60 results on '"C. Sergent"'
Search Results
2. Hypotension intracrânienne et hématome sous-dural subaigu
- Author
-
L. Sanders and C. Sergent
- Subjects
Hematoma ,business.industry ,Anesthesia ,Emergency Medicine ,medicine ,medicine.disease ,Intracranial Hypotension ,business - Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Modeling the effect of an inhomogeneous surface albedo on incident UV radiation in mountainous terrain: Determination of an effective surface albedo
- Author
-
Stana Simic, E. Pougatch, T. J. Martin, Rolf Philipona, C. Sergent, Dominique Masserot, Mario Blumthaler, Daniel A. Schmucki, Philipp Weihs, Julian Gröbner, A. de La Casinière, Gunther Seckmeyer, G. Rengarajan, T. Cabot, Jacqueline Lenoble, and T. Pichler
- Subjects
Surface (mathematics) ,Geophysics ,Mountainous terrain ,Cloud albedo ,Spectral slope ,Irradiance ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Environmental science ,Albedo ,Radiation ,Reflectivity ,Remote sensing - Abstract
We compare three different methods for determining an average ‘effective‧ UV albedo. These methods are applied to spectral irradiance data from a measurement campaign held in the German Alps during the spring of 1999. The first method is based on the comparison of measurements of absolute levels of UV irradiance with model calculations. The second method takes advantage of changes in the spectral slope of spectral UV irradiance, which is a function of the surface albedo. In the third method, the surrounding area is partitioned into snow-covered and snow-free regions, and the effective albedo estimated by applying a higher or lower reflectivity to each facet before integrating over the surroundings. We present the differences and the correlations between the various methods as well as the results for the different locations.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Variability of spectral solar ultraviolet irradiance in an Alpine environment
- Author
-
C. Sergent, G. Rengarajan, Gunther Seckmeyer, T. J. Martin, Rolf Philipona, Astrid Albold, Daniel A. Schmucki, T. Pichler, T. Cabot, E. Pougatch, Dominique Masserot, M. L. Touré, Martin Müller, Jacqueline Lenoble, Philipp Weihs, Julian Gröbner, A. de La Casinière, Mario Blumthaler, and Publica
- Subjects
Atmospheric Science ,Ozone ,Ecology ,Solar zenith angle ,Irradiance ,Paleontology ,Soil Science ,Forestry ,Aquatic Science ,Albedo ,Oceanography ,Atmospheric sciences ,Aerosol ,Troposphere ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Geophysics ,Altitude ,chemistry ,Space and Planetary Science ,Geochemistry and Petrology ,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Environmental science ,Tropospheric ozone ,Earth-Surface Processes ,Water Science and Technology - Abstract
Seven spectroradiorneters measured simultaneous surface UV irradiances at six different sites in the vicinity of Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany, during spring 1999. The measured clear-sky irradiance variability between the sites was analyzed with respect to altitude, aerosol optical depth, solar zenith angle, effective albedo, and tropospheric ozone. For conditions of low aerosol loading the increase of irradiance per 1000 m altitude difference was 9% at 400 nm. 20% at 320 nm, and 30% at 300 nm in this season. Effective albedo differences of 0.15, 0.29, and 0.65 were found between the snow-covered stations and the snow-free ground station with the higher effective albedo values determined at the two mountain stations. Clean continental aerosols with a single-scatter albedo of 0.95 were observed during this campaign. The measurements and the observed variations between the sites should enable more accurate modeling studies to be performed for an Alpine environment.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Remote Sensing of Snow in the Solar Spectrum: Experiments in the French Alps
- Author
-
Michel Fily, Y. Durand, C. Sergent, and Jean-Pierre Dedieu
- Subjects
Pixel ,Orientation (computer vision) ,Mechanical Engineering ,General Chemical Engineering ,Biomedical Engineering ,Elevation ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Snow ,Grain size ,Computer Science Applications ,Thematic Mapper ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Digital elevation model ,Image resolution ,Geology ,Remote sensing - Abstract
I Two experiments were perfonned irliApril and December 1992 in the French Alps using simultaneous relnote sensing and grolJnd truth data. Snow grain site and soot content of samples collected in the field were measured. ~he Landsat thematic mapper (TM) sensor was used because it has a good spatial resolution, a middle infrared channel which is ~ensitive to grain size and a the'nnal infrared channel. Firstj the reflectance data were compared with the theoretical results obtained from a bidirectional reflectance model. Then, some remote sehstng-derived snow parameters wbre compared iWith the outpllt ofa snow metamorphism model (CROCUS),viz., lower elevation of the snowcover, lhe surface grl1in size and the surface temperature. A digital elevation model was used to obtain the local incidenc:f angles and the elevation of each snow pixel. The pixels were then grouped according to CROCUS classification (range, elevation, slope, and orientation) and th~ mean snow chart;1cteristics for each class were .compared with the tROCUS results. The lower limit of snow and the surface grain size derived from TM data were compAred favourably with the model results. Larger differences were found for the temperature, because it varies rapidly and is very sensitive to shadowing by the snrroun4ing mountains and also because its remote measurement is dependent on atmospheric conditions. I
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Modélisation de la réflectance de la neige du visible au proche infrarouge. Comparaison avec des mesures en laboratoire et des mesures in situ
- Author
-
P. Goloub, C. Leroux, J. L. Deuzé, J. Lenoble, and C. Sergent
- Subjects
Water Science and Technology - Abstract
La reflectance de la neige est un parametre climatique capital qui intervient dans les disciplines telles que la glaciologie, l'hydrologie, la climatologie, la meteorologie, la prevision des risques d'avalanches... Notre etude est consacree a la modelisation des proprietes . optiques de la neige a partir de ses· caracteristiques physiques (taille et forme des grains) en y incluant sa contamination par le carbone suie. Le domaine d'application s'etend du visible au proche infrarouge. Le modele que nous avons developpe est base sur la theorie du transfert radiatif. La diffusion multiple est modelisee par un code adding/doubling (qui nous a ete fourni). Sur le spectre proche infrarouge, pour rendre compte de l'effet de la forme des grains sur la reflectance de la neige, deux codes de diffusion simples ont ete utilises. Les grains de neige· sont modelises soit par des spheres isolees de glace a l'aide de la theorie de Mie, soit par des particules hexagonales (colonnes, plaquettes...) en faisant appel a un code ray-tracing. Afin de valider le modele, nous disposons de reflectances mesurees en laboratoire au CEN et sur le terrain (campagne mars 95 dans les Alpes).
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Imaging neural signatures of consciousness: 'what', 'when', 'where' and 'how' does it work?
- Author
-
C, Sergent and L, Naccache
- Subjects
Brain Mapping ,Consciousness ,Neural Pathways ,Brain ,Humans ,Brain Waves ,Models, Biological - Abstract
'What' do we call consciousness? 'When' and 'Where' in the brain do conscious states occur, and 'How' conscious processing and conscious access to a given content work? In the present paper, we present a non-exhaustive overview of each of these 4 major issues, we provide the reader with a brief description of the major difficulties related to these issues, we highlight the current theoretical points of debate, and we advocate for the explanatory power of the "global workspace" model of consciousness (Baars 1989; Dehaene and Naccache 2001; Dehaene, Changeux et al. 2006) which can accommodate for a fairly large proportion of current experimental findings, and which can be used to reinterpret apparent contradictory findings within a single theoretical framework. Most notably, we emphasize the crucial importance to distinguish genuine neural signatures of conscious access from neural events correlated with consciousness but occurring either before ('upstream') or after ('downstream').
- Published
- 2012
8. Comparaison entre les caractéristiques de surface de la neige dans les Alpes, les données du satellite Landsat TM et un modèle de métamorphisme du manteau neigeux
- Author
-
Michel Fily, Jean-Pierre Dedieu, C. Sergent, and Yves Durand
- Subjects
remote sensing ,télédétection ,lcsh:G1-922 ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,lcsh:Geography (General) - Abstract
Deux expérimentations ont été conduites dans les Alpes françaises afin de mieux connaître la réponse spectrale de la neige dans le domaine visible et infra-rouge. Cette information est nécessaire pour les études climatologiques (albedo) et la prévision du risque d’avalanches. Les données du satellite Landsat TM ont été confrontées avec les résultats d’un modèle de réflectance bi-directionnelle théorique de la neige et d’un modèle de simulation de son métamorphisme. Two experiments were performed in the French Alps to study the reflectance of snow in the solar spectrum. This information is useful for climatological studies and avalanche forecasting. The Landsat TM data are compared to the results of a theoretical bi-directional snow reflectance model, and of a physically-based numerical model of snow metamorphism.
- Published
- 2000
9. [Update on mechanisms of drug resistance]
- Author
-
B, Chauffert, M, Correia, and C, Sergent
- Subjects
DNA Adducts ,DNA Repair ,Drug Resistance, Neoplasm ,Antineoplastic Agents ,ATP Binding Cassette Transporter, Subfamily B, Member 1 ,Cisplatin ,Genes, MDR ,Drug Resistance, Multiple - Published
- 1999
10. [When art rescues health]
- Author
-
C, Sergent
- Subjects
Geriatric Psychiatry ,Art Therapy ,Humans ,Health Promotion - Published
- 1998
11. Effects of various winter chilling regimes on flowering quality indicators of Greek olive cultivars
- Author
-
G. KOUBOURIS, I. LIMPERAKI, M. DARIOTI, and C. SERGENTANI
- Subjects
climate change ,ovary abortion ,phenology ,pollen germination ,vernalization ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 ,Plant ecology ,QK900-989 - Abstract
Aims of the present two-year study were to evaluate the feasibility and identify potential drawbacks of the greenhouse/outdoors parallel plant growth methods for investigation of the effects of various winter chilling regimes on flowering quality indicators of four Greek olive cultivars, namely Mastoidis, Amfissis, and Lefkolia Serron (originating from mountainous and colder areas) compared to cv. Koroneiki (grown mainly in plain warm areas). Groups of potted olive plants were either grown outdoors under ambient temperature or transferred into a greenhouse for one, two, or three months during winter in Crete, Greece. During the first year, chilling accumulation deficit caused a marked decrease in the number of inflorescences per plant in all four olive cultivars. In the second year, chilling accumulation deficit had a negative effect on the number of inflorescences per plant in 'Mastoidis' at 3-month greenhouse treatment but not at all in 'Koroneiki'. Chilling deficit caused an overall decrease in the number of flowers per inflorescence in both 'Koroneiki' and 'Mastoidis' as well as in the percentage of morphologically perfect flowers. The width and length of inflorescences were not affected by chilling deficit in both the cultivars. In vitro pollen germination was reduced in all greenhouse treatments in 'Koroneiki'; however, this effect was significant only after 3 month, whereas no effect was observed in 'Mastoidis'. The results of the present study may contribute to understanding olive flowering biology and selecting appropriate cultivars for new plantations according to historical meteorological data and predicted climate change scenarios.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. CARACTERISATION OPTIQUE DE DIFFERENTS TYPES DE NEIGE. EXTINCTION DE LA LUMIERE DANS LA NEIGE
- Author
-
D. Marbouty, P. Chevrand, J. Lafeuille, and C. Sergent
- Subjects
General Engineering - Abstract
La complexite des particules qui constituent le materiau neige ne permet pas un calcul rigoureux de ses parametres optiques pour lesquels il est donc necessaire de recourir a l'experience. L'extinction de la lumiere a ete mesuree pour differents types de neige, dont le givre de profondeur, et pour des bandes spectrales allant du visible au proche infra-rouge. Les donnees experimentales montrent une nette dependance envers la taille des cristaux (D) en D-½ et revelent l'effet de la pollution.
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. The french tdma terminal
- Author
-
C. Bareyt, D. Vautier, L. Kerromes, A. Beaucent, C. Sergent, F. Rancy, A. Bernard, J. Meunier, and J. Salomon
- Subjects
Engineering ,Modularity (networks) ,Terminal (electronics) ,Computer Networks and Communications ,business.industry ,Electrical engineering ,Time division multiple access ,Bit error rate ,Aerospace Engineering ,business ,Terminal equipment ,Computer network - Abstract
The paper describes the TDMA terminal manufactured by the French consortium regrouping TEL-SPACE, SAT and CIT-ALCATEL. Details on terminal organization, equipment modularity and operational aspects are first presented. The constituent parts of the terminal (common TDMA terminal equipment, DSI/DNI module, order wire module) are then described. Results of modem performances are also indicated. Finally, a description of the first French earth-station operating with TDMA, Pleumeur-Bodou 6, is given.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Precipitating antibodies and fixatives from the supplement of various antiprotein and anti-diphtheria serums in rabbits and horses
- Author
-
J J, PEREZ and C, SERGENT
- Subjects
Immune System Phenomena ,Immune Sera ,Humans ,Proteins ,Diphtheria ,Complement System Proteins ,Antigens ,Antibodies - Published
- 1948
15. [On the nature of the antigenic specificity of horse serum treated by formol and heat]
- Author
-
J J, PEREZ, C, SERGENT, and F, PEROUX
- Subjects
Epitopes ,Hematologic Tests ,Hot Temperature ,Albumins ,Formaldehyde ,Immune Sera ,Humans ,Immunologic Factors ,Serum Albumin - Published
- 1962
16. [Action of formol and heat on the immunological properties of ovalbumin]
- Author
-
J J, PEREZ and C, SERGENT
- Subjects
Hot Temperature ,Egg White ,Ovalbumin ,Formaldehyde ,Ovum - Published
- 1958
17. [Antigenic properties of bovine plasma treated with formol and heat]
- Author
-
J J, PEREZ and C, SERGENT
- Subjects
Plasma ,Hot Temperature ,Formaldehyde ,Animals ,Cattle ,Antigens - Published
- 1953
18. [Antigenic properties of formol-and heat-treated crystallized horse serum albumin]
- Author
-
J J, PEREZ and C, SERGENT
- Subjects
Hot Temperature ,Albumins ,Formaldehyde ,Animals ,Immunologic Factors ,Horses ,Antigens ,Antibodies ,Serum Albumin - Published
- 1956
19. [Effect of formalheat on the immunological properties of ovalbumin: anaphylaxis in the guinea pig]
- Author
-
J J, PEREZ and C, SERGENT
- Subjects
Hot Temperature ,Egg White ,Ovalbumin ,Formaldehyde ,Guinea Pigs ,Anaphylaxis ,Ovum - Published
- 1958
20. Distinct dynamic connectivity profiles promote enhanced conscious perception of auditory stimuli.
- Author
-
Türker B, Manasova D, Béranger B, Naccache L, Sergent C, and Sitt JD
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Adult, Young Adult, Brain Mapping methods, Consciousness physiology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Auditory Perception physiology, Acoustic Stimulation, Brain physiology, Brain diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
The neuroscience of consciousness aims to identify neural markers that distinguish brain dynamics in healthy individuals from those in unconscious conditions. Recent research has revealed that specific brain connectivity patterns correlate with conscious states and diminish with loss of consciousness. However, the contribution of these patterns to shaping conscious processing remains unclear. Our study investigates the functional significance of these neural dynamics by examining their impact on participants' ability to process external information during wakefulness. Using fMRI recordings during an auditory detection task and rest, we show that ongoing dynamics are underpinned by brain patterns consistent with those identified in previous research. Detection of auditory stimuli at threshold is specifically improved when the connectivity pattern at stimulus presentation corresponds to patterns characteristic of conscious states. Conversely, the occurrence of these conscious state-associated patterns increases after detection, indicating a mutual influence between ongoing brain dynamics and conscious perception. Our findings suggest that certain brain configurations are more favorable to the conscious processing of external stimuli. Targeting these favorable patterns in patients with consciousness disorders may help identify windows of greater receptivity to the external world, guiding personalized treatments., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Retrospective cueing mediates flexible conscious access to past spoken words.
- Author
-
Garnier-Allain A, Pressnitzer D, and Sergent C
- Subjects
- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Consciousness, Semantics, Cues, Memory, Short-Term
- Abstract
Can we become aware of auditory stimuli retrospectively, even if they initially failed to reach awareness? Here, we tested whether spatial cueing of attention after a word had been played could trigger retrospective conscious access. Two sound streams were presented dichotically. One stream was attended for a primary task of speeded semantic categorization. The other stream included occasional target words, which had to be identified as a secondary task after the trial. We observed that cueing attention to the secondary stream improved identification accuracy, even when cueing occurred more than 500 ms after the target offset. In addition, such "retro-cueing" boosted the detection sensitivity and subjective audibility of the target. The effect was a perceptual one and not one based on enhancing or protecting conscious representations already available in working memory, as shown by quantitative models of the experimental data. In particular, the retro-cue did not gradually shift audibility but rather sharply changed the balance between fully audible and not audible trials. Together with remarkably similar results in vision, these results point to a previously unsuspected temporal flexibility of conscious access as a core feature of perception, across modalities. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Consensus Goals in the Field of Visual Metacognition.
- Author
-
Rahnev D, Balsdon T, Charles L, de Gardelle V, Denison R, Desender K, Faivre N, Filevich E, Fleming SM, Jehee J, Lau H, Lee ALF, Locke SM, Mamassian P, Odegaard B, Peters M, Reyes G, Rouault M, Sackur J, Samaha J, Sergent C, Sherman MT, Siedlecka M, Soto D, Vlassova A, and Zylberberg A
- Subjects
- Humans, Consensus, Goals, Achievement, Metacognition
- Abstract
Despite the tangible progress in psychological and cognitive sciences over the last several years, these disciplines still trail other more mature sciences in identifying the most important questions that need to be solved. Reaching such consensus could lead to greater synergy across different laboratories, faster progress, and increased focus on solving important problems rather than pursuing isolated, niche efforts. Here, 26 researchers from the field of visual metacognition reached consensus on four long-term and two medium-term common goals. We describe the process that we followed, the goals themselves, and our plans for accomplishing these goals. If this effort proves successful within the next few years, such consensus building around common goals could be adopted more widely in psychological science.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. The nature of blindsight: implications for current theories of consciousness.
- Author
-
Derrien D, Garric C, Sergent C, and Chokron S
- Abstract
Blindsight regroups the different manifestations of preserved discriminatory visual capacities following the damage to the primary visual cortex. Blindsight types differentially impact objective and subjective perception, patients can report having no visual awareness whilst their behaviour suggests visual processing still occurs at some cortical level. This phenomenon hence presents a unique opportunity to study consciousness and perceptual consciousness, and for this reason, it has had an historical importance for the development of this field of research. From these studies, two main opposing models of the underlying mechanisms have been established: (a) blindsight is perception without consciousness or (b) blindsight is in fact degraded vision, two views that mirror more general theoretical options about whether unconscious cognition truly exists or whether it is only a degraded form of conscious processing. In this article, we want to re-examine this debate in the light of recent advances in the characterization of blindsight and associated phenomena. We first provide an in-depth definition of blindsight and its subtypes, mainly blindsight type I, blindsight type II and the more recently described blindsense. We emphasize the necessity of sensitive and robust methodology to uncover the dissociations between perception and awareness that can be observed in brain-damaged patients with visual field defects at different cognitive levels. We discuss these different profiles of dissociation in the light of both contending models. We propose that the different types of dissociations reveal a pattern of relationship between perception, awareness and metacognition that is actually richer than what is proposed by either of the existing models. Finally, we consider this in the framework of current theories of consciousness and touch on the implications the findings of blindsight have on these., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Bifurcation in brain dynamics reveals a signature of conscious processing independent of report.
- Author
-
Sergent C, Corazzol M, Labouret G, Stockart F, Wexler M, King JR, Meyniel F, and Pressnitzer D
- Subjects
- Acoustic Stimulation, Adolescent, Adult, Auditory Perception physiology, Behavior, Cognitive Neuroscience, Electroencephalography, Female, Humans, Male, Visual Perception physiology, Young Adult, Brain physiology, Consciousness physiology
- Abstract
An outstanding challenge for consciousness research is to characterize the neural signature of conscious access independently of any decisional processes. Here we present a model-based approach that uses inter-trial variability to identify the brain dynamics associated with stimulus processing. We demonstrate that, even in the absence of any task or behavior, the electroencephalographic response to auditory stimuli shows bifurcation dynamics around 250-300 milliseconds post-stimulus. Namely, the same stimulus gives rise to late sustained activity on some trials, and not on others. This late neural activity is predictive of task-related reports, and also of reports of conscious contents that are randomly sampled during task-free listening. Source localization further suggests that task-free conscious access recruits the same neural networks as those associated with explicit report, except for frontal executive components. Studying brain dynamics through variability could thus play a key role for identifying the core signatures of conscious access, independent of report.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Making sense of blindsense: a reply to Phillips.
- Author
-
Garric C, Caetta F, Sergent C, and Chokron S
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Photic Stimulation, Vision, Ocular, Visual Fields, Hemianopsia, Visual Perception
- Abstract
We recently published the results of a study on the occurrence of blindsight among eight, post-stroke homonymous hemianopic (HH) patients (Garric et al., 2019), in whom we measured blindsight through forced-choice tasks and assessed perceptual experiences by a new awareness scale, the Sensation Awareness Scale (SAS). Within the cohort, we found different profiles of dissociation between objective and subjective performance. Importantly, we were able to describe several cases of a dissociation phenomenon that we named blindsense, whereby patients exhibited marked subjective sensitivity in their blind hemifield despite being unable to discriminate the different stimuli. Following publication of our article (Garric et al., 2019), Prof. Ian Phillips (Phillips, 2019) wrote a Commentary in which he questioned the methodology we used to measure and analyze objective and subjective perception in our HH patients. As opposed to our original interpretation of our results to describe the new profile of blindsense, based on a non-visual experience hypothesis (Kentridge, 2015), Prof. Phillips re-evaluated the different blindsight profiles that we identified in our study through the lens of a degraded conscious vision hypothesis (Overgaard, Fehl, Mouridsen, Bergholt, & Cleeremans, 2008). In the present response, we explain that, although we agree that dichotomous visual scales lead to highly conservative responses and mask conscious perceptual experience of patients, we still support the notion that nuanced report protocols can enable more-sensitive measurements of perceptual experiences in the hemianopic, so-called blind visual field. Furthermore, we affirm that the additional awareness-scale phenomenal levels that such protocols enable are more consistent with patients' experiences and lead patients to provide more liberal responses when describing their subjective perceptions., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest None., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Retrospective auditory cues can improve detection of near-threshold visual targets.
- Author
-
Rimsky-Robert D, Störmer V, Sackur J, and Sergent C
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Attention physiology, Auditory Perception physiology, Reaction Time physiology, Visual Perception physiology
- Abstract
Recent studies have demonstrated that visually cueing attention towards a stimulus location after its disappearance can facilitate visual processing of the target and increase task performance. Here, we tested whether such retro-cueing effects can also occur across different sensory modalities, as cross-modal facilitation has been shown in pre-cueing studies using auditory stimuli prior to the onset of a visual target. In the present study, participants detected low-contrast Gabor patches in a speeded response task. These patches were presented in the left or right visual periphery, preceded or followed by a lateralized and task-irrelevant sound at 4 stimulus-onset asynchronies (SOA; -600 ms, -150 ms, +150 ms, +450 ms). We found that pre-cueing at the -150 ms SOA led to a general increase in detection performance irrespective of the sound's location relative to the target. On top of this temporal effect, sound-cues also had a spatially specific effect, with further improvement when cue and target originated from the same location. Critically, the temporal effect was absent, but the spatial effect was present in the short-SOA retro-cueing condition (+150 ms). Drift-diffusion analysis of the response time distributions allowed us to better characterize the evidenced effects. Overall, our results show that sounds can facilitate visual processing, both pre- and retro-actively, indicative of a flexible and multisensory attentional system that underlies our conscious visual experience.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Dissociation between objective and subjective perceptual experiences in a population of hemianopic patients: A new form of blindsight?
- Author
-
Garric C, Sebaa A, Caetta F, Perez C, Savatovsky J, Sergent C, and Chokron S
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Photic Stimulation, Vision Tests, Awareness physiology, Hemianopsia psychology, Unconscious, Psychology, Visual Fields physiology, Visual Perception physiology
- Abstract
After a post-chiasmatic lesion, some patients may retain unconscious visual function, known as blindsight, in their contralesional visual field. Despite the importance of blindsight in the study of consciousness, little is known about the nature of patients' experience in their hemianopic field. To address this knowledge gap, we measured blindsight, and assessed the perceptual experience in the contralesional visual field, of seventeen homonymous hemianopic (HH) patients. To ensure that the stimuli were shown in a "blind" sector of the visual field, we selected a subgroup of eight complete-HH patients, as determined by automatic perimetry. Firstly, we measured blindsight through a forced-choice task in which the patients had to identify letters displayed on a screen. Secondly, we compared the patients' binary responses ("Something was presented" vs "Nothing was presented") to responses on a new, five-level scale, the Sensation Awareness Scale (SAS), which we designed to include visual as well as non-visual answers (e.g., "I felt something"). Interestingly, only one of the eight complete-HH patients met the criteria for blindsight. More importantly, our SAS enabled us to identify a previously unreported dissociation, which we have named blindsense, in four of the eight complete-HH patients. Specifically, these four patients exhibited better-than-chance sensitivity to the presence of a stimulus on the subjective scale, despite being unable to identify the stimulus during the forced-choice task. Our findings highlight the importance of awareness-assessment methods to investigate perceptual experiences in the contralesional visual field and suggest a low incidence of blindsight in post-stroke HH patients., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Opportunities and challenges for a maturing science of consciousness.
- Author
-
Michel M, Beck D, Block N, Blumenfeld H, Brown R, Carmel D, Carrasco M, Chirimuuta M, Chun M, Cleeremans A, Dehaene S, Fleming SM, Frith C, Haggard P, He BJ, Heyes C, Goodale MA, Irvine L, Kawato M, Kentridge R, King JR, Knight RT, Kouider S, Lamme V, Lamy D, Lau H, Laureys S, LeDoux J, Lin YT, Liu K, Macknik SL, Martinez-Conde S, Mashour GA, Melloni L, Miracchi L, Mylopoulos M, Naccache L, Owen AM, Passingham RE, Pessoa L, Peters MAK, Rahnev D, Ro T, Rosenthal D, Sasaki Y, Sergent C, Solovey G, Schiff ND, Seth A, Tallon-Baudry C, Tamietto M, Tong F, van Gaal S, Vlassova A, Watanabe T, Weisberg J, Yan K, and Yoshida M
- Subjects
- Humans, Biomedical Research economics, Consciousness, Neurosciences economics, Research Support as Topic
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. An Informal Internet Survey on the Current State of Consciousness Science.
- Author
-
Michel M, Fleming SM, Lau H, Lee ALF, Martinez-Conde S, Passingham RE, Peters MAK, Rahnev D, Sergent C, and Liu K
- Abstract
The scientific study of consciousness emerged as an organized field of research only a few decades ago. As empirical results have begun to enhance our understanding of consciousness, it is important to find out whether other factors, such as funding for consciousness research and status of consciousness scientists, provide a suitable environment for the field to grow and develop sustainably. We conducted an online survey on people's views regarding various aspects of the scientific study of consciousness as a field of research. 249 participants completed the survey, among which 80% were in academia, and around 40% were experts in consciousness research. Topics covered include the progress made by the field, funding for consciousness research, job opportunities for consciousness researchers, and the scientific rigor of the work done by researchers in the field. The majority of respondents (78%) indicated that scientific research on consciousness has been making progress. However, most participants perceived obtaining funding and getting a job in the field of consciousness research as more difficult than in other subfields of neuroscience. Overall, work done in consciousness research was perceived to be less rigorous than other neuroscience subfields, but this perceived lack of rigor was not related to the perceived difficulty in finding jobs and obtaining funding. Lastly, we found that, overall, the global workspace theory was perceived to be the most promising (around 28%), while most non-expert researchers (around 22% of non-experts) found the integrated information theory (IIT) most promising. We believe the survey results provide an interesting picture of current opinions from scientists and researchers about the progresses made and the challenges faced by consciousness research as an independent field. They will inspire collective reflection on the future directions regarding funding and job opportunities for the field.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. The offline stream of conscious representations.
- Author
-
Sergent C
- Subjects
- Consciousness physiology, Memory, Short-Term physiology
- Abstract
When do we become conscious of a stimulus after its presentation? We would all agree that this necessarily takes time and that it is not instantaneous. Here, I would like to propose not only that conscious access is delayed relative to the external stimulation, but also that it can flexibly desynchronize from external stimulation; it can process some information 'offline', if and when it becomes relevant. Thus, in contrast with initial sensory processing, conscious experience might not strictly follow the sequence of events in the environment. In this article, I will review gathering evidence in favour of this proposition. I will argue that it offers a coherent framework for explaining a great variety of observations in the domain of perception, sensory memory and working memory: the psychological refractory period, the attentional blink, post-dictive phenomena, iconic memory, latent working memory and the newly described retro-perception phenomenon. I will integrate this proposition to the global neuronal workspace model and consider possible underlying brain mechanisms. Finally, I will argue that this capacity to process information 'offline' might have made conscious processing evolutionarily advantageous in spite of its sluggishness and capacity limitations.This article is part of the theme issue 'Perceptual consciousness and cognitive access'., (© 2018 The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Human susceptibility to social influence and its neural correlates are related to perceived vulnerability to extrinsic morbidity risks.
- Author
-
Jacquet PO, Wyart V, Desantis A, Hsu YF, Granjon L, Sergent C, and Waszak F
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Male, Brain physiopathology, Decision Making, Electroencephalography, Mental Processes, Social Behavior
- Abstract
Humans considerably vary in the degree to which they rely on their peers to make decisions. Why? Theoretical models predict that environmental risks shift the cost-benefit trade-off associated with the exploitation of others' behaviours (public information), yet this idea has received little empirical support. Using computational analyses of behaviour and multivariate decoding of electroencephalographic activity, we test the hypothesis that perceived vulnerability to extrinsic morbidity risks impacts susceptibility to social influence, and investigate whether and how this covariation is reflected in the brain. Data collected from 261 participants tested online revealed that perceived vulnerability to extrinsic morbidity risks is positively associated with susceptibility to follow peers' opinion in the context of a standard face evaluation task. We found similar results on 17 participants tested in the laboratory, and showed that the sensitivity of EEG signals to public information correlates with the participants' degree of vulnerability. We further demonstrated that the combination of perceived vulnerability to extrinsic morbidity with decoding sensitivities better predicted social influence scores than each variable taken in isolation. These findings suggest that susceptibility to social influence is partly calibrated by perceived environmental risks, possibly via a tuning of neural mechanisms involved in the processing of public information.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Measuring away an attentional confound?
- Author
-
Morales J, Mouradi Y, Sergent C, Block N, Taschereau-Dumouchel V, Rosenthal D, Grimaldi P, and Lau H
- Abstract
A recent fMRI study by Webb et al. (Cortical networks involved in visual awareness independent of visual attention, Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2016; 113 :13923-28) proposes a new method for finding the neural correlates of awareness by matching attention across awareness conditions. The experimental design, however, seems at odds with known features of attention. We highlight logical and methodological points that are critical when trying to disentangle attention and awareness.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Multidimensional cognitive evaluation of patients with disorders of consciousness using EEG: A proof of concept study.
- Author
-
Sergent C, Faugeras F, Rohaut B, Perrin F, Valente M, Tallon-Baudry C, Cohen L, and Naccache L
- Subjects
- Adult, Biomarkers, Female, Humans, Male, Young Adult, Attention physiology, Auditory Perception physiology, Clinical Protocols standards, Consciousness Disorders diagnosis, Electroencephalography methods, Evoked Potentials physiology, Motor Activity physiology
- Abstract
The use of cognitive evoked potentials in EEG is now part of the routine evaluation of non-communicating patients with disorders of consciousness in several specialized medical centers around the world. They typically focus on one or two cognitive markers, such as the mismatch negativity or the P3 to global auditory regularity. However it has become clear that none of these markers in isolation is at the same time sufficiently specific and sufficiently sensitive to be taken as the unique gold standard for diagnosing consciousness. A good way forward would be to combine several cognitive markers within the same test to improve evaluation. Furthermore, given the diversity of lesions leading to disorders of consciousness, it is important not only to probe whether a patient is conscious or not, but also to establish a more general and nuanced profile of the residual cognitive capacities of each patient using a combination of markers. In the present study we built a unique EEG protocol that probed 8 dimensions of cognitive processing in a single 1.5 h session. This protocol probed variants of classical markers together with new markers of spatial attention, which has not yet been studied in these patients. The eight dimensions were: (1) own name recognition, (2) temporal attention, (3) spatial attention, (4) detection of spatial incongruence (5) motor planning, and (6,7,8) modulations of these effects by the global context, reflecting higher-level functions. This protocol was tested in 15 healthy control subjects and in 17 patients with various etiologies, among which 13 could be included in the analysis. The results in the control group allowed a validation and a specific description of the cognitive levels probed by each marker. At the single-subject level, this combined protocol allowed assessing the presence of both classical and newly introduced markers for each patient and control, and revealed that the combination of several markers increased diagnostic sensitivity. The presence of a high-level effect in any of the three tested domains distinguished between minimally conscious and vegetative patients, while the presence of low-level effects was similar in both groups. In summary, this study constitutes a validated proof of concept in favor of probing multiple cognitive dimensions to improve the evaluation of non-communicating patients. At a more conceptual level, this EEG tool can help achieve a better understanding of disorders of consciousness by exploring consciousness in its multiple cognitive facets.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Retrospective Attention Gates Discrete Conscious Access to Past Sensory Stimuli.
- Author
-
Thibault L, van den Berg R, Cavanagh P, and Sergent C
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Algorithms, Female, Humans, Male, Memory, Orientation physiology, Probability, Psychometrics, Reaction Time, Reproducibility of Results, Space Perception physiology, Visual Perception physiology, Young Adult, Attention physiology, Consciousness physiology, Cues
- Abstract
Cueing attention after the disappearance of visual stimuli biases which items will be remembered best. This observation has historically been attributed to the influence of attention on memory as opposed to subjective visual experience. We recently challenged this view by showing that cueing attention after the stimulus can improve the perception of a single Gabor patch at threshold levels of contrast. Here, we test whether this retro-perception actually increases the frequency of consciously perceiving the stimulus, or simply allows for a more precise recall of its features. We used retro-cues in an orientation-matching task and performed mixture-model analysis to independently estimate the proportion of guesses and the precision of non-guess responses. We find that the improvements in performance conferred by retrospective attention are overwhelmingly determined by a reduction in the proportion of guesses, providing strong evidence that attracting attention to the target's location after its disappearance increases the likelihood of perceiving it consciously.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Neurocomputational account of how the human brain decides when to have a break.
- Author
-
Meyniel F, Sergent C, Rigoux L, Daunizeau J, and Pessiglione M
- Subjects
- Adult, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Female, France, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Magnetoencephalography, Male, Brain physiology, Decision Making physiology, Models, Psychological, Physical Exertion physiology, Reward
- Abstract
No pain, no gain: cost-benefit trade-off has been formalized in classical decision theory to account for how we choose whether to engage effort. However, how the brain decides when to have breaks in the course of effort production remains poorly understood. We propose that decisions to cease and resume work are triggered by a cost evidence accumulation signal reaching upper and lower bounds, respectively. We developed a task in which participants are free to exert a physical effort knowing that their payoff would be proportional to their effort duration. Functional MRI and magnetoencephalography recordings conjointly revealed that the theoretical cost evidence accumulation signal was expressed in proprioceptive regions (bilateral posterior insula). Furthermore, the slopes and bounds of the accumulation process were adapted to the difficulty of the task and the money at stake. Cost evidence accumulation might therefore provide a dynamical mechanistic account of how the human brain maximizes benefits while preventing exhaustion.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Cueing attention after the stimulus is gone can retrospectively trigger conscious perception.
- Author
-
Sergent C, Wyart V, Babo-Rebelo M, Cohen L, Naccache L, and Tallon-Baudry C
- Subjects
- Adult, Consciousness, Female, Humans, Male, Time Factors, Young Adult, Attention, Cues, Visual Perception
- Abstract
Is our perceptual experience of a stimulus entirely determined during the early buildup of the sensory representation, within 100 to 150 ms following stimulation? Or can later influences, such as sensory reactivation, still determine whether we become conscious of a stimulus? Late visual reactivation can be experimentally induced by postcueing attention after visual stimulus offset. In a contrary approach from previous work on postcued attention and visual short-term memory, which used multiple item displays, we tested the influence of postcued attention on perception, using a single visual stimulus (Gabor patch) at threshold contrast. We showed that attracting attention to the stimulus location 100 to 400 ms after presentation still drastically improved the viewers' objective capacity to detect its presence and to discriminate its orientation, along with drastic increase in subjective visibility. This retroperception effect demonstrates that postcued attention can retrospectively trigger the conscious perception of a stimulus that would otherwise have escaped consciousness. It was known that poststimulus events could either suppress consciousness, as in masking, or alter conscious content, as in the flash-lag illusion. Our results show that conscious perception can also be triggered by an external event several hundred ms after stimulus offset, underlining unsuspected temporal flexibility in conscious perception., (Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Imaging neural signatures of consciousness: 'what', 'when', 'where' and 'how' does it work?
- Author
-
Sergent C and Naccache L
- Subjects
- Humans, Models, Biological, Neural Pathways physiology, Brain physiology, Brain Mapping, Brain Waves physiology, Consciousness physiology
- Abstract
'What' do we call consciousness? 'When' and 'Where' in the brain do conscious states occur, and 'How' conscious processing and conscious access to a given content work? In the present paper, we present a non-exhaustive overview of each of these 4 major issues, we provide the reader with a brief description of the major difficulties related to these issues, we highlight the current theoretical points of debate, and we advocate for the explanatory power of the "global workspace" model of consciousness (Baars 1989; Dehaene and Naccache 2001; Dehaene, Changeux et al. 2006) which can accommodate for a fairly large proportion of current experimental findings, and which can be used to reinterpret apparent contradictory findings within a single theoretical framework. Most notably, we emphasize the crucial importance to distinguish genuine neural signatures of conscious access from neural events correlated with consciousness but occurring either before ('upstream') or after ('downstream').
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Event related potentials elicited by violations of auditory regularities in patients with impaired consciousness.
- Author
-
Faugeras F, Rohaut B, Weiss N, Bekinschtein T, Galanaud D, Puybasset L, Bolgert F, Sergent C, Cohen L, Dehaene S, and Naccache L
- Subjects
- Acoustic Stimulation, Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Case-Control Studies, Electroencephalography, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Auditory Cortex physiology, Consciousness physiology, Consciousness Disorders physiopathology, Evoked Potentials, Auditory physiology
- Abstract
Improving our ability to detect conscious processing in non communicating patients remains a major goal of clinical cognitive neurosciences. In this perspective, several functional brain imaging tools are currently under development. Bedside cognitive event-related potentials (ERPs) derived from the EEG signal are a good candidate to explore consciousness in these patients because: (1) they have an optimal time resolution within the millisecond range able to monitor the stream of consciousness, (2) they are fully non-invasive and relatively cheap, (3) they can be recorded continuously on dedicated individual systems to monitor consciousness and to communicate with patients, (4) and they can be used to enrich patients' autonomy through brain-computer interfaces. We recently designed an original auditory rule extraction ERP test that evaluates cerebral responses to violations of temporal regularities that are either local in time or global across several seconds. Local violations led to an early response in auditory cortex, independent of attention or the presence of a concurrent visual task, while global violations led to a late and spatially distributed response that was only present when subjects were attentive and aware of the violations. In the present work, we report the results of this test in 65 successive recordings obtained at bedside from 49 non-communicating patients affected with various acute or chronic neurological disorders. At the individual level, we confirm the high specificity of the 'global effect': only conscious patients presented this proposed neural signature of conscious processing. Here, we also describe in details the respective neural responses elicited by violations of local and global auditory regularities, and we report two additional ERP effects related to stimuli expectancy and to task learning, and we discuss their relations to consciousness., (Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Top-down modulation of human early visual cortex after stimulus offset supports successful postcued report.
- Author
-
Sergent C, Ruff CC, Barbot A, Driver J, and Rees G
- Subjects
- Acoustic Stimulation methods, Adult, Female, Humans, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Male, Oxygen blood, Photic Stimulation methods, Reaction Time physiology, Time Factors, Visual Cortex blood supply, Young Adult, Attention, Brain Mapping, Cues, Pattern Recognition, Visual physiology, Visual Cortex physiology
- Abstract
Modulations of sensory processing in early visual areas are thought to play an important role in conscious perception. To date, most empirical studies focused on effects occurring before or during visual presentation. By contrast, several emerging theories postulate that sensory processing and conscious visual perception may also crucially depend on late top-down influences, potentially arising after a visual display. To provide a direct test of this, we performed an fMRI study using a postcued report procedure. The ability to report a target at a specific spatial location in a visual display can be enhanced behaviorally by symbolic auditory postcues presented shortly after that display. Here we showed that such auditory postcues can enhance target-specific signals in early human visual cortex (V1 and V2). For postcues presented 200 msec after stimulus termination, this target-specific enhancement in visual cortex was specifically associated with correct conscious report. The strength of this modulation predicted individual levels of performance in behavior. By contrast, although later postcues presented 1000 msec after stimulus termination had some impact on activity in early visual cortex, this modulation no longer related to conscious report. These results demonstrate that within a critical time window of a few hundred milliseconds after a visual stimulus has disappeared, successful conscious report of that stimulus still relates to the strength of top-down modulation in early visual cortex. We suggest that, within this critical time window, sensory representation of a visual stimulus is still under construction and so can still be flexibly influenced by top-down modulatory processes.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Probing consciousness with event-related potentials in the vegetative state.
- Author
-
Faugeras F, Rohaut B, Weiss N, Bekinschtein TA, Galanaud D, Puybasset L, Bolgert F, Sergent C, Cohen L, Dehaene S, and Naccache L
- Subjects
- Acoustic Stimulation methods, Auditory Cortex blood supply, Electroencephalography, Evoked Potentials, Auditory physiology, Female, Humans, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Oxygen, Auditory Cortex physiopathology, Consciousness physiology, Persistent Vegetative State diagnosis, Persistent Vegetative State physiopathology
- Abstract
Objective: Probing consciousness in noncommunicating patients is a major medical and neuroscientific challenge. While standardized and expert behavioral assessment of patients constitutes a mandatory step, this clinical evaluation stage is often difficult and doubtful, and calls for complementary measures which may overcome its inherent limitations. Several functional brain imaging methods are currently being developed within this perspective, including fMRI and cognitive event-related potentials (ERPs). We recently designed an original rule extraction ERP test that is positive only in subjects who are conscious of the long-term regularity of auditory stimuli., Methods: In the present work, we report the results of this test in a population of 22 patients who met clinical criteria for vegetative state., Results: We identified 2 patients showing this neural signature of consciousness. Interestingly, these 2 patients showed unequivocal clinical signs of consciousness within the 3 to 4 days following ERP recording., Conclusions: Taken together, these results strengthen the relevance of bedside neurophysiological tools to improve diagnosis of consciousness in noncommunicating patients.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. The phase of ongoing EEG oscillations uncovers the fine temporal structure of conscious perception.
- Author
-
Wyart V and Sergent C
- Subjects
- Evoked Potentials, Visual physiology, Humans, Photic Stimulation methods, Brain physiology, Consciousness physiology, Electroencephalography, Visual Perception physiology
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Impaired perceptual memory of locations across gaze-shifts in patients with unilateral spatial neglect.
- Author
-
Vuilleumier P, Sergent C, Schwartz S, Valenza N, Girardi M, Husain M, and Driver J
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Judgment, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Memory, Middle Aged, Perceptual Disorders diagnosis, Perceptual Disorders physiopathology, Photic Stimulation, Reaction Time, Severity of Illness Index, Visual Fields, Fixation, Ocular, Memory Disorders etiology, Memory Disorders psychology, Perceptual Disorders complications, Space Perception, Visual Perception
- Abstract
Right hemisphere lesions often lead to severe disorders in spatial awareness and behavior, such as left hemispatial neglect. Neglect involves not only pathological biases in attention and exploration but also deficits in internal representations of space and spatial working memory. Here we designed a new paradigm to test whether one potential component may involve a failure to maintain an updated representation of visual locations across delays when a gaze-shift intervenes. Right hemisphere patients with varying severity of left spatial neglect had to encode a single target location and retain it across an interval of 2 or 3 sec, during which the target was transiently removed, before a subsequent probe appeared for a same/different location judgment. During the delay, gaze could have to shift to either side of the remembered location, or no gaze-shift was required. Patients showed a dramatic loss of memory for target location after shifting gaze to its right (toward their "intact" ipsilesional side), but not after leftward gaze-shifts. Such impairment arose even when the target initially appeared in the right visual field, before being updated leftward due to right gaze, and even when gaze returned to the screen center before the memory probe was presented. These findings indicate that location information may be permanently degraded when the target has to be remapped leftward in gaze-centric representations. Across patients, the location-memory deficit induced by rightward gaze-shifts correlated with left neglect severity on several clinical tests. This paradoxical memory deficit, with worse performance following gaze-shifts to the "intact" side of space, may reflect losses in gaze-centric representations of space that normally remap a remembered location dynamically relative to current gaze. Right gaze-shifts may remap remembered locations leftward, into damaged representations, whereas left gaze-shifts will require remapping rightward, into intact representations. Our findings accord with physiological data on normal remapping mechanisms in the primate brain but demonstrate for the first time their impact on perceptual spatial memory when damaged, while providing new insights into possible components that may contribute to the neglect syndrome.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Conscious, preconscious, and subliminal processing: a testable taxonomy.
- Author
-
Dehaene S, Changeux JP, Naccache L, Sackur J, and Sergent C
- Subjects
- Brain anatomy & histology, Evoked Potentials physiology, Frontal Lobe physiology, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Parietal Lobe physiology, Space Perception physiology, Brain physiology, Cognition physiology, Consciousness, Sublimation, Psychological
- Abstract
Of the many brain events evoked by a visual stimulus, which are specifically associated with conscious perception, and which merely reflect non-conscious processing? Several recent neuroimaging studies have contrasted conscious and non-conscious visual processing, but their results appear inconsistent. Some support a correlation of conscious perception with early occipital events, others with late parieto-frontal activity. Here we attempt to make sense of these dissenting results. On the basis of the global neuronal workspace hypothesis, we propose a taxonomy that distinguishes between vigilance and access to conscious report, as well as between subliminal, preconscious and conscious processing. We suggest that these distinctions map onto different neural mechanisms, and that conscious perception is systematically associated with surges of parieto-frontal activity causing top-down amplification.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Timing of the brain events underlying access to consciousness during the attentional blink.
- Author
-
Sergent C, Baillet S, and Dehaene S
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Analysis of Variance, Brain Mapping, Electroencephalography, Female, Humans, Male, Models, Neurological, Nonlinear Dynamics, Photic Stimulation methods, Reaction Time physiology, Time Factors, Attention physiology, Blinking physiology, Brain physiology, Consciousness physiology, Evoked Potentials, Visual physiology, Time Perception physiology
- Abstract
In the phenomenon of attentional blink, identical visual stimuli are sometimes fully perceived and sometimes not detected at all. This phenomenon thus provides an optimal situation to study the fate of stimuli not consciously perceived and the differences between conscious and nonconscious processing. We correlated behavioral visibility ratings and recordings of event-related potentials to study the temporal dynamics of access to consciousness. Intact early potentials (P1 and N1) were evoked by unseen words, suggesting that these brain events are not the primary correlates of conscious perception. However, we observed a rapid divergence around 270 ms, after which several brain events were evoked solely by seen words. Thus, we suggest that the transition toward access to consciousness relates to the optional triggering of a late wave of activation that spreads through a distributed network of cortical association areas.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Is consciousness a gradual phenomenon? Evidence for an all-or-none bifurcation during the attentional blink.
- Author
-
Sergent C and Dehaene S
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Fixation, Ocular, Humans, Male, Visual Cortex physiology, Visual Perception, Consciousness physiology
- Abstract
Several theories of the neural correlates of consciousness assume that there is a continuum of perception, associated with a gradual change in the intensity of brain activation. But some models, considering reverberation of neural activity as necessary for conscious perception, predict a sharp nonlinear transition between unconscious and conscious processing. We asked participants to evaluate the visibility of target words on a continuous scale during the attentional blink, which is known to impede explicit reports. Participants used this continuous scale in an all-or-none fashion: Targets presented during the blink were either identified as well as targets presented outside the blink period or not detected at all. We suggest that a stochastic nonlinear bifurcation in neural activity underlies the all-or-none perception observed during the attentional blink.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Neural processes underlying conscious perception: experimental findings and a global neuronal workspace framework.
- Author
-
Sergent C and Dehaene S
- Subjects
- Animals, Awareness physiology, Brain Mapping, Cognition physiology, Frontal Lobe physiology, Humans, Neural Networks, Computer, Parietal Lobe physiology, Time Factors, Visual Cortex anatomy & histology, Visual Cortex physiology, Consciousness physiology, Models, Neurological, Nerve Net physiology, Neurons, Afferent physiology, Visual Perception physiology
- Abstract
One striking property of perception is that it can be achieved in two seemingly different ways: either consciously or non-consciously. What distinguishes these two types of processing at the neural level? So far, empirical findings suggest that conscious perception is associated with an increase in activity at the sensory level, the specific involvement of a fronto-parietal network and an increase in long-distance functional connectivity and synchrony within a broad network of areas. We interpret these data in the framework of the global neuronal workspace model which proposes that the neural basis of conscious access is a sudden self-amplifying process leading to a global brain-scale pattern of activity. In contradiction with several theories which assume that there is a continuum of perception, associated with a gradual change in the intensity of brain activation, the model predicts a sharp non-linear transition between non-conscious and conscious processing.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. A neuronal network model linking subjective reports and objective physiological data during conscious perception.
- Author
-
Dehaene S, Sergent C, and Changeux JP
- Subjects
- Adult, Animals, Attention physiology, Cerebral Cortex physiology, Haplorhini, Humans, Neurons physiology, Consciousness physiology, Models, Neurological, Models, Psychological, Neural Networks, Computer, Visual Perception physiology
- Abstract
The subjective experience of perceiving visual stimuli is accompanied by objective neuronal activity patterns such as sustained activity in primary visual area (V1), amplification of perceptual processing, correlation across distant regions, joint parietal, frontal, and cingulate activation, gamma-band oscillations, and P300 waveform. We describe a neuronal network model that aims at explaining how those physiological parameters may cohere with conscious reports. The model proposes that the step of conscious perception, referred to as access awareness, is related to the entry of processed visual stimuli into a global brain state that links distant areas including the prefrontal cortex through reciprocal connections, and thus makes perceptual information reportable by multiple means. We use the model to simulate a classical psychological paradigm: the attentional blink. In addition to reproducing the main objective and subjective features of this paradigm, the model predicts an unique property of nonlinear transition from nonconscious processing to subjective perception. This all-or-none dynamics of conscious perception was verified behaviorally in human subjects.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Analysis of microsatellite instability in acquired drug-resistance human tumor cell lines.
- Author
-
Picard SF, Franco N, Sergent C, Chauffert B, and Lizard-Nacol S
- Subjects
- Alleles, Antineoplastic Agents pharmacology, Antineoplastic Agents, Phytogenic pharmacology, Base Pair Mismatch, DNA Repair, Doxorubicin pharmacology, Humans, K562 Cells, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Tumor Cells, Cultured, Vinblastine pharmacology, Drug Resistance, Neoplasm, Microsatellite Repeats
- Abstract
Genomic instability characterized as microsatellite instability (MIN) is associated with loss of DNA mismatch repair (MMR) protein. Several studies have shown that loss of DNA MMR protein confers resistance to some interacting DNA chemotherapeutic drugs, but also that exposure of MMR-proficient cells to these drugs can result in loss of MMR protein accompanied by induction of MIN. Such associations were mainly reported for cisplatin, but scarce data are available for doxorubicin (a DNA interacting agent), and nothing is known about vinblastine (an antitubulin agent). Thus, in this study we have analyzed MIN frequency in different type of human tumor cell lines characterized by their MMR protein status and resistant to doxorubicin or to vinblastine. Relationship between MIN occurrence and drug resistance was firstly verified in cisplatin resistant cells, and showed a MIN enrichment (33%) only in the MMR-deficient cells. In order to determine whether treatment of MMR-proficient cells with doxorubicin might lead to induction of MIN, we analyzed two different MMR-proficient cell lines. Variations of MIN frequency were found with either high levels of MIN (66%) or no MIN at all (0%). Effect of vinblastine was analyzed according to the MMR status in two different MMR-proficient and -deficient cells. No major change in MIN frequency was found either in the MMR-proficient (0%) or -deficient (9%) cells. Our results demonstrate that MIN occurs only in tumor cells resistant to cisplatin or doxorubicin, thus supporting earlier findings reporting such associations only with drugs interacting with DNA. Moreover, the data show that MIN does not appear in all tumor cell lines, suggesting that induction of MIN in relation to MMR status is a complex phenomenon which does not only depend on the drug considered (interacting or not with DNA), but also on the tumor cell variant.
- Published
- 2002
49. Radiographic and histologic evaluation of a sinus augmentation with composite bone graft: a clinical case report.
- Author
-
Armand S, Kirsch A, Sergent C, Kemoun P, and Brunel G
- Subjects
- Adult, Animals, Bone Substitutes, Cattle, Chin surgery, Collagen, Dental Implantation, Endosseous, Dental Prosthesis, Implant-Supported, Denture, Partial, Fixed, Female, Humans, Maxilla surgery, Maxillary Sinus diagnostic imaging, Minerals, Radiography, Bone Transplantation methods, Maxillary Sinus surgery, Oral Surgical Procedures, Preprosthetic methods
- Abstract
Background: The purpose of the present study was to present a clinical case report of a sinus augmentation with a composite bone graft and delayed implant placement with a 5-year follow-up., Methods: A 40-year-old female in good health required replacement of her partial upper removable denture with a prosthesis supported by implants. Due to insufficient bone, she had to undergo a sinus lift. A block graft of autogenous chin bone, along with anorganic bovine bone covered by collagen, was utilized. Eight months postsurgery, a biopsy core was taken and 3 endosseous implants were placed., Results: The sinus lift and implantation site are illustrated with clinical, radiological, and histological data. The discussion covers the problems raised by the choice of the surgical technique, grafting material, and immediate or delayed placement of the appropriate implant design., Conclusion: Our results show that a maxillary sinus augmentation with a composite bone graft is a possible method for creating adequate bone volume before implantation.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Seeing your own touched hands in a mirror modulates cross-modal interactions.
- Author
-
Maravita A, Spence C, Sergent C, and Driver J
- Subjects
- Adult, Bone Conduction physiology, Humans, Random Allocation, Reaction Time, Hand, Touch, Visual Perception
- Abstract
In mirror reflections, visual stimuli in near peripersonal space (e.g., an object in the hand) can project the retinal image of far, extrapersonal stimuli "beyond" the mirror. We studied the interaction of such visual reflections with tactile stimuli in a cross-modal congruency task. We found that visual distractors produce stronger interference on tactile judgments when placed close to the stimulated hand, but observed indirectly as distant mirror reflections, than when directly observed in equivalently distant far space, even when in contact with a dummy hand or someone else's hand in the far location. The stronger visual-tactile interference for the mirror condition implies that near stimuli seen as distant reflections in a mirror view of one's own hands can activate neural networks coding peripersonal space, because these visual stimuli are coded as having a true source near to the body.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.