommodative lags, as well as between the variations of them (for all, P ≥ 0.069). Conclusion: Ortho-K treatment increased the children's level of blur detection sensitivity, which may have contributed to their good visual acuity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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20. Peer Presence Effects on Eye Movements and Attentional Performance.
- Author
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Tricoche, Leslie, Ferrand-Verdejo, Johan, Pélisson, Denis, and Meunier, Martine
- Subjects
EYE movements ,REACTION time ,PEER pressure ,VISUAL perception ,SOCIAL sciences education - Abstract
"Social facilitation" refers to the enhancement or impairment of performance engendered by the mere presence of others. It has been demonstrated for a diversity of behaviors. This study assessed whether it also concerns attention and eye movements and if yes, which decision-making mechanisms it affects. Human volunteers were tested in three different tasks (saccades, visual search, and continuous performance) either alone or in the presence of a familiar peer. The results failed to reveal any significant peer influence on the visual search and continuous performance tasks. For saccades, by contrast, they showed a negative or positive peer influence depending on the complexity of the testing protocol. Pro-and anti-saccades were both inhibited when pseudorandomly mixed, and both facilitated when performed separately. Peer presence impaired or improved reaction times, i.e., the speed to initiate the saccade, as well as peak velocity, i.e., the driving force moving the eye toward the target. Effect sizes were large, with Cohen's d -values ranging for reaction times (RTs) from 0.50 to 0.95. Analyzing RT distributions using the LATER (Linear Approach to Threshold with Ergodic Rate) model revealed that social inhibition of pro- and anti-saccades in the complex protocol was associated with a significant increase in the rate of rise. The present demonstration that the simple presence of a familiar peer can inhibit or facilitate saccades depending on task difficulty strengthens a growing body of evidence showing social modulations of eye movements and attention processes. The present lack of effect on visual search and continuous performance tasks contrasts with peer presence effects reported earlier using similar tasks, and future studies are needed to determine whether it is due to an intermediate level of difficulty maximizing individual variability. Together with an earlier study of the social inhibition of anti-saccades also using the LATER model, which showed an increase of the threshold, the present increase of the rate of rise suggests that peer presence can influence both the top-down and bottom-up attention-related processes guiding the decision to move the eyes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Performance and Material-Dependent Holistic Representation of Unconscious Thought: A Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study.
- Author
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Kageyama, Tetsuya, dos Santos Kawata, Kelssy Hitomi, Kawashima, Ryuta, and Sugiura, Motoaki
- Subjects
FUNCTIONAL magnetic resonance imaging ,DEPENDENCY (Psychology) ,DIAGNOSTIC imaging ,TASK analysis ,PSYCHOLOGICAL research ,TASK performance - Abstract
Psychological research has demonstrated that humans can think unconsciously. Unconscious thought (UT) refers to cognitive or affective decision-related processes that occur beyond conscious awareness. UT processes are considered more effective in complex decision-making than conscious thought (CT). In addition, holistic representation plays a key role in UT and consists of a multimodal, value-related cognitive process. While the neural correlates of UT have recently been investigated, the holistic representation hypothesis of UT has not been confirmed. Therefore, in the present study, we aimed to further evaluate this hypothesis by utilizing two UT tasks (person and consumer-product evaluations) in conjunction with an improved functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) experimental protocol. Participants evaluated four alternatives with 12 attributes each. In the UT condition, once the decision information had been presented, the participants completed a 1-back task for 120 s and evaluated each alternative, as well as an independent 1-back task in the absence of any decision information. We then performed regression analysis of the UT performance in both tasks. Our results revealed a positive correlation between performance in the UT task and the use of the anterior part of the precuneus/paracentral lobule in the person evaluation task and between performance and the posterior part of the precuneus, postcentral gyrus, middle occipital gyrus, and superior parietal lobule in the consumer-product evaluation task. The involvement of the precuneus area in both tasks was indicative of a multimodal, value-related process and is consistent with the features of holistic representation, supporting a central role for holistic representation in UT. Furthermore, the involvement of different precuneus subregions in the two UT tasks may reflect the task dependency of the key representation critical for advantageous UT. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Behavioral and Neural Dysregulation to Social Rewards and Links to Internalizing Symptoms in Adolescents.
- Author
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Kwon, Seh-Joo, Ivory, Susannah L., McCormick, Ethan M., and Telzer, Eva H.
- Subjects
ADOLESCENCE ,YOUTH ,FALSE alarms ,ADOLESCENT psychopathology - Abstract
Adolescence is a time of unique sensitivity to socially salient stimuli such as social rewards. This period overlaps with the onset of psychopathology such as internalizing and externalizing symptoms. In the current studies, we examined behavioral and neural patterns of dysregulation to social rewards and threats, and links to internalizing and externalizing symptoms in youths. In study 1, we used a social Go/NoGo cognitive control task using peer faces to test for age-related behavioral differences in inhibitory failures in adolescents (N = 53, M
age = 13.37 years), and adults (N = 51, Mage = 43.71 years). In study 2, an independent adolescent sample (N = 51, Mage = 13.98 years) completed a similar social Go/NoGo cognitive control task during fMRI. Results show that adolescents had greater inhibitory failures – as measured by false alarm rate – to both social reward and threat cues than adults, and more so to social reward than threat cues. Greater inhibitory failures to social reward than threat cues were associated with greater internalizing symptoms, but were not significantly related to externalizing symptoms. At the neural level, greater inhibitory failures to social reward than threat cues as well as greater internalizing symptoms were both associated with heightened amygdala-ventral striatum connectivity. Our findings indicate that subcortico-subcortical connectivity, which is deemed to occur chronologically earlier and thus necessary for subcortico-cortical circuits, may serve as an early biomarker for emotion dysregulation and a risk factor for internalizing symptoms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Associations Between Adolescents' Social Re-orientation Toward Peers Over Caregivers and Neural Response to Teenage Faces.
- Author
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Morningstar, Michele, Grannis, Connor, Mattson, Whitney I., and Nelson, Eric E.
- Subjects
ADOLESCENCE ,CAREGIVERS ,FACIAL expression ,PREFRONTAL cortex ,RESPONSE inhibition - Abstract
Adolescence is a period of intensive development in body, brain, and behavior. Potentiated by changes in hormones and neural response to social stimuli, teenagers undergo a process of social re-orientation away from their caregivers and toward expanding peer networks. The current study examines how relative relational closeness to peers (compared to parents) during adolescence is linked to neural response to the facial emotional expressions of other teenagers. Self-reported closeness with friends (same- and opposite-sex) and parents (mother and father), and neural response to facial stimuli during fMRI, were assessed in 8- to 19-year-old typically developing youth (n = 40, mean age = 13.90 years old, SD = 3.36; 25 female). Youth who reported greater relative closeness with peers than with parents showed decreased activation in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) during stimulus presentation, which may reflect lessened inhibitory control or regulatory response to peer-aged faces. Functional connectivity between the dlPFC and dorsal striatum was greatest in older youth who were closer to peers; in contrast, negative coupling between these regions was noted for both younger participants who were closer to peers and older participants who were closer to their parents. In addition, the association between relative closeness to peers and neural activation in regions of the social brain varied by emotion type and age. Results suggest that the re-orientation toward peers that occurs during adolescence is accompanied by changes in neural response to peer-aged social signals in social cognitive, prefrontal, and subcortical networks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. The Influence of Different Kinds of Incentives on Decision-Making and Cognitive Control in Adolescent Development: A Review of Behavioral and Neuroscientific Studies.
- Author
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Kray, Jutta, Schmitt, Hannah, Lorenz, Corinna, and Ferdinand, Nicola K.
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DECISION making ,COGNITIVE ability ,NEUROSCIENCES ,ADOLESCENT psychology ,INCENTIVE (Psychology) - Published
- 2018
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25. The Independent and Shared Mechanisms of Intrinsic Brain Dynamics: Insights From Bistable Perception.
- Author
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Cao, Teng, Wang, Lan, Sun, Zhouyuan, Engel, Stephen A., and He, Sheng
- Subjects
VISUAL perception ,RETINAL imaging ,SENSORY perception ,LISSAJOUS' curves ,PREFRONTAL cortex - Abstract
In bistable perception, constant input leads to alternating perception. The dynamics of the changing perception reflects the intrinsic dynamic properties of the "unconscious inferential" process in the brain. Under the same condition, individuals differ in how fast they experience the perceptual alternation. In this study, testing many forms of bistable perception in a large number of observers, we investigated the key question of whether there is a general and common mechanism or multiple and independent mechanisms that control the dynamics of the inferential brain. Bistable phenomena tested include binocular rivalry, vase-face, Necker cube, moving plaid, motion induced blindness, biological motion, spinning dancer, rotating cylinder, Lissajous-figure, rolling wheel, and translating diamond. Switching dynamics for each bistable percept was measured in 100 observers. Results show that the switching rates of subsets of bistable percept are highly correlated. The clustering of dynamic properties of some bistable phenomena but not an overall general control of switching dynamics implies that the brain's inferential processes are both shared and independent - faster in constructing 3D structure from motion does not mean faster in integrating components into an objects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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26. Fitness and ERP Indices of Cognitive Control Mode during Task Preparation in Preadolescent Children.
- Author
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Keita Kamijo and Hiroaki Masaki
- Subjects
EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) ,SLOW potentials (Electrophysiology) ,BIOPOTENTIALS (Electrophysiology) ,COGNITION ,COGNITIVE ability - Abstract
A growing number of studies conducted over the past decade have demonstrated that greater aerobic fitness is associated with superior cognitive control in preadolescent children. Several studies have suggested that the relationship between fitness and cognitive control may be attributed to differential reliance on proactive vs. reactive cognitive control modes. However, this contention has remained speculative, and further studies are needed to better elucidate this relationship. We designed the present study to test the hypothesis that use of cognitive control modes would differ as a function of childhood fitness. We compared performance of lower-fit and higher-fit children on a modified AX-continuous performance task, commonly used to examine shifts in the use of proactive and reactive control, along with cue-P3 and contingent negative variation (CNV) of event-related brain potentials (ERPs). Results indicated that higher-fit children exhibited greater response accuracy for BX (non-target cue -- target probe) relative to AY (target cue -- non-target probe) trials, whereas lower-fit children had comparable response accuracies for AY and BX trials. Because enhanced BX performance and impaired AY performance may be attributed to the proactive use of context information, these results suggest that greater childhood fitness is associated with more effective utilization of proactive control. Higher-fit children also exhibited larger cue-P3 amplitude and smaller CNV amplitude for BX relative to AY trials, with no such effect of trial type in lower-fit children. These ERP results suggest that greater fitness is associated with more effective utilization of cue information and response preparation more appropriate to trial type, supporting the behavioral findings. The present study provides novel insights into the relationship between fitness and cognition from the perspective of cognitive control mode during task preparation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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- View/download PDF
27. Adolescent Emotional Maturation through Divergent Models of Brain Organization.
- Author
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Semper, Jose V. Oron, Murillo, Jose I., and Bernacer, Javier
- Subjects
ADOLESCENT psychology ,MATURATION (Psychology) ,EMOTIONS ,NEUROPSYCHOLOGY ,COGNITIVE ability - Abstract
In this article we introduce the hypothesis that neuropsychological adolescent maturation, and in particular emotional management, may have opposing explanations depending on the interpretation of the assumed brain architecture, that is, whether a componential computational account (CCA) or a dynamic systems perspective (DSP) is used. According to CCA, cognitive functions are associated with the action of restricted brain regions, and this association is temporally stable; by contrast, DSP argues that cognitive functions are better explained by interactions between several brain areas, whose engagement in specific functions is temporal and context-dependent and based on neural reuse. We outline the main neurobiological facts about adolescent maturation, focusing on the neuroanatomical and neurofunctional processes associated with adolescence. We then explain the importance of emotional management in adolescent maturation. We explain the interplay between emotion and cognition under the scope of CCA and DSP, both at neural and behavioral levels. Finally, we justify why, according to CCA, emotional management is understood as regulation, specifically because the cognitive aspects of the brain are in charge of regulating emotion-related modules. However, the key word in DSP is integration, since neural information from different brain areas is integrated from the beginning of the process. Consequently, although the terms should not be conceptually confused, there is no cognition without emotion, and vice versa. Thus, emotional integration is not an independent process that just happens to the subject, but a crucial part of personal growth. Considering the importance of neuropsychological research in the development of educational and legal policies concerning adolescents, we intend to expose that the holistic view of adolescents is dependent on whether one holds the implicit or explicit interpretation of brain functioning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Aging into Perceptual Control: A Dynamic Causal Modeling for fMRI Study of Bistable Perception.
- Author
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Dowlati, Ehsan, Adams, Sarah E., Stiles, Alexandra B., and Moran, Rosalyn J.
- Subjects
AGING ,OPTICAL illusions ,CORTICAL blindness ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Aging is accompanied by stereotyped changes in functional brain activations, for example a cortical shift in activity patterns from posterior to anterior regions is one hallmark revealed by functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) of aging cognition. Whether these neuronal effects of aging could potentially contribute to an amelioration of or resistance to the cognitive symptoms associated with psychopathology remains to be explored. We used a visual illusion paradigm to address whether aging affects the cortical control of perceptual beliefs and biases. Our aim was to understand the effective connectivity associated with volitional control of ambiguous visual stimuli and to test whether greater top-down control of early visual networks emerged with advancing age. Using a bias training paradigm for ambiguous images we found that older participants (n = 16) resisted experimenter-induced visual bias compared to a younger cohort (n = 14) and that this resistance was associated with greater activity in prefrontal and temporal cortices. By applying Dynamic Causal Models for fMRI we uncovered a selective recruitment of top-down connections from the middle temporal to Lingual gyrus (LIN) by the older cohort during the perceptual switch decision following bias training. In contrast, our younger cohort did not exhibit any consistent connectivity effects but instead showed a loss of driving inputs to orbitofrontal sources following training. These findings suggest that perceptual beliefs are more readily controlled by top-down strategies in older adults and introduce age-dependent neural mechanisms that may be important for understanding aberrant belief states associated with psychopathology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Color difference threshold of chromostereopsis induced by flat display emission.
- Author
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Ozolinsh, Maris and Muizniece, Kristine
- Subjects
OPTICAL illusions ,PSYCHOLOGY of color ,THRESHOLD (Perception) ,ACHROMATISM ,MONOCHROMATIC aberration - Abstract
The study of chromostereopsis has gained attention in the backdrop of the use of computer displays in daily life. In this context, we analyze the illusory depth sense using planar color images presented on a computer screen. We determine the color difference threshold required to induce an illusory sense of depth psychometrically using a constant stimuli paradigm. Isoluminant stimuli are presented on a computer screen, which stimuli are aligned along the blue-red line in the computer display CIE xyY color space. Stereo disparity is generated by increasing the color difference between the central and surrounding areas of the stimuli with both areas consisting of random dots on a black background. The observed altering of illusory depth sense, thus also stereo disparity is validated using the "center-of-gravity" model. The induced illusory sense of the depth effect undergoes color reversal upon varying the binocular lateral eye pupil covering conditions (lateral or medial). Analysis of the retinal image point spread function for the display red and blue pixel radiation validates the altering of chromostereopsis retinal disparity achieved by increasing the color difference, and also the chromostereopsis color reversal caused by varying the eye pupil covering conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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