3,219 results on '"PRIMING (Psychology)"'
Search Results
2. Repetition Priming in Treatment of Anomia
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Rana Tabrizi, Emily Simon, Logan Walton, and JoAnn P. Silkes
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Linguistics and Language ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Repetition priming ,Anomia ,Audiology ,030507 speech-language pathology & audiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Speech and Hearing ,0302 clinical medicine ,Aphasia ,Generalization (learning) ,Repetition Priming ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Humans ,Training period ,Language ability ,Response to treatment ,Semantics ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Language Therapy ,medicine.symptom ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,Priming (psychology) ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,After treatment - Abstract
Purpose: Repetition priming has been suggested as a method for targeting implicit processes in anomia treatment. Prior studies have used masked priming for this purpose. This study extends that work with visible primes, a more clinically feasible approach. Method: This study used a single-subject design across three participants with aphasia. Treatment involved repeated exposure to identity primes (trained condition) or sham primes (untrained condition) paired with pictures. Analyses assessed acquisition effects for trained items and untrained items that were seen during the training period, generalization to untrained items that had not been seen, and generalization to broader language skills, immediately and 3 months post-treatment. Results: All participants improved in naming trained items immediately after treatment, with greater improvements for trained than for untrained items. All participants maintained some degree of improvement on trained items 3 months post-treatment, although the degree differed across participants. Inconsistent generalization occurred to unexposed items. Improvements were noted in some areas of broader language ability, although these varied. Conclusions: These data suggest a repetition priming treatment paradigm may increase naming accuracy for individuals with anomia and may benefit other aspects of language. Participant factors may have influenced response to treatment. Directions for future investigation are discussed.
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- 2022
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3. Repetition priming in individuals with amnestic mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer's dementia: A systematic review and meta-analysis
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Glenn E. Smith, Priscilla Amofa, Pilar Thangwaritorn, Brynn Johnson, Roy P. C. Kessels, Deirdre M. O’Shea, Michael Marsiske, Liselotte De Wit, Nancy Schaefer, and Vitória Piai
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Neurology ,Repetition priming ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Audiology ,Severity of Illness Index ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,All institutes and research themes of the Radboud University Medical Center ,0302 clinical medicine ,Alzheimer Disease ,Repetition Priming ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Humans ,Dementia ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Cognitive impairment ,Aged ,Neurodevelopmental disorders Donders Center for Medical Neuroscience [Radboudumc 7] ,Neuro- en revalidatiepsychologie ,Neuropsychology and rehabilitation psychology ,05 social sciences ,Neuropsychology ,medicine.disease ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Meta-analysis ,Implicit memory ,Psychology ,Priming (psychology) ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Contains fulltext : 234369.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access) The literature on repetition priming in Alzheimer's disease (AD) is inconsistent, with some findings supporting spared priming while others do not. Several factors may explain these inconsistencies, including AD severity (e.g., dementia vs. Mild Cognitive Impairment; MCI) and priming paradigm-related characteristics. This systematic review and meta-analysis provides a quantitative summary of repetition priming in AD. We examined the between-group standard mean difference comparing repetition priming in AD dementia or amnestic MCI (aMCI; presumably due to AD) to controls. Thirty-two studies were selected, including 590 individuals with AD dementia, 267 individuals with amnestic MCI, and 703 controls. Our results indicated that both individuals with aMCI and AD dementia perform worse on repetition priming tasks than cognitively older adults. Paradigm-related moderators suggested that the effect size between studies comparing the combined aMCI or AD dementia group to cognitively healthy older adults was the highest for paradigms that required participants to produce, rather than identify, primes during the test phase. Our results further suggested that priming in AD is impaired for both conceptual and perceptual priming tasks. Lastly, while our results suggested that priming in AD is impaired for priming tasks that require deep processing, we were unable to draw firm conclusions about whether priming is less impaired in aMCI or AD dementia for paradigms that require shallow processing. 19 p.
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- 2022
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4. On the lexical representation of compound nouns: Evidence from a picture-naming task with compound targets and gender-marked determiner primes in aphasia
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Antje Lorenz, Hellmuth Obrig, Jörg D. Jescheniak, and Danièle Pino
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Grammatical gender ,Head (linguistics) ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Linguistics ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Task (project management) ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Noun ,Aphasia ,medicine ,Humans ,Determiner ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Control (linguistics) ,Priming (psychology) ,Language ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Our study examines the lexical representation and processing of compounds in participants with aphasia (PWA) and language-unimpaired control speakers. Participants were engaged in primed picture-naming in German, a language that marks for grammatical gender. Gender-marked determiners served as primes (dermasc, diefem, dasneut [the]) and noun-noun compounds as targets (e.g., Goldneutfischmasc [goldfish]). Experiment 1 tested whether the compound’s constituents are activated at a lexical-syntactic level during production. Primes were gender-congruent either with the morphological head of the target compound (e.g., dermasc for the target Goldneut fisch masc), or its modifier (dasneut for Gold neutfischmasc), or incongruent with both (diefem). Head congruency of prime and target produced strong facilitatory effects across groups. Modifier congruent primes produced contrasting effects. Modifier congruency speeded up picture naming in the controls and PWA with isolated deficits of lexical access (PWA-lex) but they delayed picture naming in PWA with additional deficits of phonological encoding (PWA-pho). Both patterns suggest that the lemmas of both constituents of compound targets and their grammatical gender are activated during compound retrieval, in line with a multiple-lemma representation of compounds. Experiment 2 explored the nature of the observed effects compared to a gender-neutral control condition. While facilitatory effects were shown by PWA-lex and the controls, PWA-pho did not profit from congruent primes but showed inhibitory effects by incongruent primes, exclusively. Inhibitory effects were also attested for the controls but not for PWA-lex. The functional origin of determiner priming effects and their theoretical and clinical implications are discussed in the framework of current accounts.
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- 2022
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5. Transcutaneous Auricular Vagus Nerve Stimulation Strengthens Semantic Representations of Foreign Language Tone Words during Initial Stages of Learning
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Stefanie E. Kuchinsky, Ian Phillips, Valerie Karuzis, Regina C. Calloway, Nick B. Pandža, and Polly O'Rourke
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Vagus Nerve Stimulation ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,media_common.quotation_subject ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Audiology ,Mandarin Chinese ,Perception ,Neuroplasticity ,medicine ,Humans ,Evoked Potentials ,Language ,media_common ,Tone (linguistics) ,Electroencephalography ,language.human_language ,N400 ,Semantics ,language ,Female ,Psychology ,Priming (psychology) ,Pupillometry ,Vagus nerve stimulation - Abstract
Difficulty perceiving phonological contrasts in a second language (L2) can impede initial L2 lexical learning. Such is the case for English speakers learning tonal languages, like Mandarin Chinese. Given the hypothesized role of reduced neuroplasticity in adulthood limiting L2 phonological perception, the current study examined whether transcutaneous auricular vagus nerve stimulation (taVNS), a relatively new neuromodulatory technique, can facilitate L2 lexical learning for English speakers learning Mandarin Chinese over 2 days. Using a double-blind design, one group of participants received 10 min of continuous priming taVNS before lexical training and testing each day, a second group received 500 msec of peristimulus (peristim) taVNS preceding each to-be-learned item in the same tasks, and a third group received passive sham stimulation. Results of the lexical recognition test administered at the end of each day revealed evidence of learning for all groups, but a higher likelihood of accuracy across days for the peristim group and a greater improvement in response time between days for the priming group. Analyses of N400 ERP components elicited during the same tasks indicate behavioral advantages for both taVNS groups coincided with stronger lexico-semantic encoding for target words. Comparison of these findings to pupillometry results for the same study reported in Pandža, N. B., Phillips, I., Karuzis, V. P., O'Rourke, P., and Kuchinsky, S. E. (Neurostimulation and pupillometry: New directions for learning and research in applied linguistics. Annual Review of Applied Linguistics, 40, 56–77, 2020) suggest that positive effects of priming taVNS (but not peristim taVNS) on lexico-semantic encoding are related to sustained attentional effort.
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- 2021
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6. Prolonged partner separation erodes nucleus accumbens transcriptional signatures of pair bonding in male prairie voles
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Xander G. Bradeen, Conor J. Kelly, Deena M. Walker, Julie M. Sadino, and Zoe R. Donaldson
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biology ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Aggression ,General Neuroscience ,Dopaminergic ,General Medicine ,Nucleus accumbens ,biology.organism_classification ,Pair bond ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Cell biology ,medicine ,Vole ,medicine.symptom ,Microtus ,Priming (psychology) ,Gliogenesis - Abstract
The loss of a spouse is often cited as the most traumatic event in a person’s life. However, for most people, the severity of grief and its maladaptive effects subside over time via an understudied adaptive process. Like humans, socially monogamous prairie voles (Microtus ochrogaster) form opposite-sex pair bonds, and upon partner separation, show behavioral and neuroendocrine stress phenotypes that diminish over time. Eventually, they can form a new bond, a key indicator of adapting to the loss of their partner. Thus, prairie voles provide an ethologically-relevant model for examining neuromolecular changes that emerge following partner separation for adapting to loss. Here, we test the hypothesis that extended partner separation diminishes pair bond-associated behaviors (partner preference and selective aggression) and causes pair bond transcriptional signatures to erode. Pairs were cohoused for 2 weeks and then either remained paired or were separated for 48hrs or 4wks before collecting fresh nucleus accumbens tissue for RNAseq. In a separate cohort, we assessed partner preference and selective aggression at these time points. Surprisingly, pair bond-associated behaviors persist despite prolonged separation and are similar between same-sex and opposite-sex paired voles. In contrast, we found that opposite-sex pair bonding, as compared with same-sex pairing, led to changes in accumbal transcription that were stably maintained as long as animals remained paired but eroded following prolonged partner separation. Eroded genes are primarily associated with gliogenesis and myelination, suggesting a previously undescribed role for glia in maintaining pair bonds and adapting to partner loss. We further reasoned that relevant neuronal transcriptional changes may have been masked by the prominent transcriptional signals associated with glia. Thus, we pioneered neuron-specific translating ribosomal affinity purification in voles. Neuronally-enriched transcriptional changes revealed dopaminergic-, mitochondrial-, and steroid hormone signaling-associated gene clusters whose expression patterns are sensitive to acute pair bond disruption and loss adaptation. Together, our results suggest that partner separation results in erosion of transcriptomic signatures of pair bonding despite core behavioral features of the bond remaining intact, revealing potential molecular processes central to priming a vole to be able to form a new bond.
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- 2023
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7. The influence of inhibitory control on reappraisal and the experience of negative emotions
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Noam Weinbach, Meital Gil, and Noga Cohen
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media_common.quotation_subject ,Emotions ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Context (language use) ,Negativity effect ,Cognitive reappraisal ,Cognition ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Feeling ,Inhibitory control ,Rumination ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Humans ,Self Report ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Reactivity (psychology) ,Priming (psychology) ,media_common ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Inhibitory control (IC) enables goal-directed behaviour by reducing the interference of irrelevant information. Studies have shown that IC can downregulate performance-based behavioural and physiological measures of emotional reactivity. This study examined whether transient recruitment of IC can modulate self-reported negative feelings after exposure to negative or neutral content. Furthermore, it was tested if triggering IC can improve the ability to reduce the negativity of unpleasant content by reinterpreting its meaning (cognitive reappraisal). For this purpose, a combined flanker and cognitive reappraisal task was performed by 49 participants. The flanker task was used to prime IC before participants reappraised or observed negative and neutral content. Priming IC before negative images reduced self-reported negative feelings compared to when IC was not primed. In contrast, priming IC before neutral images increased negative feelings. Priming IC had no influence on the ability to reappraise negative emotional content. Finally, trait rumination was associated with higher emotional reactivity only when IC was not primed. These results illustrate the importance of IC in decreasing emotional reactivity after being exposed to negative content. IC is revealed as a mechanism that can dynamically modulate subjective emotional reactivity as a function of emotional context.
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- 2021
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8. Durability of treatment response to zolpidem using a partial reinforcement regimen: does this strategy require priming?
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Alexandria Muench, Mark Seewald, Knashawn H. Morales, Michael A. Grandner, Michael E. Thase, Michael L. Perlis, Robert Ader, Ivan Vargas, Ted J. Kaptchuk, and Nalaka S. Gooneratne
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Zolpidem ,Treatment response ,Pyridines ,business.industry ,Wake time ,General Medicine ,Placebo ,Article ,Regimen ,Double-Blind Method ,Maintenance therapy ,Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders ,Anesthesia ,Humans ,Hypnotics and Sedatives ,Medicine ,Partial reinforcement ,business ,Priming (psychology) ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background Previous research has shown that after one month of full dose nightly treatment with zolpidem (priming), subjects with chronic insomnia (CI) switched to intermittent dosing with medication and placebos were able to maintain their treatment responses. This approach to maintenance therapy is referred to as partial reinforcement. The present study sought to assess whether priming is required for partial reinforcement or whether intermittent dosing with placebos (50% placebos and 50% active medication) can, by itself, be used for both acute and extended treatment. Method 55 CI subjects underwent a baseline evaluation (Phase-1) and then were randomized to one of two conditions in Phase-2 of the study: one month of (1) nightly medication use with standard-dose zolpidem (QHS [n = 39]) or (2) intermittent dosing with standard-dose zolpidem and placebos (IDwP [n = 16]). In Phase-3 (three months), the QHS group was re-randomized to either continued QHS full dose treatment (FD/FD) or to IDwP dose treatment (FD/VD). Treatment response rates and Total Wake Time (TWT = [SL + WASO + EMA]) were assessed during each phase of the study. Results In Phase-2, 77% (QHS) and 50% (IDwP) subjects exhibited treatment responses (p = 0.09) where the average change in TWT was similar. In Phase-3, 73% (FD/FD), 57% (FD/VD), and 88% (VD/VD) of subjects exhibited continued treatment responses (p = 0.22) where the average improvement in TWT continued with FD/FD and remained stable for FD/VD and VD/VD (p Conclusion These results suggest that intermittent dosing with placebos can maintain effects but do not allow for the additional clinical gains afforded by continuous treatment.
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- 2021
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9. Secure attachment priming protects against relapse of fear in Young adults
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Belinda J. Liddell, Metaxia Toumbelekis, and Richard A. Bryant
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Reflex, Startle ,Physiology ,Conditioning, Classical ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,Article ,Extinction, Psychological ,Young Adult ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Recurrence ,Human behaviour ,medicine ,Attachment theory ,Humans ,Fear conditioning ,Fear learning ,Young adult ,Biological Psychiatry ,Recall ,Fear ,Extinction (psychology) ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Anxiety ,medicine.symptom ,Psychiatric disorders ,Psychology ,Priming (psychology) ,Clinical psychology ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Previous studies have shown that activating the attachment system attenuates fear learning. This study aimed to explore whether attachment priming can also impact on fear extinction processes, which underpin the management of anxiety disorders. In this study, 81 participants underwent a standard fear conditioning and extinction protocol on day 1 and returned 24 h later for an extinction recall and reinstatement test. Half the participants were primed to imagine their closest attachment figure prior to undergoing extinction training, while the other half were instructed to imagine a positive situation. Fear-potentiated startle and subjective expectancies of shock were measured as the primary indicators of fear. Attachment priming led to less relapse during the reinstatement test at the physiological but not subjective levels. These findings have translational potential to imply that activating awareness of attachment figures might augment long-term safety memories acquired in existing treatments to reduce relapse of fear.
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- 2021
10. Intoxication without anticipation: Disentangling pharmacological from expected effects of alcohol
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Adam M McNeill, Derek Heim, Adam Qureshi, and Rebecca L. Monk
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Male ,Alcohol ,Craving ,Attentional bias ,Attentional Bias ,Executive Function ,Young Adult ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Inhibitory control ,medicine ,Humans ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Pharmacology ,Ethanol ,Central Nervous System Depressants ,Anticipation, Psychological ,Anticipation ,Inhibition, Psychological ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,chemistry ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Alcoholic Intoxication ,Perceptual Masking ,Neuroscience ,Priming (psychology) - Abstract
Background: The pharmacological effects of alcohol on executive function, craving and subsequent alcohol-seeking have been well documented. Yet, insufficient methodological controls within existing alcohol administration paradigms have meant that the relative importance of alcohol’s pharmacological and anticipatory effects remains in need of further elucidation. Aim: The objective of this study is to disentangle alcohol’s pharmacological effects from its anticipatory effects on alcohol-related cognitions and subsequent consumption. Methods: Inhibitory control, attentional bias and craving were assessed pre- and post-consumption in 100 participants who were randomly allocated to one of four beverage conditions in a two by two design: (1) alcohol aware (alcohol with participant knowledge (pharmacological/anticipation effects)), (2) alcohol blind (alcohol without participant knowledge; in a novel grain alcohol masking condition (pharmacological/no anticipation effects)), (3) placebo (no alcohol but participants were deceived (anticipation/non-pharmacological effects)) and (4) pure control (no alcohol with participant knowledge (no anticipation/non-pharmacological effects)). Results: Findings suggest that the pharmacological effects of alcohol result in greater inhibitory control impairments compared with anticipated effects. Anticipatory but not the pharmacological effects of alcohol were found to increase attentional bias. Both pharmacology and anticipation resulted in increased craving, though higher levels of craving were observed due to alcohol’s pharmacology. Furthermore, alcohol pharmacology resulted in heightened ad libitum consumption; however, anticipation did not. Changes in craving partially mediated the relationship between initial intoxication and subsequent drinking, while inhibitory control impairments did not. Conclusions: Successive alcohol consumption appears driven primarily by the pharmacological effects of alcohol which are exerted via changes in craving.
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- 2021
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11. Current Movement Follows Previous Nontarget Movement With Somatosensory Stimulation
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Hiroshi Kunimura, Taku Kawasaki, Yasushi Sawaguchi, Hitoshi Oda, and Koichi Hiraoka
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End point ,Movement (music) ,Movement ,05 social sciences ,Short-term memory ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Stimulation ,Index finger ,Somatosensory system ,Positive correlation ,Electric Stimulation ,050105 experimental psychology ,Fingers ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Physiology (medical) ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Neurology (clinical) ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,Priming (psychology) ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
This study examined whether the current movement follows the previous movement and whether this process is enhanced by somatosensory stimulation or is gated while retrieving and using the memory of the previously practiced target end point. Healthy humans abducted the index finger to a previously practiced target (target movement) or abducted it freely without aiming at the target (nontarget movement). The end point of the nontarget movement had a positive correlation with the previous nontarget movement only when somatosensory stimulation was given during the previous movement, indicating that the current nontarget movement follows the previous nontarget movement with somatosensory stimulation. No conclusive evidence of whether this process is gated by retrieving and using the memory of the previously practiced target was found.
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- 2021
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12. Time Course of Neuromuscular, Hormonal, and Perceptual Responses Following Moderate- and High-Load Resistance Priming Exercise
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Michael R. McGuigan, Robert W Schuster, Vincent G. Kelly, Peter W. Harrison, Lachlan P. James, and David G. Jenkins
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Delta ,Saliva ,Hydrocortisone ,business.industry ,Posture ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,030229 sport sciences ,Motor Activity ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Confidence interval ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Anesthesia ,Priming Exercise ,Time course ,Humans ,Medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Muscle Strength ,business ,Priming (psychology) ,Morning ,Hormone - Abstract
Purpose: The aim of this study was to map responses over 32 hours following high-load (HL) and moderate-load (ML) half-squat priming. Methods: Fifteen participants completed control, HL (87% 1RM), and ML (65% 1RM) activities in randomized, counterbalanced order. Countermovement jump (CMJ), squat jump (SJ), saliva testosterone, saliva cortisol, and perceptual measures were assessed before and 5 minutes, 8 hours, 24 hours, and 32 hours after each activity. Results are presented as percentage change from baseline and 95% confidence interval (CI). Cliff delta was used to determine threshold for group changes. Results: SJ height increased by 4.5% (CI = 2.2–6.8, Cliff delta = 0.20) 8 hours following HL. CMJ and SJ improved by 6.1% (CI = 2.1–7.8, Cliff delta = 0.27) and 6.5% (CI = 1.2–11.8, Cliff delta = 0.30), respectively, 32 hours after ML. No clear diurnal changes in CMJ or SJ occurred 8 hours following control; however, increases of 3.9% (CI = 2.9–9.2, Cliff delta = 0.26) and 4.5% (CI = 0.9–8.1, Cliff delta = 0.24), respectively, were observed after 32 hours. Although diurnal changes in saliva hormone concentration occurred (Cliff delta = 0.37–0.92), the influence of priming was unclear. Perceived “physical feeling” was greater 8 hours following HL (Cliff delta = 0.36) and 32 hours after ML and control (Cliff delta = 0.17–0.34). Conclusions: HL priming in the morning may result in small improvements in jump output and psychophysiological state in the afternoon. Similar improvements were observed in the afternoon the day after ML priming.
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- 2021
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13. Effects of Value Priming and Regulatory Focus on Anxiety and Task Performance
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Yonghan Park and Eunye Kim
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medicine ,Regulatory focus theory ,Anxiety ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Value (mathematics) ,Priming (psychology) ,Cognitive psychology ,Task (project management) - Published
- 2021
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14. Developmental Changes in Gaze Behavior and the Effects of Auditory Emotion Word Priming in Emotional Face Categorization
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Michael Vesker, Gudrun Schwarzer, Daniela Bahn, and Christina Kauschke
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Facial expression ,Speech perception ,genetic structures ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Audiology ,Gaze ,Sensory Systems ,Ophthalmology ,Categorization ,Face (geometry) ,Perception ,Fixation (visual) ,medicine ,Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Psychology ,Priming (psychology) ,media_common - Abstract
Social interactions often require the simultaneous processing of emotions from facial expressions and speech. However, the development of the gaze behavior used for emotion recognition, and the effects of speech perception on the visual encoding of facial expressions is less understood. We therefore conducted a word-primed face categorization experiment, where participants from multiple age groups (six-year-olds, 12-year-olds, and adults) categorized target facial expressions as positive or negative after priming with valence-congruent or -incongruent auditory emotion words, or no words at all. We recorded our participants’ gaze behavior during this task using an eye-tracker, and analyzed the data with respect to the fixation time toward the eyes and mouth regions of faces, as well as the time until participants made the first fixation within those regions (time to first fixation, TTFF). We found that the six-year-olds showed significantly higher accuracy in categorizing congruently primed faces compared to the other conditions. The six-year-olds also showed faster response times, shorter total fixation durations, and faster TTFF measures in all primed trials, regardless of congruency, as compared to unprimed trials. We also found that while adults looked first, and longer, at the eyes as compared to the mouth regions of target faces, children did not exhibit this gaze behavior. Our results thus indicate that young children are more sensitive than adults or older children to auditory emotion word primes during the perception of emotional faces, and that the distribution of gaze across the regions of the face changes significantly from childhood to adulthood.
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- 2021
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15. Use of priming principle in the induction dose requirement of propofol and its hemodynamic stability- A cross sectional study
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A Mohanhariraj, S Suganya, P Ramesh Kumar, Ramamurti Shankar, and P Jothianand
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business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Hemodynamics ,Group B ,Blood pressure ,Anesthesia ,Heart rate ,Medicine ,Airway management ,Premedication ,business ,Propofol ,Priming (psychology) ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background: In anesthesia propofol induction is administered at a dose of 2mg/kg as a single bolus and when given at this dose the commonest problem faced by the anesthetist is the sudden drop in the blood pressure, as the hypotensive effect of propofol is proportional to the dose and rate of administration. Aim: To study the effect of auto co-induction (priming principle) in the requirement of induction dose of propofol and the resulting hemodynamic parameters. Materials and Methods: A prospective randomized double blinded study was conducted for a period of one year in the department of anesthesia at a government medical college hospital in TamilNadu. A total of 60 patients were selected for our study and were randomly allocated into two groups of 30 each. Group A is the study group (priming) and group B is the control group (non-priming group). In the priming group, three minutes after premedication the co induction agent was administered (25% of the calculated dose of propofol) and two minutes later the patient received propofol at a rate of 30mg/10 sec until loss of vocalization was achieved. The hemodynamic parameters along with the total dose requirement of propofol and BIS values were monitored at regular intervals after induction. Results: The mean total dose of propofol required among the priming group patients was 78.2 mg compared to the total dose requirement in the non-priming group which was 92.5 mg and the mean difference was found to be statistically significant. A statistically significant fall in the heart rate and blood pressure was observed at 1 min and 3 mins after induction in non priming group compared to priming group. Conclusion: By applying priming principle the induction dose of propofol was reduced by 14.25% with a good hemodynamic stability. Keywords: Priming principle, Propofol, Anesthesia, Induction dose.
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- 2021
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16. Coarse or fine? Grain size and morpho-orthographic segmentation in struggling readers
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Richard S. Kruk and Lindsay Rosenberg
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Parsing ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Dyslexia ,050301 education ,computer.software_genre ,medicine.disease ,050105 experimental psychology ,Psycholinguistics ,Education ,Speech and Hearing ,Word recognition ,medicine ,Lexical decision task ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Segmentation ,Artificial intelligence ,Suffix ,Psychology ,business ,0503 education ,computer ,Priming (psychology) ,Natural language processing - Abstract
Morpho-orthographic segmentation, rapid parsing of complex written words into their morphological components, is a potential source of difference in word recognition between struggling and typical readers. Although typical readers use morpho-semantic representations and morpho-orthographic segmentation in processing morphologically complex words, struggling readers typically rely on morpho-semantic processes involving coarse-grained processing of whole-word units rather than morpho-orthographic segmentation involving fine-grained letter processing. We tested this limitation in struggling readers, examining reading-ability differences among chronological-age, reading-age, and adult groups in morpho-orthographic segmentation in a primed lexical decision task. We transposed letter order across the morphological boundary of complex-word primes, focusing on disruption in priming effects of morphological and pseudo-orthographic primes that involved only orthographic overlap with target words. Morpho-semantic (coarse-grained) processing in Grade 2 typical readers was indicated by no moderation of priming effects by suffix types and letter transposition. By Grade 6, evidence of emerging fine grained analysis was found in both groups, with clear evidence of both coarse and fine grained analysis in adults. Grade 6 struggling readers showed comparable patterns of coarse and fine grained analysis as Grade 6 typical readers. Although they experienced generalized priming effects, struggling readers did experience response time disruption with transposed primes, indicating that they, like Grade 6 typical readers, adopt fine-grained processing perhaps as a precursor of emerging morpho-orthographic segmentation.
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- 2021
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17. Effects of proximal priority and distal priority robotic priming techniques with impairment-oriented training of upper limb functions in patients with chronic stroke: study protocol for a single-blind, randomized controlled trial
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Chihchieh Kuo, Chia-Ling Chen, Yi-chen Lee, Yi-hsuan Wu, Yi-ping Yeh, Keh-chung Lin, Ting-xuan Liu, and Yi-chun Li
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Medicine (General) ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Bilateral motor priming ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Impairment-oriented training ,Wrist ,Distal priority ,law.invention ,Upper Extremity ,Study Protocol ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,R5-920 ,Robotic Surgical Procedures ,Forearm ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,medicine ,Upper extremity rehabilitation ,Humans ,Single-Blind Method ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Stroke ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Rehabilitation ,business.industry ,Robotics ,medicine.disease ,Proximal priority ,Test (assessment) ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Upper limb ,Robotic therapy ,business ,Priming (psychology) - Abstract
Background The sequence of establishing a proximal stability or function before facilitation of the distal body part has long been recognized in stroke rehabilitation practice but lacks scientific evidence. This study plans to examine the effects of proximal priority robotic priming and impairment-oriented training (PRI) and distal priority robotic priming and impairment-oriented training (DRI). Methods This single-blind, randomized, comparative efficacy study will involve 40 participants with chronic stroke. Participants will be randomized into the PRI or DRI groups and receive 18 intervention sessions (90 min/day, 3 days/weeks for 6 weeks). The Fugl-Meyer Assessment Upper Extremity subscale, Medical Research Council Scale, Revised Nottingham Sensory Assessment, and Wolf Motor Function Test will be administered at baseline, after treatment, and at the 3-month follow-up. Two-way repeated-measures analysis of variance and the chi-square automatic interaction detector method will be used to examine the comparative efficacy and predictors of outcome, respectively, after PRI and DRI. Discussion Through manipulating the sequence of applying wrist and forearm robots in therapy, this study will attempt to examine empirically the priming effect of proximal or distal priority robotic therapy in upper extremity impairment-oriented training for people with stroke. The findings will provide directions for further studies and empirical implications for clinical practice in upper extremity rehabilitation after stroke. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04446273. Registered on June 23, 2020.
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- 2021
18. Oculomotor inhibition and location priming in schizophrenia
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Benjamin M. Robinson, Britta Hahn, Steven J. Luck, Sonia Bansal, James M. Gold, and Nicholas Gaspelin
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oculomotor inhibition ,selective attention ,Context (language use) ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Article ,mental disorders ,Inhibitory control ,Saccades ,medicine ,Psychology ,Humans ,priming ,Biological Psychiatry ,Inhibition ,cognitive impairment ,Neurosciences ,Eye movement ,medicine.disease ,Gaze ,Brain Disorders ,Goal attainment ,schizophrenia ,Inhibition, Psychological ,Clinical Psychology ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Mental Health ,Schizophrenia ,Psychological ,Eye tracking ,Cognitive Sciences ,Cognition Disorders ,Priming (psychology) ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Schizophrenia is widely thought to involve elevated distractibility, which may reflect a general impairment in top-down inhibitory processes. Schizophrenia also appears to involve increased priming of previously performed actions. Here, we used a highly refined eye-tracking paradigm that makes it possible to concurrently assess distractibility, inhibition, and priming. In both healthy control subjects (HCS, N = 41) and people with schizophrenia (PSZ, N = 46), we found that initial saccades were actually less likely to be directed toward a salient "singleton" distractor than toward less salient distractors, reflecting top-down suppression of the singleton. Remarkably, this oculomotor suppression effect was as strong or stronger in PSZ than in HCS, indicating intact inhibitory control. In addition, saccades were frequently directed to the location of the previous-trial target in both groups, but this priming effect was much stronger in PSZ than in HCS. Indeed, PSZ directed gaze toward the location of the previous-trial target as often as they directed gaze to the location of the current-trial target. These results demonstrate that-at least in the context of visual search-PSZ are no more distractable than HCS and are fully capable of inhibiting salient-but-irrelevant stimuli. However, PSZ do exhibit exaggerated priming, focusing on recently attended locations even when this is not beneficial for goal attainment. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2021
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19. Dynamic negativity effects in emotional responding: Onsets, peaks, and influences from repetition
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Roberta L. Irvin, Michael D. Robinson, and Robert J. Klein
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Motivation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Repetition (rhetorical device) ,Emotions ,Individuality ,Negativity effect ,Context (language use) ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Audiology ,Behavioral activation ,Inhibition, Psychological ,medicine ,Humans ,Aversive Stimulus ,Psychology ,Reactivity (psychology) ,Priming (psychology) ,General Psychology - Abstract
Emotional responses to aversive stimuli may be more mandatory than emotional responses to appetitive stimuli, and extant theorizing suggests that negative reactions may be more peaked at maximum intensity. Parameters of this type were investigated within two experiments (total N = 198) in which emotional images were presented and re-presented as participants indicated their moment-to-moment feeling changes in response to both appetitive and aversive images. Negative emotional reactions were more detectable, with more definitive onsets and peaks, and peak amplitudes were systematically higher in the context of aversive stimuli. Furthermore, stimulus repetition enhanced negative emotional responding in terms of both faster onset times and more pronounced peak amplitudes. Although behavioral activation and behavioral inhibition motivation modulated the emotional onset and peak reactivity metrics, such individual differences did not interact with the repetition effects that were observed. These results highlight several dynamic negativity effects that distinguish positive versus negative emotional reactivity processes. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2021
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20. Changes in local protocols on inpatient cervical priming and introduction of outpatient priming: A nationwide survey in the Netherlands
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Dorothee M. R. Croll, Kitty W. M. Bloemenkamp, Roel de Heus, Corine J. M. Verhoeven, Marjon A. de Boer, and Peter C. Hoge
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Pessary ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Foley catheter ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pregnancy ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Outpatients ,medicine ,Humans ,Labor, Induced ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Cervix ,Netherlands ,Response rate (survey) ,Protocol (science) ,Inpatients ,030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicine ,business.industry ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Cervical priming ,Induction of labor ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Reproductive Medicine ,Emergency medicine ,Female ,business ,Priming (psychology) ,Cervical Ripening - Abstract
Objective: The aims of this study are to assess (changes in) local procedures for inpatient cervical priming as part of induction of labor and to identify the implementation of outpatient cervical priming in the Netherlands. Methods: This survey study was conducted from October 2019 until January 2020; obstetricians of all 72 hospitals with a maternity unit in the Netherlands received a questionnaire. The questionnaire consisted of three parts: basic hospital data, local protocol on methods of inpatient induction of labor (IPI), local protocol for outpatient induction of labor (OPI). Results: A response was received from 66/72 hospitals, giving a response rate of 92%. For IPI the most preferred method was a Foley catheter (87.9%), 27.6% protocols switched to prostaglandins after day 1 if the cervix was not ripe yet. A prostaglandin gel or pessary was not the preferred method on day 1 but only used after 24 h in 5 hospitals (7.6%). OPI was offered in 53% (35/66 hospitals), all using a Foley catheter. Conclusion: In the Netherlands, local protocols for IPI have shifted towards the use of a Foley catheter. More than half of the hospitals offer OPI. As safety and efficacy data of OPI are lacking, research on this topic is urgently warranted.
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- 2021
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21. Sensory-Based Priming for Upper Extremity Hemiparesis After Stroke: A Scoping Review
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Shamshir Kang, Lisa Lodesky, Lindsay E. Maccary, Courtney Heidle, Mary Ellen Stoykov, and Sangeetha Madhavan
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Rehabilitation ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Stroke Rehabilitation ,Sensory system ,medicine.disease ,Somatosensory system ,Article ,Paresis ,Stroke ,Upper Extremity ,Hemiparesis ,Systematic review ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Occupational Therapy ,Humans ,Medicine ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Priming (psychology) ,Motor skill - Abstract
Sensory priming is a technique to facilitate neuroplasticity and improve motor skills after injury. Common sensory priming modalities include peripheral nerve stimulation/somatosensory electrical stimulation (PNS/SES), transient functional deafferentation (TFD), and vibration. The aim of this study was to determine whether sensory priming with a motor intervention results in improved upper limb motor impairment or function after stroke. PubMed, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), Web of Science, and EMBASE were the databases used to search the literature in July 2020. This scoping review followed the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) statement and recommendations for the Cochrane collaboration. In total, 30 studies were included in the analysis: three studies examined TFD, 16 examined PNS/SES, 10 studied vibration, and one combined the three stimulation techniques. Most studies reported significant improvements for participants receiving sensory priming. Given the low risk, it may be advantageous to use sensory-based priming prior to or concurrent with upper limb training after stroke.
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- 2021
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22. Intranasal oxytocin increases state anhedonia following imagery training of positive social outcomes in individuals lower in extraversion, trust-altruism, and openness to experience
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Shiu F. Wong, Mark A. Ellenbogen, Shawna Grossman, Kenneth Kelly-Turner, Serena Vaillancourt, and Simon E. Blackwell
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Anhedonia ,Context (language use) ,Oxytocin ,Trust ,050105 experimental psychology ,Extraversion, Psychological ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Double-Blind Method ,Physiology (medical) ,medicine ,Openness to experience ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Depressive Disorder, Major ,Extraversion and introversion ,General Neuroscience ,05 social sciences ,Cognition ,medicine.disease ,Altruism ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Major depressive disorder ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Priming (psychology) ,psychological phenomena and processes ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Clinical psychology ,Mental image - Abstract
Psychological disorders such as major depressive disorder are characterised by interpersonal difficulties and anhedonia. A cognitive mechanism proposed to contribute to the maintenance of these problems is a diminished ability to generate positive mental imagery, especially regarding social interactions. The current study examined whether the effects of social imagery training on social activity and anhedonia could be enhanced with the addition of intranasal oxytocin, and whether these effects might be augmented in persons with a high propensity to engage socially (i.e., high extraversion). University students (N = 111) were randomised to self-administer intranasal oxytocin or placebo, followed by a single session of positive social or non-social imagery training that required participants to imagine 64 positive scenarios occurring in either a social or non-social context, respectively. There were no main effects of imagery type and drug, and no interaction effect on anhedonia and social activity, measured respectively via self-report and a behavioural task. Individuals low in extraversion, trust-altruism, and openness to experience reported significantly more anhedonia after receiving oxytocin relative to placebo, but only following imagery training of positive social outcomes. Results highlight the negative consequences of increasing oxytocin bioavailability after priming social contact in more withdrawn individuals.
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- 2021
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23. Subthreshold stimulation intensity is associated with greater clinical efficacy of intermittent theta-burst stimulation priming for Major Depressive Disorder
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Doan Ngo, Andrew C. Wilson, Juliana Corlier, Reza Tadayonnejad, Nathaniel Ginder, Jennifer G. Levitt, Andrew F. Leuchter, Scott A. Wilke, Jonathan C. Lee, Katharine G. Marder, and David E. Krantz
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Optimization ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Biophysics ,Prefrontal Cortex ,Stimulation ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,Audiology ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Augmentation ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Homeostatic plasticity ,Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Clinical efficacy ,Retrospective Studies ,Depressive Disorder, Major ,business.industry ,Subthreshold conduction ,General Neuroscience ,05 social sciences ,medicine.disease ,Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation ,Intensity (physics) ,Treatment Outcome ,Intermittent theta-burst (iTBS) ,Priming stimulation ,Major depressive disorder ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Priming (psychology) ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Background Intermittent theta-burst stimulation priming (iTBS-P) can improve clinical outcome of patients with Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) who do not show early benefit from 10 Hz stimulation of left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC), also known as high-frequency left-sided (HFL) stimulation. The intensity and pulse number for iTBS-P needed to induce clinical benefit have not been systematically examined. Objective To study the effect of intensity and pulse number on the clinical efficacy of iTBS-P. Methods We conducted a retrospective review of 71 participants who received at least five sessions of HFL with limited clinical benefit and received iTBS-P augmentation for between 5 and 25 sessions. Intensity of iTBS-P priming stimuli ranged from 75 to 120% of motor threshold (MT) and pulse number ranged from 600 to 1800. Associations among intensity, pulse number, and clinical outcome were analyzed using a mixed methods linear model with change in IDS-SR as the primary outcome variable, priming stimulation intensity (subthreshold or suprathreshold), pulse number ( 1200 pulses), and gender as fixed factors, and number of iTBS-P treatments and age as continuous covariates. Results Subjects who received subthreshold intensity iTBS-P experienced greater reduction in depressive symptoms than those who received suprathreshold iTBS-P (p = 0.011) with no effect of pulse number after controlling for stimulus intensity. Conclusions Subthreshold intensity iTBS-P was associated with greater clinical improvement than suprathreshold stimulation. This finding is consistent with iTBS-P acting through homeostatic plasticity mechanisms.
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- 2021
24. The influence of organizational death on work priorities and the moderating role of attachment internal working models
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Erez Yaakobi
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Work priorities ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Control (management) ,Attachment ,050109 social psychology ,Stress ,050105 experimental psychology ,Article ,Organizational death ,Orientation (mental) ,Phenomenon ,medicine ,Personality ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,General Psychology ,media_common ,Motivation ,Recall ,05 social sciences ,COVID-19 ,Scale (social sciences) ,Anxiety ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Priming (psychology) ,Social psychology - Abstract
Downturns in the global economy have caused even large organizations to cease to operate; a phenomenon often dubbed "organizational death". Two studies focused on individual coping strategies in times of organizational death and the possible moderating role of attachment as a personality factor. Experiment 1 (N = 162) explored the effects of the saliency of organizational death on work priorities, and the moderating role of dispositional attachment orientation. Experiment 2 (N = 119) examined the interaction between dispositional attachment and the recall of an attachment event on work priorities. Participants reported their work priorities after being primed to imagine that their organization must either shut down or undergo an organizational crisis (or were assigned to a neutral control group), and completed the Experiences in Close Relationships scale to determine their attachment orientation. In Experiment 2, participants were also asked to recall a secure/insecure event after organizational death (or organizational crisis) priming to test the impact of external attachment event recall saliency and its interaction with dispositional attachment on work priorities. Dispositional avoidance (but not anxiety) moderated the effects of the organizational priming condition on work priorities. Recall of an attachment event interacted with dispositional avoidance (but not anxiety) on work priorities after organizational death priming. The saliency of organizational death mitigated the moderating role of individual differences on the effects of both dispositional orientation and priming of an attachment event on work priorities. Thus, a significant event that undermines one of the pillars of security in adulthood may lessen individual differences in work priorities following this exposure.
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- 2021
25. Working memory load reduces corticospinal suppression to former go and trained no-go cues
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Dominic M. D. Tran, William G. Nicholson, Justin A. Harris, Irina M. Harris, and Evan J. Livesey
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Male ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Science ,Article ,050105 experimental psychology ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Task Performance and Analysis ,Motor system ,medicine ,Psychology ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Sensory cue ,Multidisciplinary ,Working memory ,05 social sciences ,Motor Cortex ,Electroencephalography ,Cognition ,Evoked Potentials, Motor ,Transcranial magnetic stimulation ,Memory, Short-Term ,Spinal Cord ,Go/no go ,Medicine ,Female ,Cues ,Primary motor cortex ,Priming (psychology) ,Neuroscience ,Photic Stimulation ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Environmental cues associated with an action can prime the motor system, decreasing response times and activating motor regions of the brain. However, when task goals change, the same responses to former go-associated cues are no longer required and motor priming needs to be inhibited to avoid unwanted behavioural errors. The present study tested whether the inhibition of motor system activity to presentations of former go cues is reliant on top-down, goal-directed cognitive control processes using a working memory (WM) load manipulation. Applying transcranial magnetic stimulation over the primary motor cortex to measure motor system activity during a Go/No-go task, we found that under low WM, corticospinal excitability was suppressed to former go and trained no-go cues relative to control cues. Under high WM, the cortical suppression to former go cues was reduced, suggesting that the underlying mechanism required executive control. Unexpectedly, we found a similar result for trained no-go cues and showed in a second experiment that the corticospinal suppression and WM effects were unrelated to local inhibitory function as indexed by short-interval intracortical inhibition. Our findings reveal that the interaction between former response cues and WM is complex and we discuss possible explanations of our findings in relation to models of response inhibition.
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- 2021
26. The prevalence of pre-conditioning and recovery strategies in senior elite and non-elite amateur boxing
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Mitchell James Finlay, Richard Michael Page, Matt Greig, and Craig A. Bridge
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Massage ,biology ,business.industry ,Athletes ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,030229 sport sciences ,Boxing ,biology.organism_classification ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Recovery method ,Pre conditioning ,Elite ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Performance enhancement ,business ,Exercise ,Priming (psychology) ,Amateur ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
OBJECTIVES A variety of acute strategies around competition are used to prepare and promote physical and mental restoration in athletes. However, to date, no research exists on the prevalence of such methods in amateur boxing. Therefore, this study aimed to 1) examine the prevalence of pre-conditioning and recovery strategies in amateur boxing; 2) ascertain whether this was discriminated against at competitor level. METHODS This study surveyed 101 senior amateur boxers (Senior Elite SEB n = 59; Senior Development SDB n = 42), on their application and perceptions of pre-conditioning and recovery strategies. RESULTS The reported findings determined a significantly greater number of SEB performed resistance priming activity up to 48 hours prior to competition (11, 19% vs 2, 5%; P = 0.040), and post-activation performance enhancement (PAPE) activity in the pre-competition warm-up (18, 31% vs 1, 2%; P
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- 2021
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27. Combining transcranial direct current stimulation with aerobic exercise to optimize cortical priming in stroke
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Sangeetha Madhavan and Anjali Sivaramakrishnan
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Physiology ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Physical Exertion ,Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Heart Rate ,Physiology (medical) ,Reaction Time ,Humans ,Medicine ,Aerobic exercise ,Stroke ,Aged ,030304 developmental biology ,Leg ,0303 health sciences ,Cross-Over Studies ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Transcranial direct-current stimulation ,Electromyography ,business.industry ,Motor Cortex ,Stroke Rehabilitation ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Evoked Potentials, Motor ,medicine.disease ,Exercise Therapy ,Female ,Perception ,business ,Priming (psychology) ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Physical Conditioning, Human - Abstract
Aerobic exercise (AE) and transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) are priming techniques that have been studied for their potential neuromodulatory effects on corticomotor excitability (CME); however, the synergistic effects of AE and tDCS are not explored in stroke. Here we investigated the synergistic effects of AE and tDCS on CME, intracortical and transcallosal inhibition, and motor control for the lower limb in stroke. Twenty-six stroke survivors participated in 3 sessions: tDCS, AE, and AE+tDCS. AE included moderate-intensity exercise and tDCS included 1 mA of anodal tDCS to the lower limb motor cortex with or without AE. Outcomes included measures of CME, short-interval intracortical inhibition (SICI), ipsilateral silent period (iSP) (an index of transcallosal inhibition) for the tibialis anterior, and ankle reaction time. Ipsilesional CME significantly decreased for AE compared with AE+tDCS and tDCS. No differences were noted in SICI, iSP measures, or reaction time between all 3 sessions. Our findings suggest that a combination of exercise and tDCS, and tDCS demonstrate greater excitability of the ipsilesional hemisphere compared with exercise only; however, these effects were specific to the descending corticomotor pathways. No additive priming effects of exercise and tDCS over tDCS was observed. Novelty: An exercise and tDCS paradigm upregulated the descending motor pathways from the ipsilesional lower limb primary motor cortex compared with exercise. Exercise or tDCS administered alone or in combination did not affect intracortical or transcallosal inhibition or reaction time.
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- 2021
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28. Associations between Cognitive Concepts of Self and Emotional Facial Expressions with an Emphasis on Emotion Awareness
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Aimee Mavratzakis and Peter Walla
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electromyography ,media_common.quotation_subject ,emotion ,Stimulus (physiology) ,emotion awareness ,050105 experimental psychology ,spontaneous facial mimicry ,03 medical and health sciences ,self ,0302 clinical medicine ,Alexithymia ,Perception ,medicine ,Psychology ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Pharmacology (medical) ,media_common ,Facial expression ,05 social sciences ,Cognition ,medicine.disease ,BF1-990 ,Facial muscles ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Facial electromyography ,Priming (psychology) ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Recognising our own and others’ emotions is vital for healthy social development. The aim of the current study was to determine how emotions related to the self or to another influence behavioural expressions of emotion. Facial electromyography (EMG) was used to record spontaneous facial muscle activity in nineteen participants while they passively viewed negative, positive and neutral emotional pictures during three blocks of referential instructions. Each participant imagined themself, another person or no one experiencing the emotional scenario, with the priming words “You”, “Him” or “None” presented before each picture for the respective block of instructions. Emotion awareness (EA) was also recorded using the TAS-20 alexithymia questionnaire. Corrugator supercilii (cs) muscle activity increased significantly between 500 and 1000 ms post stimulus onset during negative and neutral picture presentations, regardless of ownership. Independent of emotion, cs activity was greatest during the “no one” task and lowest during the “self” task from less than 250 to 1000 ms. Interestingly, the degree of cs activation during referential tasks was further modulated by EA. Low EA corresponded to significantly stronger cs activity overall compared with high EA, and this effect was even more pronounced during the “no one” task. The findings suggest that cognitive processes related to the perception of emotion ownership can influence spontaneous facial muscle activity, but that a greater degree of integration between higher cognitive and lower affective levels of information may interrupt or suppress these behavioural expressions of emotion.
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- 2021
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29. Remote muscle priming anodal transcranial direct current stimulation attenuates short interval intracortical inhibition and increases time to task failure of a constant workload cycling exercise
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Simranjit K. Sidhu
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Neurology ,Transcranial direct-current stimulation ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,medicine.medical_treatment ,05 social sciences ,Inhibitory postsynaptic potential ,050105 experimental psychology ,Transcranial magnetic stimulation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endurance training ,Internal medicine ,Neuromodulation ,medicine ,Cardiology ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,business ,Priming (psychology) ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Motor cortex - Abstract
Anodal transcranial direct current stimulation (atDCS), a non-invasive neuromodulatory technique has been shown to increase the excitability of targeted brain area and influence endurance exercise performance. However, the effect of atDCS applied on an unexercised muscle motor cortex (M1) representation on GABAA-mediated intracortical inhibition and endurance exercise performance remains unknown. In two separate sessions, twelve subjects performed fatigue cycling exercise (80% peak power output) sustained to task failure in a double-blinded design, following either ten minutes of bicephalic anodal tDCS (atDCS) or sham applied on a non-exercised hand muscle M1 representation. Short interval intracortical inhibition (SICI) was measured at baseline, post neuromodulation and post-exercise using paired-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) in a resting hand muscle. There was a greater decrease in SICI (P
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- 2021
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30. Priming Global Processing Strategy Improves the Perceptual Performance of Children with Autism Spectrum Disorders
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Golnoosh Soroor, Hamidreza Pouretemad, and Setareh Mokhtari
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Autism Spectrum Disorder ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Motor Activity ,medicine.disease ,Perceptual performance ,Task (project management) ,03 medical and health sciences ,Identification (information) ,0302 clinical medicine ,Perceptual integration ,Perception ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Humans ,Autism ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Child ,Psychology ,Priming (psychology) ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Information integration ,media_common ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
We investigated (1) if the perceptual integration performance is different in children with ASD in comparison with their typically developed (TD) counterparts; and (2) if activating- priming- the global processing strategy, could benefit the integration performance of children with ASD in the subsequent task. We observed that in comparison with the TD group, children with ASD had lower performance in an information integration task that required identification of illusory shapes. Additionally, we observed that priming the global processing strategy increased the correct identification of the illusory shapes in the subsequent task. We suggested that studies on priming effect shed light on the different aspects of perceptual properties of ASD, and could also be used in developing new rehabilitation plans.
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- 2021
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31. Interoception Primes Emotional Processing: Multimodal Evidence from Neurodegeneration
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Alejandra Neely, Magdalena Miranda, Agostina Galiani, Roque Villagra, Cecilia Serrano, Andrea Slachevsky, Sebastian Moguilner, Sol Fittipaldi, Sofía Abrevaya, Agustina Legaz, Adrián Yoris, Adolfo M. García, Lucas Sedeño, Ricardo Marcos Pautassi, Matías Fraile-Vazquez, Agustina Birba, Florencia Alifano, Florencia Anunziata, Paula Salamone, Agustín Ibáñez, Cecilia Gonzalez Campo, Miguel Martorell Caro, and Maira Okada de Oliveira
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Male ,Parkinson's disease ,Behavioral/Cognitive ,Emotions ,emotion ,behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia ,Cognitive neuroscience ,interoception ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Alzheimer Disease ,Neural Pathways ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,priming ,Evoked Potentials ,Research Articles ,Anterior cingulate cortex ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Brain Mapping ,Behavioral neurology ,General Neuroscience ,05 social sciences ,Electroencephalography ,Parkinson Disease ,Middle Aged ,Alzheimer's disease ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Frontotemporal Dementia ,Nerve Degeneration ,Interoception ,Female ,Psychology ,Facial Recognition ,Neuroscience ,Priming (psychology) ,Insula ,Psychomotor Performance ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Frontotemporal dementia - Abstract
Recent frameworks in cognitive neuroscience and behavioral neurology underscore interoceptive priors as core modulators of negative emotions. However, the field lacks experimental designs manipulating the priming of emotions via interoception and exploring their multimodal signatures in neurodegenerative models. Here, we designed a novel task that involves interoceptive and control-exteroceptive priming conditions followed by post-interoception and post-exteroception facial emotion recognition (FER). We recruited 114 participants, including healthy controls (HCs) as well as patients with behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD), Parkinson's disease (PD), and Alzheimer's disease (AD). We measured online EEG modulations of the heart-evoked potential (HEP), and associations with both brain structural and resting-state functional connectivity patterns. Behaviorally, post-interoception negative FER was enhanced in HCs but selectively disrupted in bvFTD and PD, with AD presenting generalized disruptions across emotion types. Only bvFTD presented impaired interoceptive accuracy. Increased HEP modulations during post-interoception negative FER was observed in HCs and AD, but not in bvFTD or PD patients. Across all groups, post-interoception negative FER correlated with the volume of the insula and the ACC. Also, negative FER was associated with functional connectivity along the (a) salience network in the post-interoception condition, and along the (b) executive network in the post-exteroception condition. These patterns were selectively disrupted in bvFTD (a) and PD (b), respectively. Our approach underscores the multidimensional impact of interoception on emotion, while revealing a specific pathophysiological marker of bvFTD. These findings inform a promising theoretical and clinical agenda in the fields of nteroception, emotion, allostasis, and neurodegeneration.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENTWe examined whether and how emotions are primed by interoceptive states combining multimodal measures in healthy controls and neurodegenerative models. In controls, negative emotion recognition and ongoing HEP modulations were increased after interoception. These patterns were selectively disrupted in patients with atrophy across key interoceptive-emotional regions (e.g., the insula and the cingulate in frontotemporal dementia, frontostriatal networks in Parkinson's disease), whereas persons with Alzheimer's disease presented generalized emotional processing abnormalities with preserved interoceptive mechanisms. The integration of both domains was associated with the volume and connectivity (salience network) of canonical interoceptive-emotional hubs, critically involving the insula and the anterior cingulate. Our study reveals multimodal markers of interoceptive-emotional priming, laying the groundwork for new agendas in cognitive neuroscience and behavioral neurology.
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- 2021
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32. Do Food Odors Differently Influence Cerebral Activity Depending on Weight Status? An Electroencephalography Study of Implicit Olfactory Priming Effects on the Processing of Food Pictures
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Charlotte Sinding, Stéphanie Chambaron, Ambre Godet, Isabella Zsoldos, Centre des Sciences du Goût et de l'Alimentation [Dijon] (CSGA), Université de Bourgogne (UB)-AgroSup Dijon - Institut National Supérieur des Sciences Agronomiques, de l'Alimentation et de l'Environnement-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE), Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté [COMUE] (UBFC), The research presented in this report was supported by grants from the French National Research Agency [Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR): ImplicEAT project ANR-17-CE21-0001]., and ANR-17-CE21-0001,IMPLICEAT,Importance des facteurs implicites dans le comportement alimentaire : Comment les mécanismes de prise de décision alimentaire diffèrent entre les adultes normo-pondéraux et en surpoids/obèses ?(2017)
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Adult ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,odor ,Electroencephalography ,Audiology ,Overweight ,event-related potentials ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Event-related potential ,medicine ,Humans ,EEG ,priming ,Evoked Potentials ,N100 ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,General Neuroscience ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,P200 ,N400 ,030104 developmental biology ,Odor ,Food ,Odorants ,[SDV.NEU]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC] ,Female ,Cues ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,[SDV.AEN]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food and Nutrition ,Priming (psychology) ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
International audience; Attentional automatic processes and cerebral activity may differ between individuals with different weight statuses in the presence of food stimuli (e.g. odors, pictures). In the present study, we used an implicit olfactory priming paradigm to test the influence of non-attentively perceived food odors on the cerebral activity underlying the processing of food pictures, in normal-weight, overweight, and obese adults. A pear odor and a pound cake odor were used as primes, respectively priming sweet low-energy-density foods and high-energy-density foods. Event-related potentials were recorded while the participants passively watched pictures of sweet low and high-energy-density foods, under the two priming conditions plus an odorless control condition. The amplitude and latency of several peaks were measured (P100, N100, P200, N400). As a major result, we found that weight status influences the cerebral activity underlying the processing of food cues outside of consciousness, as early as the first detectable P100 peak.
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- 2021
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33. Summary of evidence to reduce the two-dose infant priming schedule to a single dose of the 13-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine in the national immunisation programme in the UK
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Nick Andrews, Shamez N Ladhani, and Mary Ramsay
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Schedule ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,030231 tropical medicine ,Immunization, Secondary ,Mass Vaccination ,complex mixtures ,Pneumococcal Infections ,Pneumococcal conjugate vaccine ,Pneumococcal Vaccines ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Age groups ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Serotyping ,Immunization Schedule ,Vaccines, Conjugate ,Booster (rocketry) ,business.industry ,Infant ,medicine.disease ,United Kingdom ,Clinical trial ,Pneumococcal infections ,Streptococcus pneumoniae ,Infectious Diseases ,Epidemiological Monitoring ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,business ,Priming (psychology) ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Pneumococcal conjugate vaccines (PCVs) are highly effective in preventing invasive and non-invasive pneumococcal infections in all age groups through a combination of direct and indirect protection. In many industrialised countries with established PCV programmes, the maximum benefit of the PCV programme has already been achieved, with most cases now due to non-PCV serotypes. On Jan 1, 2020, the UK changed its childhood pneumococcal immunisation programme from a two-dose infant priming schedule with the 13-valent PCV at 8 and 16 weeks after birth, to a single priming dose at 12 weeks after birth, while retaining the 12-month booster. This decision was made after reviewing the evidence from surveillance data, clinical trials, epidemiological analyses, vaccine effectiveness estimates, and modelling studies to support the reduced schedule. In this Review, we summarise the epidemiology of pneumococcal disease in the UK, the evidence supporting the decision to implement a reduced schedule, and the national and global implications of the proposed schedule.
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- 2021
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34. Enhanced inter-regional coupling of neural responses and repetition suppression provide separate contributions to long-term behavioral priming
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Stephen J. Gotts, Shawn C. Milleville, and Alex Martin
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Adult ,Male ,genetic structures ,QH301-705.5 ,Repetition priming ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Sharpening ,Stimulus (physiology) ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Repetition Priming ,Human behaviour ,medicine ,Reaction Time ,Humans ,Latency (engineering) ,Biology (General) ,Anterior cingulate cortex ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Repetition (rhetorical device) ,Cognitive neuroscience ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Temporal Lobe ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Pattern Recognition, Visual ,Facilitation ,Female ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,Priming (psychology) ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Photic Stimulation - Abstract
Stimulus identification commonly improves with repetition over long delays (“repetition priming”), whereas neural activity commonly decreases (“repetition suppression”). Multiple models have been proposed to explain this brain-behavior relationship, predicting alterations in functional and/or effective connectivity (Synchrony and Predictive Coding models), in the latency of neural responses (Facilitation model), and in the relative similarity of neural representations (Sharpening model). Here, we test these predictions with fMRI during overt and covert naming of repeated and novel objects. While we find partial support for predictions of the Facilitation and Sharpening models in the left fusiform gyrus and left frontal cortex, the data were most consistent with the Synchrony model, with increased coupling between right temporoparietal and anterior cingulate cortex for repeated objects that correlated with priming magnitude across participants. Increased coupling and repetition suppression varied independently, each explaining unique variance in priming and requiring modifications of all current models., Gotts et al. test different theoretical model predictions for repetition-associated alterations in functional and/or effective brain connectivity using fMRI. They report that the generated data is most consistent with a Synchrony model-based prediction and provide data which informs the refinement of all models tested.
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- 2021
35. Cognitive epigenetic priming: leveraging histone acetylation for memory amelioration
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Allison M. Burns and Johannes Gräff
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0301 basic medicine ,biology ,medicine.drug_class ,General Neuroscience ,Histone deacetylase inhibitor ,Acetylation ,Cognition ,Epigenesis, Genetic ,Histone Deacetylase Inhibitors ,Histones ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Histone ,biology.protein ,medicine ,Epigenetics ,Mode of action ,Priming (psychology) ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Epigenesis - Abstract
Multiple studies have found that increasing histone acetylation by means of histone deacetylase inhibitor (HDACi) treatment can ameliorate memory and rescue cognitive impairments, but their mode of action is not fully understood. In particular, it is unclear how HDACis, applied systemically and devoid of genomic target selectivity, would specifically improve memory-related molecular processes. One theory for such specificity is called cognitive epigenetic priming (CEP), according to which HDACis promote memory by facilitating the expression of neuroplasticity-related genes that have been stimulated by learning itself. In this review, we summarize the experimental evidence in support of CEP, describe newly discovered off-target effects of HDACis and highlight similarities between drug-induced and naturally occurring CEP. Understanding the underlying mechanisms of CEP is important in light of the preclinical premise of HDACis as cognitive enhancers.
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- 2021
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36. Priming Effects on Verb Production as a Function of Semantic Richness in Persons with Aphasia
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Jee Eun Sung and Gyu Yeon Kim
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Speech and Hearing ,Linguistics and Language ,Communication ,Aphasia ,medicine ,Verb ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Priming (psychology) ,Cognitive psychology - Published
- 2021
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37. Reading without phonology: ERP evidence from skilled deaf readers of Spanish
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Noemi Fariña, Manuel Carreiras, Brendan Costello, Jon Andoni Duñabeitia, and Sendy Caffarra
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Adult ,Male ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Science ,Deafness ,050105 experimental psychology ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Hearing ,Phonetics ,Reading (process) ,Lexical decision task ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Evoked Potentials ,media_common ,Language ,Multidisciplinary ,05 social sciences ,Brain ,Phonology ,Electroencephalography ,N400 ,Semantics ,Persons With Hearing Impairments ,Categorization ,Reading ,Spain ,Word recognition ,Medicine ,Female ,Psychology ,Priming (psychology) ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Published: 04 March 2021 Reading typically involves phonological mediation, especially for transparent orthographies with a regular letter to sound correspondence. In this study we ask whether phonological coding is a necessary part of the reading process by examining prelingually deaf individuals who are skilled readers of Spanish. We conducted two EEG experiments exploiting the pseudohomophone effect, in which nonwords that sound like words elicit phonological encoding during reading. The first, a semantic categorization task with masked priming, resulted in modulation of the N250 by pseudohomophone primes in hearing but not in deaf readers. The second, a lexical decision task, confirmed the pattern: hearing readers had increased errors and an attenuated N400 response for pseudohomophones compared to control pseudowords, whereas deaf readers did not treat pseudohomophones any differently from pseudowords, either behaviourally or in the ERP response. These results offer converging evidence that skilled deaf readers do not rely on phonological coding during visual word recognition. Furthermore, the finding demonstrates that reading can take place in the absence of phonological activation, and we speculate about the alternative mechanisms that allow these deaf individuals to read competently. The authors acknowledge financial support from the Basque Government through the BERC 2018-2021 program, the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (Agencia Estatal de Investigación, AEI), through the Severo Ochoa Programme for Centres/Units of Excellence in R&D (SEV‐2015‐490); and Grants (PSI-2016-76435-P to B.C.; ACELERA RED2018-102615-T, SAPIENTIA-CM H2019/HUM-5705 and PGC2018-097145-B-I00 to J.A.D.; and RTI2018-093547-B-I00 to M.C.); and fellowships (Juan de la Cierva Fellowships FJCI-2017-31806 to B.C. and IJCI-2016-27702 to S.C., and predoctoral fellowship BES-2013-064140 to N.F. from the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (AEI); and H2020-MSCA-IF-2018-837228 to S.C. from the European Commission). This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement No 837228
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- 2021
38. Pictures of social interaction prompt a sustained increase of the smile expression and induce sociability
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Eliane Volchan, Paula Ohana Rodrigues, Gabriela Guerra Leal Souza, Isabel A. David, Rafaela R. Campagnoli, Kissyla Christine Duarte Lacerda, and Bruna Eugênia Ferreira Mota
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media_common.quotation_subject ,Science ,Empathy ,050105 experimental psychology ,Article ,Developmental psychology ,Arousal ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Social neuroscience ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Valence (psychology) ,media_common ,Emotion ,Multidisciplinary ,05 social sciences ,Social relation ,Mood ,Feeling ,Social behaviour ,Medicine ,Peripheral nervous system ,Psychology ,Priming (psychology) ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Viewing pictures of social interaction can facilitate approach behaviors. We conducted two studies to investigate if social interaction cues, empathy, and/or social touch modulate facial electromyographic (EMG) reactivity (as evidenced by the zygomaticus major and corrugator supercilii muscles) and mood states. We presented bonding pictures (depicting social interaction) and control pictures (without social interaction) while continuously recording zygomatic and corrugator EMG activities. In both studies, picture blocks were paired by valence and arousal. All participants were college students. In study 1, participants (n = 80, 47 women) read relevant priming texts immediately before viewing each block of 14 pictures. In study 2, participants did not read (n = 82, 63 women) priming texts before each block of 28 pictures. In study 1 and study 2, participants also completed mood states questionnaires to assess sociability and altruistic behavior. Empathy and social touch frequency were also assessed by self-reported questionnaires. In both studies, bonding pictures increased the zygomatic activity and the self-reported sociability feeling compared to control pictures. Only in study 2, bonding pictures decreased median corrugator activity compared to control pictures. We concluded that social interaction cues were efficient to increase sociability and prompt a sustained smile expression regardless of priming texts.
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- 2021
39. Sleep terrors—A parental nightmare
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Dario Esposito, Consuelo Basile, Federica Gigliotti, Serena Cesario, and Oliviero Bruni
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Adult ,Parents ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Parasomnias ,Night Terrors ,Arousal ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,disorders of arousal ,sleep terrors ,030225 pediatrics ,Humans ,Medicine ,Child ,NREM parasomnias ,Sleep hygiene ,business.industry ,Sleep terror ,Sleep in non-human animals ,Dreams ,Nightmare ,030228 respiratory system ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Spite ,Etiology ,medicine.symptom ,Sleep ,business ,Priming (psychology) ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Sleep terrors (STs) are sleep disorders characterized by abrupt arousal from sleep with autonomic hyperactivity and inappropriate behavior. Though a common condition in childhood that usually affects children between 4 and 12 years of age, STs, however, may be present even in adulthood. The exact etiology of STs is not known yet, however, several hypotheses have been proposed over the years, identifying some potential genetic, neurodevelopmental, or other causes. Nevertheless, a useful pathophysiological model identified a common cascade of predisposing, priming, and precipitating factors, which could help to explain and sometimes prevent STs. Establishing a correct diagnosis is mandatory for appropriate management, as several conditions (such as other parasomnias or nocturnal seizures) may mimic STs. Furthermore, we also described some conditions which can be comorbid to STs, like some medical or psychological disorders. A number of treatment options have been proposed, ranging from only sleep hygiene practices to pharmacological therapies; we reviewed some of the most prominent ones. In spite of the fact that STs have long been considered benign disorders, which tend to reduce spontaneously over the years, they may have unexpected consequences on the child but also on the caregivers.
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- 2021
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40. Motor preparation for compensatory reach-to-grasp responses when viewing a wall-mounted safety handle
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Mahmoud Mansour, Garrett Rydalch, David A. E. Bolton, Sarah Schwartz, Blake Butler, David M. Cole, Douglas W. McDannald, and Utah State University
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Adult ,Male ,Cognition and Perception ,Visual perception ,Adolescent ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Article ,050105 experimental psychology ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Motor system ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Affordance ,Set (psychology) ,Balance (ability) ,Hand Strength ,Electromyography ,05 social sciences ,GRASP ,Motor Cortex ,Cognitive Psychology ,successful aging ,Evoked Potentials, Motor ,Hand ,Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation ,Transcranial magnetic stimulation ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,active lifestyle ,neural mechanisms in reactive balance control ,Female ,Psychology ,Priming (psychology) ,Psychomotor Performance ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
The present study explored how motor cortical activity was influenced by visual perception of complex environments that either afforded or obstructed arm and leg reactions in young, healthy adults. Most importantly, we focused on compensatory balance reactions where the arms were required to regain stability following unexpected postural perturbation. Our first question was if motor cortical activity from the hand area automatically corresponds to the visual environment. Affordance-based priming of the motor system was assessed using single-pulse Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) to determine if visual access to a wall-mounted support handle influenced corticospinal excitability. We evaluated if hand actions were automatically facilitated and/or suppressed by viewing an available handle within graspable range. Our second question was if the requirement for rapid movement to recover balance played a role in modulating any affordance effect in the hands. The goal was to disentangle motor demands related to postural threat from the impact of observation alone. For balance trials, a custom-built, lean and release apparatus was used to impose temporally unpredictable postural perturbations. In all balance trials, perturbations were of sufficient magnitude to evoke a compensatory change-in-support response; therefore, any recovery action needed to carefully take into account the affordances and constraints of the perceived environment to prevent a fall. Consistent with our first hypothesis, activity in an intrinsic hand muscle was increased when participants passively viewed a wall-mounted safety handle, in both seated and standing contexts. Contrary to our second hypothesis, this visual priming was absent when perturbations were imposed and the handle was needed to regain balance. Our results reveal that motor set is influenced by simply viewing objects that afford a grasp. We suggest that such preparation may provide an advantage when generating balance recovery actions that require quickly grasping a supportive handle. This priming effect likely competes with other task-dependent influences that regulate cortical motor output. Future studies should expand from limitations inherent with single-pulse TMS alone, to determine if vision of our surrounding world influences motor set in other contexts (e.g., intensified postural threat) and investigate if this priming corresponds to overt behavior.
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- 2022
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41. Morphological processing in children with developmental dyslexia: a visual masked priming study
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Jeremy Law and Pol Ghesquière
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AWARENESS ,Morphological processing ,medicine.medical_specialty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,INSTRUCTION ,Social Sciences ,Audiology ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Education ,DERIVATIONAL MORPHOLOGY ,LITERACY ACHIEVEMENT ,Phonological awareness ,Reading (process) ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Lexical decision task ,Psychology ,Association (psychology) ,media_common ,Psychology, Educational ,Dyslexia ,Cognition ,ADULTS ,medicine.disease ,Education & Educational Research ,ABILITY ,INSIGHTS ,WORD RECOGNITION ,UNIVERSITY-STUDENTS ,Priming (psychology) ,FORM - Abstract
This study examined the processing of derivational morphology and its association with early phonological skills of 24 Dutch-speaking children with dyslexia and 46 controls matched for age. A masked priming experiment was conducted where the semantic overlap between morphologically related pairs was manipulated as part of a lexical decision task. Results suggest that morphological processing is intact in children with dyslexia when compared to age-matched controls. Significant priming effects were found in each group. Children with dyslexia were found to solely benefit from the morpho-semantic information, while the morpho-orthographic form the properties of morphemes-influenced controls. Due to the longitudinal nature of the data set, an examination of early phonological awareness’s role in the later development of morphological processing skills was possible. In line with the psycholinguistic grain-size theory, fifth-grade morphological processing in children with dyslexia was found to be negatively correlated to earlier second-grade PA skills. A similar relation was not found among the controls. Results indicate a potential shift in the cognitive processes involved during reading to compensate for the observed phonological deficits of children with dyslexia.
- Published
- 2022
42. The self’s choice: Priming attentional focus on bodily self promotes loss frequency bias
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Valeria Sebri, Stefano Triberti, and Gabriella Pravettoni
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Self ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Cognition ,Iowa gambling task ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Interoception ,Anxiety ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Narrative ,Consciousness ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Priming (psychology) ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,General Psychology ,Cognitive psychology ,media_common - Abstract
When attention is focused on self representation(s), the ability to evaluate one’s internal sensations is enhanced, according to previous research by Ainley and colleagues (Consciousness and Cognition, 22(4), 1231–1238, 2013). Self-representations are usually distinguished between bodily and narrative. Both bodily and narrative representations improve decision-making processes, in that the consideration of alternatives is informed by sensations experienced deep inside the body (e.g., anxiety) as suggest by the literature (Noël, Brevers & Bechara in Frontiers in Psychiatry, 4, 179, 2013). The objective of the present study is to analyze the decision-making process in multiple conditions of stimulated self-representations. Participants played the Iowa Gambling Task three times (a baseline without stimuli and two randomly ordered stimulations to prime bodily and narrative self-representations). While no significant differences emerged regarding advantageous choices, participants showed loss frequency bias in the condition with bodily-self representation priming. Two interpretations are proposed: bodily-self focus acted as a distractor diminishing participants’ commitment to long term outcomes or enhanced interoception promoted aversion to losses. Directions are given for future research and clinical implications.
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- 2021
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43. Cannabidiol prevents priming- and stress-induced reinstatement of the conditioned place preference induced by cocaine in mice
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Jorge Manzanares, José Miñarro, María A. Aguilar, Francisco Navarrete, Ani Gasparyan, and Claudia Calpe-López
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Male ,Conditioning, Classical ,Pharmacology ,Cocaine dependence ,Social Defeat ,Social defeat ,Cocaine-Related Disorders ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cannabinoid Receptor Modulators ,medicine ,Animals ,Cannabidiol ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Dopamine transporter ,Dopamine Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins ,Behavior, Animal ,biology ,business.industry ,Ventral Tegmental Area ,food and beverages ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Conditioned place preference ,030227 psychiatry ,Ventral tegmental area ,Disease Models, Animal ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,biology.protein ,Cannabis ,business ,Priming (psychology) ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,medicine.drug - Abstract
[Background]: Cocaine dependence is an important problem without any effective pharmacological treatment. Some preclinical studies have suggested that cannabidiol (CBD), a component of the Cannabis sativa plant, could be useful for the treatment of cocaine use disorders., [Aims]: This work aims to evaluate the ability of CBD to reduce priming- and stress-induced reinstatement of the conditioned place preference (CPP) induced by cocaine., [Methods]: Young adult CD-1 male mice were allocated to 10 groups (n = 12/group), conditioned with cocaine (10 mg/kg) and exposed to extinction of CPP (two sessions per week). When extinction was achieved, each group received the corresponding treatment before the reinstatement test. In experiment 1, six groups were used: vehicle+saline (Veh+Sal), 5 mg/kg cocaine alone (Veh+Coc) or with CBD 30 or 60 mg/kg (CBD30+Coc, CBD60+Coc) and CBD alone (CBD30+Sal, CBD60+Sal). In experiment 2, four groups were used: exploration (Veh+Expl), social defeat (Veh+SD) and social defeat with CBD (CBD30+SD and CBD60+SD). Furthermore, the relative gene expression of the dopamine transporter (DAT) in the ventral tegmental area was measured., [Results]: All mice acquired cocaine CPP and extinguished it after three or four weeks. Only the groups treated with cocaine priming (Veh+Coc) or exposed to social defeat (Veh+SD) showed reinstatement of CPP. Interestingly, CBD itself did not induce reinstatement and blocked the reinstating effects of cocaine priming and social defeat. Furthermore, cocaine priming increased DAT gene expression in the ventral tegmental area and CBD completely reversed this effect., [Conclusion]: These results suggest that CBD could reduce reinstatement to cocaine seeking after a period of abstinence.
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- 2021
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44. Возрастная динамика процессов зрительного прайминга
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Interval (music) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Younger age ,Visual Objects ,medicine ,General Medicine ,Audiology ,Priming (psychology) ,computer ,Prime (order theory) ,computer.programming_language ,Mathematics ,REACTION TIME DECREASED - Abstract
In order to study the age-related development of visual priming, we compared the characteristics of the influence of a priori visual information on the identification of objects of varying degrees of complexity in children of four (n = 20), five (n = 20), and six years (n = 20). Using the priming paradigm, the dependence of the magnitude of the priming effect on the interval between the target and prime stimuli was analyzed. As targets, we used pictures of lines, animals and blots. Combined figures containing targets were presented as primes. Comparison of testing data showed that, regardless of the complexity of visual objects, the priming effect decreases with age. With the identification of lines, the reaction time decreased to both stimuli regardless of age. If animal figures were used, positive priming was observed on both targets in children of four and five years old, but in children of 6 years old, an acceleration of reaction was noted only to the target presented in prime as a global element. When presented with figures of blots, reaction times increased in four-year-olds and decreased in five and six years old. At the same time, the positive priming effect was lower and was observed at large values of the interval between prime and test in five-year-old children compared with six-year-old children. The results indicate that the mechanisms of visual priming in children of younger age groups are active when using familiar and simple objects, for which anticipatory schemes have already been formed.
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- 2021
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45. Deaf and Hard of Hearing Students' Configurational and Phonological Processing in Chinese One- and Two-Character Word Recognition
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Degao Li, Fan Zhang, and Xiaoyun Wang
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Adult ,Male ,China ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Deafness ,Audiology ,Education ,Young Adult ,Speech and Hearing ,Phonetics ,Repetition Priming ,Reaction Time ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Humans ,Students ,Language ,Stimulus onset asynchrony ,Semantics ,Persons With Hearing Impairments ,Character (mathematics) ,Pattern Recognition, Visual ,Reading ,Categorization ,Word recognition ,Female ,Psychology ,Priming (psychology) - Abstract
To examine deaf and hard of hearing (DHH) students' configurational and phonological processing in Chinese one- and two-character word recognition, two experiments were conducted in a primed semantic categorization task. Configurational priming was observed in DHH participants' reaction times (RTs) at the SOA (stimulus onset asynchrony) of 47 ms and in their probability of making erroneous responses at SOAs of 47 and 187 ms in Experiment 1. Phonological priming was revealed in hearing and DHH participants' probability of making erroneous responses in Experiment 2. Hearing participants' RTs indicated facilitation and inhibition at the SOAs of 47 and 187 ms, respectively; DHH participants' RTs showed priming at the SOA of 187 ms. It is concluded that DHH college students are more likely to use the configurational information but less likely to use the phonological information than hearing college students in one- and two-character word recognition.
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- 2021
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46. Comparative study of inj. Rocuronium with priming dose and inj. Rocuronium without priming with respect to onset, time of intubation and intubating conditions in patients undergoing general anaesthesia
- Author
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Sachin Swami
- Subjects
business.industry ,Anesthesia ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Medicine ,Intubation ,General anaesthesia ,In patient ,Building and Construction ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Rocuronium ,business ,Priming (psychology) ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background: Rocuronium is fastest among non-depolarizing muscle relaxants ,but still it produces appropriate intubating conditions comparable to succinylcholine, in >90 seconds on administering 2 × ED95 dose as a bolus dose. In present study we compared the effect of inj. Rocuronium with priming dose and inj. Rocuronium without priming on intubating conditions and onset time of intubation with respect to rocuronium as bolus. Material and Methods: Present study was single-center, prospective, randomized study, conducted in patients of age groups from 18-60 years of either sex , 40-60 kgs weight, ASA grades I and II, undergoing surgeries under general anaesthesia and given valid written consent for participation. The patients were randomly allocated into 2 groups of 30 patients each as Group C (control group) and Group P (priming group). Results: Overall, 60 patients were studied in age group of 18 to 60 years, 30 patients in each group C and group P. we compared mean age, weight, gender and ASA grade between group C and group P and difference was statistically not significant (p value >0.05). We compared mean HR, mean MAP and mean SPO2 preoperatively baseline, at induction, at intubation, mean HR at 1 minute after intubation and mean HR at 5 minute after intubation between group C and group P, the difference between two groups was statistically insignificant. (P value >.05) In group C, out of 30 patients ,17 patients were having score 9 while 12 patients were having score 8, while 1 patient had score 7 which was comparable with the group P in which out of 30 patients ,18 were having score 9,while 11 patients were having score 8 and 1 patient was of score 7,so in both groups most of the patients (96.67% in each group) had excellent intubating condition, and the groups were comparable as statistically no significant difference was noted. In group C mean Onset Time of Intubation was 92.33± 6.26 seconds, while in group P it was 56± 6.75 seconds, so the difference between the groups on the basis of OTI was statistically highly significant. (P value 0.0001) Conclusion: Rocuronium with priming would be an excellent alternative to succinylcholine, whenever fast induction will be needed. Intubating conditions were good to excellent and comparable in both rocuronium with priming and without priming. NMT monitoring is a useful tool for indicating the clinically acceptable paralysis.
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- 2021
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47. Evaluation of role of priming agents in salicylic acid peel: A comparative study
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Dhwani Rathod, Bela Padhiyar, Purna Pandya, and Ishan Pandya
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Erythema ,business.industry ,Exfoliation (cosmetology) ,medicine.disease ,Dermatology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Tretinoin ,medicine ,Itching ,medicine.symptom ,Adverse effect ,business ,Priming (psychology) ,Salicylic acid ,Acne ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Introduction: Salicylic acid is increasingly used as a superficial peeling agent for acne. Widespread use has caused increasing awareness about the adverse events associated with SA like erythema, exfoliation, itching, redness etc. Appropriate use of priming agents like retinoids, hydroquinone etc., can help in reduction of ADRs and can affect final treatment result. Aim: Evaluation of efficacy and safety of salicylic acid (SA) peel with or without priming agents in patients of acne. Methodology: A prospective, randomized, open-label, parallel-group study was carried out in patients with acne. Total 72 patients were randomized in to three groups A, B and C to receive 30% salicylic acid (SA) peel with either 0.05% tretinoin or 4% hydroquinone or without any priming agent. Objective and subjective assessment in improvement in acne was compared. For safety analysis, all reported adverse drug events were compared. Results: Mean age of patients was 22.46±5.32 years. Both non-inflammatory and inflammatory acne lesions reduced with SA peel in all three groups. Improvement in total acne score is significantly higher in SA peel with priming agents (p
- Published
- 2020
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48. The steady-state visual evoked potential (SSVEP) reflects the activation of cortical object representations: evidence from semantic stimulus repetition
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Ulla Martens, Thomas Gruber, and Elise L. Radtke
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Visual perception ,Object representations ,genetic structures ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Sensory system ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Electroencephalography ,Audiology ,Repetition suppression ,Gyrus ,Perception ,medicine ,Humans ,Evoked potential ,SSVEP ,media_common ,Brain Mapping ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,General Neuroscience ,Temporal Lobe ,Semantics ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Evoked Potentials, Visual ,Occipital Lobe ,Psychology ,Priming (psychology) ,Photic Stimulation ,Semantic priming ,Research Article - Abstract
We applied high-density EEG to examine steady-state visual evoked potentials (SSVEPs) during a perceptual/semantic stimulus repetition design. SSVEPs are evoked oscillatory cortical responses at the same frequency as visual stimuli flickered at this frequency. In repetition designs, stimuli are presented twice with the repetition being task irrelevant. The cortical processing of the second stimulus is commonly characterized by decreased neuronal activity (repetition suppression). The behavioral consequences of stimulus repetition were examined in a companion reaction time pre-study using the same experimental design as the EEG study. During the first presentation of a stimulus, we confronted participants with drawings of familiar object images or object words, respectively. The second stimulus was either a repetition of the same object image (perceptual repetition; PR) or an image depicting the word presented during the first presentation (semantic repetition; SR)—all flickered at 15 Hz to elicit SSVEPs. The behavioral study revealed priming effects in both experimental conditions (PR and SR). In the EEG, PR was associated with repetition suppression of SSVEP amplitudes at left occipital and repetition enhancement at left temporal electrodes. In contrast, SR was associated with SSVEP suppression at left occipital and central electrodes originating in bilateral postcentral and occipital gyri, right middle frontal and right temporal gyrus. The conclusion of the presented study is twofold. First, SSVEP amplitudes do not only index perceptual aspects of incoming sensory information but also semantic aspects of cortical object representation. Second, our electrophysiological findings can be interpreted as neuronal underpinnings of perceptual and semantic priming.
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- 2020
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49. Relationships between cognitive event-related brain potential measures in patients at clinical high risk for psychosis
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Jennifer R. Lepock, Michael Kiang, Cory Gerritsen, Sarah Ahmed, Margaret Maheandiran, Michele Korostil, Romina Mizrahi, R. Michael Bagby, Gregory A. Light, and Lauren Drvaric
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Male ,Psychosis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Mismatch negativity ,Context (language use) ,Audiology ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,03 medical and health sciences ,P3a ,Cognition ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Evoked Potentials ,Biological Psychiatry ,business.industry ,Brain ,Electroencephalography ,medicine.disease ,N400 ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Psychotic Disorders ,Schizophrenia ,Evoked Potentials, Auditory ,Female ,business ,Priming (psychology) ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Neurophysiological measures of cognitive functioning that are abnormal in patients with schizophrenia are promising candidate biomarkers for predicting development of psychosis in individuals at clinical high risk (CHR). We examined the relationships among event-related brain potential (ERP) measures of early sensory, pre-attentional, and attention-dependent cognition, in antipsychotic-naïve help-seeking CHR patients (n = 36) and healthy control participants (n = 22). These measures included the gamma auditory steady-state response (ASSR; early sensory); mismatch negativity (MMN) and P3a (pre-attentional); and N400 semantic priming effects - a measure of using meaningful context to predict related items - over a shorter and a longer time interval (attention-dependent). Compared to controls, CHR patients had significantly smaller P3a amplitudes (d = 0.62, p = 0.03) and N400 priming effects over the long interval (d = 0.64, p = 0.02). In CHR patients, gamma ASSR evoked power and phase-locking factor were correlated (r = 0.41, p = 0.03). Reductions in mismatch negativity (MMN) and P3a amplitudes were also correlated (r = -0.36, p = 0.04). Moreover, lower gamma ASSR evoked power correlated with smaller MMN amplitudes (r = -0.45, p = 0.02). MMN amplitude reduction was also associated with reduced N400 semantic priming over the shorter but not the longer interval (r = 0.52, p 0.002). This pattern of results suggests that, in a subset of CHR patients, impairment in pre-attentional measures of early information processing may contribute to deficits in attention-dependent cognition involving rapid, more automatic processing, but may be independent from pathological processes affecting more controlled or strategic processing. Thus, combining neurophysiological indices of cognitive deficits in different domains offers promise for improving their predictive power as prognostic biomarkers of clinical outcome.
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- 2020
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50. De novo protein synthesis is necessary for priming in preclinical models of migraine
- Author
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Theodore J. Price, Jacob Lackovic, and Gregory Dussor
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Nervous system ,0303 health sciences ,business.industry ,Mechanism (biology) ,EIF4E ,Translation (biology) ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Migraine ,medicine ,Protein biosynthesis ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Neuroscience ,Priming (psychology) ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Sensitization ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
Background Migraine attacks are often triggered by normally innocuous stimuli, suggesting that sensitization within the nervous system is present. One mechanism that may contribute to neuronal sensitization in this context is translation regulation of new protein synthesis. The goal of this study was to determine whether protein synthesis contributes to behavioral responses and priming in preclinical models of migraine. Methods Mice received a dural injection of interleukin-6 in the absence or presence of the protein synthesis inhibitor anisomycin or the translation initiation inhibitor 4EGI-1 and were tested for facial hypersensitivity. Upon returning to baseline, mice were given a second, non-noxious dural injection of pH 7.0 to test for priming. Additionally, eIF4ES209Amice lacking phosphorylation of mRNA cap-binding protein eIF4E received dural interleukin-6 or were subjected to repeated restraint stress and then tested for facial hypersensitivity. After returning to baseline, mice were given either dural pH 7.0 or a systemic sub-threshold dose of the nitric oxide donor sodium nitroprusside and tested for priming. Results Dural injection of interleukin-6 in the presence of anisomycin or 4EGI-1 or in eIF4ES209Amice resulted in the partial attenuation of acute facial hypersensitivity and complete block of hyperalgesic priming. Additionally, hyperalgesic priming following repeated restraint stress was blocked in eIF4ES209Amice. Conclusions These studies show that de novo protein synthesis regulated by activity-dependent translation is critical to the development of priming in two preclinical models of migraine. This suggests that targeting the regulation of protein synthesis may be a novel approach for new migraine treatment strategies.
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- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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