164 results on '"Dehais, P."'
Search Results
2. Editorial: Neurotechnology for sensing the brain out of the lab: methods and applications for mobile functional neuroimaging
- Author
-
Hasan Ayaz, Frederic Dehais, Giuseppina Pilloni, Leigh Charvet, and Marom Bikson
- Subjects
electroencephalography (EEG) ,functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) ,transcranial direct-current stimulation (tDCS) ,neuroergonomics ,neurotechnology ,neuromodulation ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Editorial: Open science to support replicability in neuroergonomic research
- Author
-
Klaus Gramann, Fabien Lotte, Frederic Dehais, Hasan Ayaz, Mathias Vukelić, Waldemar Karwowski, Stephen Fairclough, Anne-Marie Brouwer, and Raphaëlle N. Roy
- Subjects
open access ,open data ,open analysis ,replicability ,EEG ,neuroergonomics ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Open multi-session and multi-task EEG cognitive Dataset for passive brain-computer Interface Applications
- Author
-
Hinss, Marcel F., Jahanpour, Emilie S., Somon, Bertille, Pluchon, Lou, Dehais, Frédéric, and Roy, Raphaëlle N.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Whole-genome sequencing of cryopreserved resources from French Large White pigs at two distinct sampling times reveals strong signatures of convergent and divergent selection between the dam and sire lines
- Author
-
Boitard, Simon, Liaubet, Laurence, Paris, Cyriel, Fève, Katia, Dehais, Patrice, Bouquet, Alban, Riquet, Juliette, and Mercat, Marie-José
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Immunomodulators for immunocompromised patients hospitalized for COVID-19: a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trialsResearch in context
- Author
-
Ilias I. Siempos, Andre C. Kalil, Drifa Belhadi, Viviane Cordeiro Veiga, Alexandre Biasi Cavalcanti, Westyn Branch-Elliman, Eleni Papoutsi, Konstantinos Gkirgkiris, Nikoleta A. Xixi, Anastasia Kotanidou, Olivier Hermine, Raphaël Porcher, Xavier Mariette, Philippe Ravaud, Serge Bureau, Maxime Dougados, Matthieu Resche-Rigon, Pierre-Louis Tharaux, Annick Tibi, Elie Azoulay, Jacques Cadranel, Joseph Emmerich, Muriel Fartoukh, Bertrand Guidet, Marc Humbert, Karine Lacombe, Matthieu Mahevas, Frédéric Pene, Valerie Pourchet-Martinez, Frédéric Schlemmer, Yazdan Yazdanpanah, Gabriel Baron, Elodie Perrodeau, Damien Vanhoye, Cécile Kedzia, Lauren Demerville, Anne Gysembergh-Houal, Alexandre Bourgoin, Nabil Raked, Lakhdar Mameri, Claire Montlahuc, Lucie Biard, St.phanie Alary, Samir Hamiria, Thinhinane Bariz, Hala Semri, Dhiaa Meriem Hai, Moustafa Benafla, Mohamed Belloul, Pernelle Vauboin, Saskia Flamand, Claire Pacheco, Anouk Walter-Petrich, Emilia Stan, Souad Benarab, Corine Nyanou, Robin Charreteur, Céline Dupre, Kévin Cardet, Blandine Lehmann, Kamyl Baghli, Claire Madelaine, Eric D'Ortenzio, Oriane Puéchal, Caroline Semaille, Laurent Savale, Anatole Harrois, Samy Figueiredo, Jacques Duranteau, Nadia Anguel, Arthur Pavot, Xavier Monnet, Christian Richard, Jean-Louis Teboul, Philippe Durand, Pierre Tissieres, Mitja Jevnikar, David Montani, Stephan Pavy, Gaétane Nocturne, Samuel Bitoun, Nicolas Noel, Olivier Lambotte, Lelia Escaut, Stephane Jauréguiberry, Elodie Baudry, Christiane Verny, Edouard Lefevre, Mohamad Zaidan, Domitille Molinari, Gaël Leprun, Alain Fourreau, Laurent Cylly, Lamiae Grimaldi, Myriam Virlouvet, Ramdane Meftali, Soléne Fabre, Marion Licois, Asmaa Mamoune, Yacine Boudali, Clotilde Le Tiec, Céline Verstuyft, Anne-Marie Roques, Sophie Georgin-Lavialle, Patricia Senet, Gilles Pialoux, Angele Soria, Antoine Parrot, Helene François, Nathalie Rozensztajn, Emmanuelle Blin, Pascaline Choinier, Juliette Camuset, Jean-Simon Rech, Antony Canellas, Camille Rolland-Debord, Nadege Lemarié, Nicolas Belaube, Marine Nadal, Martin Siguier, Camille Petit-Hoang, Julie Chas, Elodie Drouet, Matthieu Lemoine, Audrey Phibel, Lucie Aunay, Eliane Bertrand, Sylviane Ravato, Marie Vayssettes, Anne Adda, Celine Wilpotte, Pélagie Thibaut, Julie Fillon, Isabelle Debrix, Soraya Fellahi, Jean-Philippe Bastard, Guillaume Lefévre, Jacques-Eric Gottenberg, Yves Hansmann, Frédéric Blanc, Sophie Ohlmann-Caillard, Vincent Castelain, Emmanuel Chatelus, Eva Chatron, Olivier Collange, François Danion, Frédéric De Blay, Pierre Diemunsch, Sophie Diemunsch, Renaud Felten, Bernard Goichot, Valentin Greigert, Aurelien Guffroy, Bob Heger, Charlotte Kaeuffer, Loic Kassegne, Anne Sophie Korganow, Pierrick Le Borgne, Nicolas Lefebvre, Paul-Michel Mertes, Eric Noll, Mathieu Oberlin, Vincent Poindron, Julien Pottecher, Yvon Ruch, François Weill, Nicolas Meyer, Emmanuel Andres, Eric Demonsant, Hakim Tayebi, Gabriel Nisand, Stéphane Brin, Cédric Sublon, Guillaume Becker, Anne Hutt, Tristan Martin, Sophie Bayer, Catherine Metzger, Arsene Mekinian, Noémie Abisror, Amir Adedjouma, Diane Bollens, Marion Bonneton, Nathalie Bourcicaux, Anne Bourrier, Maria Chauchard Thibault Chiarabiani, Doroth.e Chopin, Jonathan Cohen, Ines Devred, Bruno Donadille, Olivier Fain, Geoffrey Hariri, Vincent Jachiet, Patrick Ingliz, Marc Garnier, Marc Gatfosse, Etienne Ghrenassia, Delphine Gobert, Jessica Krause le Garrec, Cecilia Landman, Jean Remy Lavillegrand, Benedicte Lefebvre, Thibault Mahevas, Sandie Mazerand, Jean Luc Meynard, Marjolaine Morgand, Zineb Ouaz.ne, Jerome Pacanowski, S.bastien Riviere, Philippe Seksik, Harry Sokol, Heithem Soliman, Nadia Valin, Thomas Urbina, Chloé McAvoy, Maria Pereira Miranda, Gladys Aratus, Laurence Berard, Tabassome Simon, Anne Daguenel Nguyen, Elise Girault, Cl.mentine Mayala-Kanda, Marie Antignac, Céline Leplay, Jean-Benoit Arlet, Jean-Luc Diehl, Florence Bellenfant, Anne Blanchard, Alexandre Buffet, Bernard Cholley, Antoine Fayol, Edouard Flamarion, Anne Godier, Thomas Gorget, Sophie-Rym Hamada, Caroline Hauw-Berlemont, Jean-Sébastien Hulot, David Lebeaux, Marine Livrozet, Adrien Michon, Arthur Neuschwander, Marie-Aude Pennet, Benjamin Planquette, Brigitte Ranque, Olivier Sanchez, Geoffroy Volle, Sandrine Briois, Mathias Cornic, Virginie Elisee, Jesuthasan Denis, Juliette Djadi-Prat, Pauline Jouany, Ramon Junquera, Mickael Henriques, Amina Kebir, Isabelle Lehir, Jeanne Meunier, Florence Patin, Val.rie Paquet, Anne Tréhan, Véronique Vigna, Brigitte Sabatier, Damien Bergerot, Charléne Jouve, Camille Knosp, Olivia Lenoir, Nassim Mahtal, Léa Resmini, Xavier Lescure, Jade Ghosn, Antoine Bachelard, Anne Rachline, Valentina Isernia, Bao-chau, Phung, Dorothée Vallois, Aurelie Sautereau, Catherine Neukrich, Antoine Dossier, Raphaël Borie, Bruno Crestani, Gregory Ducrocq, Philippe Gabriel Steg, Philippe Dieude, Thomas Papo, Estelle Marcault, Marhaba Chaudhry, Charléne Da Silveira, Annabelle Metois, Ismahan Mahenni, Meriam Meziani, Cyndie Nilusmas, Sylvie Le Gac, Awa Ndiaye, Fran.oise Louni, Malikhone Chansombat, Zelie Julia, Solaya Chalal, Lynda Chalal, Laura Kramer, Jeniffer Le Grand, Kafif Ouifiya, Valentine Piquard, Sarah Tubiana, Yann Nguyen, Vasco Honsel, Emmanuel Weiss, Anais Codorniu, Virginie Zarrouk, Victoire de Lastours, Matthieu Uzzan, Naura Gamany, Agathe Claveirole, Alexandre Navid, Tiffanie Fouque, Yonathan Cohen, Maya Lupo, Constance Gilles, Roza Rahli, Zeina Louis, David Boutboul, Lionel Galicier, Yaël Amara, Gabrielle Archer, Amira Benattia, Anne Bergeron, Louise Bondeelle, Nathalie de Castro, Melissa Clément, Michaël Darmon, Blandine Denis, Clairelyne Dupin, Elsa Feredj, Delphine Feyeux, Adrien Joseph, Etienne Lenglin, Pierre Le Guen, Geoffroy Liégeon, Gwenaël Lorillon, Asma Mabrouki, Eric Mariotte, Grégoire Martin de Frémont, Adrien Mirouse, Jean-Michel Molina, Régis Peffault de Latour, Eric Oksenhendler, Julien Saussereau, Abdellatif Tazi, Jean-Jacques Tudesq, Lara Zafrani, Isabelle Brindele, Emmanuelle Bugnet, Karine Celli Lebras, Julien Chabert, Lamia Djaghout, Catherine Fauvaux, Anne Lise Jegu, Ewa Kozakiewicz, Martine Meunier, Marie-Thérèse Tremorin, Claire Davoine, Isabelle Madelaine, Sophie Caillat-Zucman, Constance Delaugerre, Florence Morin, Damien Sène, Ruxandra Burlacu, Benjamin Chousterman, Bruno Mégarbanne, Pascal Richette, Jean-Pierre Riveline, Aline Frazier, Eric Vicaut, Laure Berton, Tassadit Hadjam, Miguel Alejandro Vazquez-Ibarra, Clément Jourdaine, Olivia Tran, Véronique Jouis, Aude Jacob, Julie Smati, Stéphane Renaud, Claire Pernin, Lydia Suarez, Luca Semerano, Sébastien Abad, Ruben B. nainous, Nicolas Bonnet, Celine Comparon, Yves Cohen, Hugues Cordel, Robin Dhote, Nathalie Dournon, Boris Duchemann, Nathan Ebstein, Thomas Gille, Benedicte Giroux-Leprieur, Jeanne Goupil de Bouille, Hilario Nunes, Johanna Oziel, Dominique Roulot, Lucile Sese, ClaireTantet, Yurdagul Uzunhan, Coralie Bloch-Queyrat, Vincent Levy, Fadhila Messani, Mohammed Rahaoui, Myléne Petit, Sabrina Brahmi, Vanessa Rathoin, Marthe Rigal, Nathalie Costedoat-Chalumeau, Liem Binh Luong, Zakaria Ait Hamou, Sarah Benghanem, Philippe Blanche, Nicolas Carlier, Benjamin Chaigne, Remy Gauzit, Hassan Joumaa, Mathieu Jozwiak, Marie Lachétre, Hélène Lafoeste, Odie Launay, Paul Legendre, Jonathan Marey, Caroline Morbieu, Lola-Jade Palmieri, Tali-Anne Szwebel, Hendy Abdoul, Alexandra Bruneau, Audrey Beclin-Clabaux, Charly Larrieu, Pierre Montanari, Eric Dufour, Ada Clarke, Catherine Le Bourlout, Nathalie Marin, Nathalie Menage, Samira Saleh-Mghir, Mamadou Salif Cisse, Kahina Cheref, Corinne Guerin, Jérémie Zerbit, Marc Michel, Sébastien Gallien, Etienne Crickx, Benjamin Le Vavasseur, Emmanuelle Kempf, Karim Jaffal, William Vindrios, Julie Oniszczuk, Constance Guillaud, Pascal Lim, Elena Fois, Giovanna Melica, Marie Matignon, Maud Jalabert, Jean-Daniel Lelièvre, David Schmitz, Marion Bourhis, Sylia Belazouz, Laetitia Languille, Caroline Boucle, Nelly Cita, Agnés Didier, Fahem Froura, Katia Ledudal, Thiziri Sadaoui, Alaki Thiemele, Delphine Le Febvre De Bailly, Muriel Carvhalo Verlinde, Julien Mayaux, Patrice Cacoub, David Saadoun, Mathieu Vautier, Héléne Bugaut, Olivier Benveniste, Yves Allenbach, Gaëlle Leroux, Aude Rigolet, Perrine Guillaume-Jugnot, Fanny Domont, Anne Claire Desbois, Chloé Comarmond, Nicolas Champtiaux, Segolene Toquet, Amine Ghembaza, Matheus Vieira, Georgina Maalouf, Goncalo Boleto, Yasmina Ferfar, Jean-Christophe Corvol, C.line Louapre, Sara Sambin, Louise-Laure Mariani, Carine Karachi, Florence Tubach, Candice Estellat, Linda Gimeno, Karine Martin, Aicha Bah, Vixra Keo, Sabrine Ouamri, Yasmine Messaoudi, Nessima Yelles, Pierre Faye, Sebastien Cavelot, Cecile Larcheveque, Laurence Annonay, Jaouad Benhida, Aida Zahrate-Ghoul, Soumeya Hammal, Ridha Belilita, Fanny Charbonnier, Claire Aguilar, Fanny Alby-Laurent, Carole Burger, Clara Campos-Vega, Nathalie Chavarot, Benjamin Fournier, Claire Rouzaud, Damien Vimpére, Caroline Elie, Prissile Bakouboula, Laure Choupeaux, Sophie Granville, Elodie Issorat, Christine Broissand, Marie-Alexandra Alyanakian, Guillaume Geri, Nawal Derridj, Naima Sguiouar, Hakim Meddah, Mourad Djadel, Héléne Chambrin-Lauvray, Jean-Charles Duclos-vallée, Faouzi Saliba, Sophie-Caroline Sacleux, Ilias Kounis, Sonia Tamazirt, Eric Rudant, Jean-Marie Michot, Annabelle Stoclin, Emeline Colomba, Fanny Pommeret, Christophe Willekens, Rosa Da Silva, Valérie Dejean, Yasmina Mekid, Ines Ben-Mabrouk, Florence Netzer, Caroline Pradon, Laurence Drouard, Valérie Camara-Clayette, Alexandre Morel, Gilles Garcia, Abolfazl Mohebbi, Férial Berbour, Mélanie Dehais, Anne-Lise Pouliquen, Alison Klasen, Loren Soyez-Herkert, Jonathan London, Younes Keroumi, Emmanuelle Guillot, Guillaume Grailles, Younes El amine, Fanny Defrancq, Hanane Fodil, Chaouki Bouras, Dominique Dautel, Nicolas Gambier, Thierno Dieye, Boris Bienvenu, Victor Lancon, Laurence Lecomte, Kristina Beziriganyan, Belkacem Asselate, Laure Allanic, Elena Kiouris, Marie-Héléne Legros, Christine Lemagner, Pascal Martel, Vincent Provitolo, Félix Ackermann, Mathilde Le Marchand, Aurélie Chan Hew Wai, Dimitri Fremont, Elisabeth Coupez, Mireille Adda, Frédéric Duée, Lise Bernard, Antoine Gros, Estelle Henry, Claire Courtin, Anne Pattyn, Pierre-Grégoire Guinot, Marc Bardou, Agnes Maurer, Julie Jambon, Amélie Cransac, Corinne Pernot, Bruno Mourvillier, Eric Marquis, Philippe Benoit, Damien Roux, Coralie Gernez, Cécile Yelnik, Julien Poissy, Mandy Nizard, Fanette Denies, Helene Gros, Jean-Jacques Mourad, Emmanuelle Sacco, Sophie Renet, F. Ader, Y. Yazdanpanah, F. Mentre, N. Peiffer-Smadja, F.X. Lescure, J. Poissy, L. Bouadma, J.F. Timsit, B. Lina, F. Morfin-Sherpa, M. Bouscambert, A. Gaymard, G. Peytavin, L. Abel, J. Guedj, C. Andrejak, C. Burdet, C. Laouenan, D. Belhadi, A. Dupont, T. Alfaiate, B. Basli, A. Chair, S. Laribi, J. Level, M. Schneider, M.C. Tellier, A. Dechanet, D. Costagliola, B. Terrier, M. Ohana, S. Couffin-Cadiergues, H. Esperou, C. Delmas, J. Saillard, C. Fougerou, L. Moinot, L. Wittkop, C. Cagnot, S. Le Mestre, D. Lebrasseur-Longuet, V. Petrov-Sanchez, A. Diallo, N. Mercier, V. Icard, B. Leveau, S. Tubiana, B. Hamze, A. Gelley, M. Noret, E. D’Ortenzio, O. Puechal, C. Semaille, T. Welte, J.A. Paiva, M. Halanova, M.P. Kieny, E. Balssa, C. Birkle, S. Gibowski, E. Landry, A. Le Goff, L. Moachon, C. Moins, L. Wadouachi, C. Paul, A. Levier, D. Bougon, F. Djossou, L. Epelboin, J. Dellamonica, C.H. Marquette, C. Robert, S. Gibot, E. Senneville, V. Jean-Michel, Y. Zerbib, C. Chirouze, A. Boyer, C. Cazanave, D. Gruson, D. Malvy, P. Andreu, J.P. Quenot, N. Terzi, K. Faure, C. Chabartier, V. Le Moing, K. Klouche, T. Ferry, F, Valour, B. Gaborit, E. Canet, P. Le Turnier, D. Boutoille, F. Bani-Sadr, F. Benezit, M. Revest, C. Cameli, A. Caro, MJ Ngo Um Tegue, Y. Le Tulzo, B. Laviolle, F. Laine, G. Thiery, F. Meziani, Y. Hansmann, W. Oulehri, C. Tacquard, F. Vardon-Bounes, B. Riu-Poulenc, M. Murris-Espin, L. Bernard, D. Garot, O. Hinschberger, M. Martinot, C. Bruel, B. Pilmis, O. Bouchaud, P. Loubet, C. Roger, X. Monnet, S. Figueiredo, V. Godard, J.P. Mira, M. Lachatre, S. Kerneis, J. Aboab, N. Sayre, F. Crockett, D. Lebeaux, A. Buffet, J.L. Diehl, A. Fayol, J.S. Hulot, M. Livrozet, A Mekontso- Dessap, C. Ficko, F. Stefan, J. Le Pavec, J. Mayaux, H. Ait-Oufella, J.M. Molina, G. Pialoux, M. Fartoukh, J. Textoris, M. Brossard, A. Essat, E. Netzer, Y. Riault, M. Ghislain, L. Beniguel, M. Genin, L. Gouichiche, C. Betard, L. Belkhir, A. Altdorfer, V Fraipont Centro, S. Braz, JM Ferreira Ribeiro, R Roncon Alburqueque, M. Berna, M. Alexandre, B. Lamprecht, A. Egle, R. Greil, M. Joannidis, Thomas F. Patterson, Philip O. Ponce, Barbara S. Taylor, Jan E. Patterson, Jason E. Bowling, Heta Javeri, LuAnn Larson, Angela Hewlett, Aneesh K. Mehta, Nadine G. Rouphael, Youssef Saklawi, Nicholas Scanlon, Jessica J. Traenkner, Ronald P. Trible, Jr., Emmanuel B. Walter, Noel Ivey, Thomas L. Holland, Guillermo M. Ruiz-Palacios, Alfredo Ponce de León, Sandra Rajme, Lanny Hsieh, Alpesh N. Amin, Miki Watanabe, Helen S. Lee, Susan Kline, Joanne Billings, Brooke Noren, Hyun Kim, Tyler D. Bold, Victor Tapson, Jonathan Grein, Fayyaz Sutterwala, Nicole Iovine, Lars K. Beattie, Rebecca Murray Wakeman, Matthew Shaw, Mamta K. Jain, Satish Mocherla, Jessica Meisner, Amneris Luque, Daniel A. Sweeney, Constance A. Benson, Farhana Ali, Robert L. Atmar, Hana M. El Sahly, Jennifer Whitaker, Ann R. Falsey, Angela R. Branche, Cheryl Rozario, Justino Regalado Pineda, José Arturo Martinez-Orozco, David Chien Lye, Sean WX. Ong, Po Ying Chia, Barnaby E. Young, Uriel Sandkovsky, Mezgebe Berhe, Clinton Haley, Emma Dishner, Valeria D. Cantos, Colleen F. Kelley, Paulina A. Rebolledo Esteinou, Sheetal Kandiah, Sarah B. Doernberg, Pierre-Cedric B. Crouch, Hannah Jang, Anne F. Luetkemeyer, Jay Dwyer, Stuart H. Cohen, George R. Thompson, 3rd, Hien H. Nguyen, Robert W. Finberg, Jennifer P. Wang, Juan Perez-Velazquez, Mireya Wessolossky, Patrick E.H. Jackson, Taison D. Bell, Miranda J. West, Babafemi Taiwo, Karen Krueger, Johnny Perez, Triniece Pearson, Catharine I. Paules, Kathleen G. Julian, Danish Ahmad, Alexander G. Hajduczok, Henry Arguinchona, Christa Arguinchona, Nathaniel Erdmann, Paul Goepfert, Neera Ahuja, Maria G. Frank, David Wyles, Heather Young, Myoung-don Oh, Wan Beom Park, Chang Kyung Kang, Vincent Marconi, Abeer Moanna, Sushma Cribbs, Telisha Harrison, Eu Suk Kim, Jongtak Jung, Kyoung-Ho Song, Hong Bin Kim, Seow Yen Tan, Humaira Shafi, MF Jaime Chien, Raymond KC. Fong, Daniel D. Murray, Jens Lundgren, Henrik Nielsen, Tomas Jensen, Barry S. Zingman, Robert Grossberg, Paul F. Riska, Otto O. Yang, Jenny Ahn, Rubi Arias, Rekha R. Rapaka, Naomi Hauser, James D. Campbell, William R. Short, Pablo Tebas, Jillian T. Baron, Susan L.F. McLellan, Lucas S. Blanton, Justin B. Seashore, C. Buddy Creech, Todd W. Rice, Shannon Walker, Isaac P. Thomsen, Diego Lopez de Castilla, Jason W. Van Winkle, Francis X. Riedo, Surinder Kaur Pada, Alvin DY. Wang, Li Lin, Michelle Harkins, Gregory Mertz, Nestor Sosa, Louis Yi Ann Chai, Paul Anantharajah Tambyah, Sai Meng Tham, Sophia Archuleta, Gabriel Yan, David A. Lindholm, Ana Elizabeth Markelz, Katrin Mende, Richard Mularski, Elizabeth Hohmann, Mariam Torres-Soto, Nikolaus Jilg, Ryan C. Maves, Gregory C. Utz, Sarah L. George, Daniel F. Hoft, James D. Brien, Roger Paredes, Lourdes Mateu, Cora Loste, Princy Kumar, Sarah Thornton, Sharmila Mohanraj, Noreen A. Hynes, Lauren M. Sauer, Christopher J. Colombo, Christina Schofield, Rhonda E. Colombo, Susan E. Chambers, Richard M. Novak, Andrea Wendrow, Samir K. Gupta, Tida Lee, Tahaniyat Lalani, Mark Holodniy, Aarthi Chary, Nikhil Huprikar, Anuradha Ganesan, Norio Ohmagari, Ayako Mikami, D. Ashley Price, Christopher J.A. Duncan, Kerry Dierberg, Henry J. Neumann, Stephanie N. Taylor, Alisha Lacour, Najy Masri, Edwin Swiatlo, Kyle Widmer, James D. Neaton, Mary Bessesen, David S. Stephens, Timothy H. Burgess, Timothy M. Uyeki, Robert Walker, G. Lynn Marks, Anu Osinusi, Huyen Cao, Anabela Cardoso, Stephanie de Bono, Douglas E. Schlichting, Kevin K. Chung, Jennifer L. Ferreira, Michelle Green, Mat Makowski, Michael R. Wierzbicki, Tom M. Conrad, Jill Ann El-Khorazaty, Heather Hill, Tyler Bonnett, Nikki Gettinger, Theresa Engel, Teri Lewis, Jing Wang, John H. Beigel, Kay M. Tomashek, Varduhi Ghazaryan, Tatiana Beresnev, Seema Nayak, Lori E. Dodd, Walla Dempsey, Effie Nomicos, Marina Lee, Rhonda Pikaart-Tautges, Mohamed Elsafy, Robert Jurao, Hyung Koo, Michael Proschan, Tammy Yokum, Janice Arega, Ruth Florese, Jocelyn D. Voell, Richard Davey, Ruth C. Serrano, Zanthia Wiley, Varun K. Phadke, Paul A. Goepfert, Carlos A. Gomez, Theresa A. Sofarelli, Laura Certain, Hannah N. Imlay, Cameron R. Wolfe, Emily R. Ko, John J. Engemann, Nora Bautista Felix, Claire R. Wan, Sammy T. Elmor, Laurel R. Bristow, Michelle S. Harkins, Nicole M. Iovine, Marie-Carmelle Elie-Turenne, Victor F. Tapson, Pyoeng Gyun Choe, Richard A. Mularski, Kevin S. Rhie, Rezhan H. Hussein, Dilek Ince, Patricia L. Winokur, Jin Takasaki, Sho Saito, Kimberly McConnell, PharmD, David L. Wyles, Ellen Sarcone, Kevin A. Grimes, Katherine Perez, Charles Janak, Jennifer A. Whitaker, Paulina A. Rebolledo, John Gharbin, Allison A. Lambert, Diego F. Zea, Emma Bainbridge, David C. Hostler, Jordanna M. Hostler, Brian T. Shahan, Evelyn Ling, Minjoung Go, Fleesie A. Hubbard, Melony Chakrabarty, Maryrose Laguio-Vila, Edward E. Walsh, Faheem Guirgis, Vincent C. Marconi, Christian Madar, Scott A. Borgetti, Corri Levine, Joy Nock, Keith Candiotti, Julia Rozman, Fernando Dangond, Yann Hyvert, Andrea Seitzinger, Kaitlyn Cross, Stephanie Pettibone, Seema U. Nayak, and Gregory A. Deye
- Subjects
Acute respiratory distress syndrome ,Acute hypoxemic respiratory failure ,Pneumonia ,Critically ill ,Cancer ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Summary: Background: Although immunomodulators have established benefit against the new coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in general, it is uncertain whether such agents improve outcomes without increasing the risk of secondary infections in the specific subgroup of previously immunocompromised patients. We assessed the effect of immunomodulators on outcomes of immunocompromised patients hospitalized for COVID-19. Methods: The protocol was prospectively registered with PROSPERO (CRD42022335397). MEDLINE, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials and references of relevant articles were searched up to 01-06-2022. Authors of potentially eligible randomized controlled trials were contacted to provide data on immunocompromised patients randomized to immunomodulators vs control (i.e., placebo or standard-of-care). Findings: Eleven randomized controlled trials involving 397 immunocompromised patients hospitalized for COVID-19 were included. Ten trials had low risk of bias. There was no difference between immunocompromised patients randomized to immunomodulators vs control regarding mortality [30/182 (16.5%) vs 41/215 (19.1%); RR 0.93, 95% CI 0.61–1.41; p = 0.74], secondary infections (RR 1.00, 95% CI 0.64–1.58; p = 0.99) and change in World Health Organization ordinal scale from baseline to day 15 (weighed mean difference 0.27, 95% CI -0.09–0.63; p = 0.15). In subgroup analyses including only patients with hematologic malignancy, only trials with low risk of bias, only trials administering IL-6 inhibitors, or only trials administering immunosuppressants, there was no difference between comparators regarding mortality. Interpretation: Immunomodulators, compared to control, were not associated with harmful or beneficial outcomes, including mortality, secondary infections, and change in ordinal scale, when administered to immunocompromised patients hospitalized for COVID-19. Funding: Hellenic Foundation for Research and Innovation.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. An AI-powered blood test to detect cancer using nanoDSF
- Author
-
Tsvetkov, Philipp O., Eyraud, Rémi, Ayache, Stéphane, Bougaev, Anton A., Malesinski, Soazig, Benazha, Hamed, Gorokhova, Svetlana, Buffat, Christophe, Dehais, Caroline, Sanson, Marc, Bielle, Franck, Figarella-Branger, Dominique, Chinot, Olivier, Tabouret, Emeline, and Devred, François
- Subjects
Quantitative Biology - Quantitative Methods ,Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Quantitative Biology - Tissues and Organs - Abstract
We describe a novel cancer diagnostic method based on plasma denaturation profiles obtained by a non-conventional use of Differential Scanning Fluorimetry. We show that 84 glioma patients and 63 healthy controls can be automatically classified using denaturation profiles with the help of machine learning algorithms with 92% accuracy. Proposed high throughput workflow can be applied to any type of cancer and could become a powerful pan-cancer diagnostic and monitoring tool from a simple blood test.
- Published
- 2020
8. Burst c-VEP Based BCI: Optimizing stimulus design for enhanced classification with minimal calibration data and improved user experience
- Author
-
Kalou Cabrera Castillos, Simon Ladouce, Ludovic Darmet, and Frédéric Dehais
- Subjects
Code-VEP ,Reactive BCI ,CNN ,Amplitude depth reduction ,Visual comfort ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
The utilization of aperiodic flickering visual stimuli under the form of code-modulated Visual Evoked Potentials (c-VEP) represents a pivotal advancement in the field of reactive Brain–Computer Interface (rBCI). A major advantage of the c-VEP approach is that the training of the model is independent of the number and complexity of targets, which helps reduce calibration time. Nevertheless, the existing designs of c-VEP stimuli can be further improved in terms of visual user experience but also to achieve a higher signal-to-noise ratio, while shortening the selection time and calibration process. In this study, we introduce an innovative variant of code-VEP, referred to as “Burst c-VEP”. This original approach involves the presentation of short bursts of aperiodic visual flashes at a deliberately slow rate, typically ranging from two to four flashes per second. The rationale behind this design is to leverage the sensitivity of the primary visual cortex to transient changes in low-level stimuli features to reliably elicit distinctive series of visual evoked potentials. In comparison to other types of faster-paced code sequences, burst c-VEP exhibit favorable properties to achieve high bitwise decoding performance using convolutional neural networks (CNN), which yields potential to attain faster selection time with the need for less calibration data. Furthermore, our investigation focuses on reducing the perceptual saliency of c-VEP through the attenuation of visual stimuli contrast and intensity to significantly improve users’ visual comfort. The proposed solutions were tested through an offline 4-classes c-VEP protocol involving 12 participants. Following a factorial design, participants were instructed to focus on c-VEP targets whose pattern (burst and maximum-length sequences) and amplitude (100% or 40% amplitude depth modulations) were manipulated across experimental conditions. Firstly, the full amplitude burst c-VEP sequences exhibited higher accuracy, ranging from 90.5% (with 17.6s of calibration data) to 95.6% (with 52.8s of calibration data), compared to its m-sequence counterpart (71.4% to 85.0%). The mean selection time for both types of codes (1.5 s) compared favorably to reports from previous studies. Secondly, our findings revealed that lowering the intensity of the stimuli only slightly decreased the accuracy of the burst code sequences to 94.2% while leading to substantial improvements in terms of user experience. Taken together, these results demonstrate the high potential of the proposed burst codes to advance reactive BCI both in terms of performance and usability. The collected dataset, along with the proposed CNN architecture implementation, are shared through open-access repositories.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Whole-genome sequencing of cryopreserved resources from French Large White pigs at two distinct sampling times reveals strong signatures of convergent and divergent selection between the dam and sire lines
- Author
-
Simon Boitard, Laurence Liaubet, Cyriel Paris, Katia Fève, Patrice Dehais, Alban Bouquet, Juliette Riquet, and Marie-José Mercat
- Subjects
Animal culture ,SF1-1100 ,Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
Abstract Background Numerous genomic scans for positive selection have been performed in livestock species within the last decade, but often a detailed characterization of the detected regions (gene or trait under selection, timing of selection events) is lacking. Cryopreserved resources stored in reproductive or DNA gene banks offer a great opportunity to improve this characterization by providing direct access to recent allele frequency dynamics, thereby differentiating between signatures from recent breeding objectives and those related to more ancient selection constraints. Improved characterization can also be achieved by using next-generation sequencing data, which helps narrowing the size of the detected regions while reducing the number of associated candidate genes. Methods We estimated genetic diversity and detected signatures of recent selection in French Large White pigs by sequencing the genomes of 36 animals from three distinct cryopreserved samples: two recent samples from dam (LWD) and sire (LWS) lines, which had diverged from 1995 and were selected under partly different objectives, and an older sample from 1977 prior to the divergence. Results French LWD and LWS lines have lost approximately 5% of the SNPs that segregated in the 1977 ancestral population. Thirty-eight genomic regions under recent selection were detected in these lines and the corresponding selection events were further classified as convergent between lines (18 regions), divergent between lines (10 regions), specific to the dam line (6 regions) or specific to the sire line (4 regions). Several biological functions were found to be significantly enriched among the genes included in these regions: body size, body weight and growth regardless of the category, early life survival and calcium metabolism more specifically in the signatures in the dam line and lipid and glycogen metabolism more specifically in the signatures in the sire line. Recent selection on IGF2 was confirmed and several other regions were linked to a single candidate gene (ARHGAP10, BMPR1B, GNA14, KATNA1, LPIN1, PKP1, PTH, SEMA3E or ZC3HAV1, among others). Conclusions These results illustrate that sequencing the genome of animals at several recent time points generates considerable insight into the traits, genes and variants under recent selection in a population. This approach could be applied to other livestock populations, e.g. by exploiting the rich biological resources stored in cryobanks.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Open multi-session and multi-task EEG cognitive Dataset for passive brain-computer Interface Applications
- Author
-
Marcel F. Hinss, Emilie S. Jahanpour, Bertille Somon, Lou Pluchon, Frédéric Dehais, and Raphaëlle N. Roy
- Subjects
Science - Abstract
Abstract Brain-Computer Interfaces and especially passive Brain-Computer interfaces (pBCI), with their ability to estimate and monitor user mental states, are receiving increasing attention from both the fundamental research and the applied research and development communities. Testing new pipelines and benchmarking classifiers and feature extraction algorithms is central to further research within this domain. Unfortunately, data sharing in pBCI research is still scarce. The COG-BCI database encompasses the recordings of 29 participants over 3 separate sessions with 4 different tasks (MATB, N-Back, PVT, Flanker) designed to elicit different mental states, for a total of over 100 hours of open EEG data. This dataset was validated on a subjective, behavioral and physiological level, to ensure its usefulness to the pBCI community. Furthermore, a proof of concept is given with an example of mental workload estimation pipeline and results, to ensure that the data can be used for the design and evaluation of pBCI pipelines. This body of work presents a large effort to promote the use of pBCIs in an open science framework.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Hybrid [18F]-F-DOPA PET/MRI Interpretation Criteria and Scores for Glioma Follow-up After Radiotherapy
- Author
-
Bertaux, Marc, Berenbaum, Arnaud, Di Stefano, Anna-Luisa, Rozenblum, Laura, Soret, Marine, Bergeret, Sebastien, Hoang-Xuan, Khé, Tainturier, Laure-Eugenie, Sgard, Brian, Habert, Marie-Odile, Delattre, Jean-Yves, Dehais, Caroline, Idbaih, Ahmed, Pyatigorskaya, Nadya, and Kas, Aurelie
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Chemotherapy is an efficient treatment in primary CNS MALT lymphoma
- Author
-
Desjardins, Clément, Larrieu-Ciron, Delphine, Choquet, Sylvain, Mokhtari, Karima, Charlotte, Frédéric, Nichelli, Lucia, Mathon, Bertrand, Ahle, Guido, Le Garff-Tavernier, Magali, Morales-Martinez, Andrea, Dehais, Caroline, Hoang-Xuan, Khê, and Houillier, Caroline
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. The role of brain-localized gamma and alpha oscillations in inattentional deafness: implications for understanding human attention
- Author
-
Daniel E. Callan, Takashi Fukada, Frédéric Dehais, and Shin Ishii
- Subjects
inattentional deafness ,EEG ,gamma ,alpha ,natural cognition ,neuroergonomics ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
IntroductionThe processes involved in how the attention system selectively focuses on perceptual and motor aspects related to a specific task, while suppressing features of other tasks and/or objects in the environment, are of considerable interest for cognitive neuroscience. The goal of this experiment was to investigate neural processes involved in selective attention and performance under multi-task situations. Several studies have suggested that attention-related gamma-band activity facilitates processing in task-specific modalities, while alpha-band activity inhibits processing in non-task-related modalities. However, investigations into the phenomenon of inattentional deafness/blindness (inability to observe stimuli in non-dominant task when primary task is demanding) have yet to observe gamma-band activity.MethodsThis EEG experiment utilizes an engaging whole-body perceptual motor task while carrying out a secondary auditory detection task to investigate neural correlates of inattentional deafness in natural immersive high workload conditions. Differences between hits and misses on the auditory detection task in the gamma (30–50 Hz) and alpha frequency (8–12 Hz) range were carried out at the cortical source level using LORETA.ResultsParticipant auditory task performance correlated with an increase in gamma-band activity for hits over misses pre- and post-stimulus in left auditory processing regions. Alpha-band activity was greater for misses relative to hits in right auditory processing regions pre- and post-stimulus onset. These results are consistent with the facilitatory/inhibitory role of gamma/alpha-band activity for neural processing. Additional gamma- and alpha-band activity was found in frontal and parietal brain regions which are thought to reflect various attentional monitoring, selection, and switching processes.DiscussionThe results of this study help to elucidate the role of gamma and alpha frequency bands in frontal and modality-specific regions involved with selective attention in multi-task immersive situations.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Improving user experience of SSVEP BCI through low amplitude depth and high frequency stimuli design
- Author
-
Ladouce, S., Darmet, L., Torre Tresols, J. J., Velut, S., Ferraro, G., and Dehais, F.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Improving user experience of SSVEP BCI through low amplitude depth and high frequency stimuli design
- Author
-
S. Ladouce, L. Darmet, J. J. Torre Tresols, S. Velut, G. Ferraro, and F. Dehais
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Steady-States Visually Evoked Potentials (SSVEP) refer to the sustained rhythmic activity observed in surface electroencephalography (EEG) in response to the presentation of repetitive visual stimuli (RVS). Due to their robustness and rapid onset, SSVEP have been widely used in Brain Computer Interfaces (BCI). However, typical SSVEP stimuli are straining to the eyes and present risks of triggering epileptic seizures. Reducing visual stimuli contrast or extending their frequency range both appear as relevant solutions to address these issues. It however remains sparsely documented how BCI performance is impacted by these features and to which extent user experience can be improved. We conducted two studies to systematically characterize the effects of frequency and amplitude depth reduction on SSVEP response. The results revealed that although high frequency stimuli improve visual comfort, their classification performance were not competitive enough to design a reliable/responsive BCI. Importantly, we found that the amplitude depth reduction of low frequency RVS is an effective solution to improve user experience while maintaining high classification performance. These findings were further validated by an online T9 SSVEP-BCI in which stimuli with 40% amplitude depth reduction achieved comparable results (>90% accuracy) to full amplitude stimuli while significantly improving user experience.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Two-view 3D Reconstruction for Food Volume Estimation
- Author
-
Dehais, Joachim, Anthimopoulos, Marios, Shevchik, Sergey, and Mougiakakou, Stavroula
- Subjects
Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
The increasing prevalence of diet-related chronic diseases coupled with the ineffectiveness of traditional diet management methods have resulted in a need for novel tools to accurately and automatically assess meals. Recently, computer vision based systems that use meal images to assess their content have been proposed. Food portion estimation is the most difficult task for individuals assessing their meals and it is also the least studied area. The present paper proposes a three-stage system to calculate portion sizes using two images of a dish acquired by mobile devices. The first stage consists in understanding the configuration of the different views, after which a dense 3D model is built from the two images; finally, this 3D model serves to extract the volume of the different items. The system was extensively tested on 77 real dishes of known volume, and achieved an average error of less than 10% in 5.5 seconds per dish. The proposed pipeline is computationally tractable and requires no user input, making it a viable option for fully automated dietary assessment., Comment: 10 pages, 7 Tables, 8 Figures in IEEE Transactions on Multimedia, 2016
- Published
- 2017
17. New and updated convex shape models of asteroids based on optical data from a large collaboration network
- Author
-
Hanuš, J., Ďurech, J., Oszkiewicz, D. A., Behrend, R., Carry, B., Delbo', M., Adam, O., Afonina, V., Anquetin, R., Antonini, P., Arnold, L., Audejean, M., Aurard, P., Bachschmidt, M., Badue, B., Barbotin, E., Barroy, P., Baudouin, P., Berard, L., Berger, N., Bernasconi, L., Bosch, J-G., Bouley, S., Bozhinova, I., Brinsfield, J., Brunetto, L., Canaud, G., Caron, J., Carrier, F., Casalnuovo, G., Casulli, S., Cerda, M., Chalamet, L., Charbonnel, S., Chinaglia, B., Cikota, A., Colas, F., Coliac, J-F., Collet, A., Coloma, J., Conjat, M., Conseil, E., Costa, R., Crippa, R., Cristofanelli, M., Damerdji, Y., Debackere, A., Decock, A., Déhais, Q., Déléage, T., Delmelle, S., Demeautis, C., Dróżdż, M., Dubos, G., Dulcamara, T., Dumont, M., Durkee, R., Dymock, R., del Valle, A. Escalante, Esseiva, N., Esseiva, R., Esteban, M., Fauchez, T., Fauerbach, M., Fauvaud, M., Fauvaud, S., Forné, E., Fournel, C., Fradet, D., Garlitz, J., Gerteis, O., Gillier, C., Gillon, M., Giraud, R., Godard, J-P., Goncalves, R., Hamanowa, H., Hay, K., Hellmich, S., Heterier, S., Higgins, D., Hirsch, R., Hodosan, G., Hren, M., Hygate, A., Innocent, N., Jacquinot, H., Jawahar, S., Jehin, E., Jerosimic, L., Klotz, A., Koff, W., Korlevic, P., Kosturkiewicz, E., Krafft, P., Krugly, Y., Kugel, F., Labrevoir, O., Lecacheux, J., Lehký, M., Leroy, A., Lesquerbault, B., Lopez-Gonzales, M. J., Lutz, M., Mallecot, B., Manfroid, J., Manzini, F., Marciniak, A., Martin, A., Modave, B., Montaigut, R., Montier, J., Morelle, E., Morton, B., Mottola, S., Naves, R., Nomen, J., Oey, J., Ogłoza, W., Paiella, M., Pallares, H., Peyrot, A., Pilcher, F., Pirenne, J-F., Piron, P., Polinska, M., Polotto, M., Poncy, R., Previt, J. P., Reignier, F., Renauld, D., Ricci, D., Richard, F., Rinner, C., Risoldi, V., Robilliard, D., Romeuf, D., Rousseau, G., Roy, R., Ruthroff, J., Salom, P. A., Salvador, L., Sanchez, S., Santana-Ros, T., Scholz, A., Séné, G., Skiff, B., Sobkowiak, K., Sogorb, P., Soldán, F., Spiridakis, A., Splanska, E., Sposetti, S., Starkey, D., Stephens, R., Stiepen, A., Stoss, R., Strajnic, J., Teng, J-P., Tumolo, G., Vagnozzi, A., Vanoutryve, B., Vugnon, J. M., Warner, B. D., Waucomont, M., Wertz, O., Winiarski, M., and Wolf, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Asteroid modeling efforts in the last decade resulted in a comprehensive dataset of almost 400 convex shape models and their rotation states. This amount already provided a deep insight into physical properties of main-belt asteroids or large collisional families. We aim to increase the number of asteroid shape models and rotation states. Such results are an important input for various further studies such as analysis of asteroid physical properties in different populations, including smaller collisional families, thermophysical modeling, and scaling shape models by disk-resolved images, or stellar occultation data. This provides, in combination with known masses, bulk density estimates, but constrains also theoretical collisional and evolutional models of the Solar System. We use all available disk-integrated optical data (i.e., classical dense-in-time photometry obtained from public databases and through a large collaboration network as well as sparse-in-time individual measurements from a few sky surveys) as an input for the convex inversion method, and derive 3D shape models of asteroids, together with their rotation periods and orientations of rotation axes. The key ingredient is the support of more that one hundred observers who submit their optical data to publicly available databases. We present updated shape models for 36 asteroids, for which mass estimates are currently available in the literature or their masses will be most likely determined from their gravitational influence on smaller bodies, which orbital deflection will be observed by the ESA Gaia astrometric mission. This was achieved by using additional optical data from recent apparitions for the shape optimization. Moreover, we also present new shape model determinations for 250 asteroids, including 13 Hungarias and 3 near-Earth asteroids., Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. A New Local Score Based Method Applied to Behavior-divergent Quail Lines Sequenced in Pools Precisely Detects Selection Signatures on Genes Related to Autism
- Author
-
Fariello, Maria-Ines, Boitard, Simon, Mercier, Sabine, Robelin, David, Faraut, Thomas, Arnould, Cécile, Recoquillay, Julien, Bouchez, Olivier, Salin, Gérald, Dehais, Patrice, Gourichon, David, Leroux, Sophie, Pitel, Frédérique, Leterrier, Christine, and Cristobal, Magali San
- Subjects
Quantitative Biology - Populations and Evolution ,Quantitative Biology - Genomics - Abstract
Detecting genomic footprints of selection is an important step in the understanding of evolution. Accounting for linkage disequilibrium in genome scans allows increasing the detection power, but haplotype-based methods require individual genotypes and are not applicable on pool-sequenced samples. We propose to take advantage of the local score approach to account for linkage disequilibrium, accumulating (possibly small) signals from single markers over a genomic segment, to clearly pinpoint a selection signal, avoiding windowing methods. This method provided results similar to haplotype-based methods on two benchmark data sets with individual genotypes. Results obtained for a divergent selection experiment on behavior in quail, where two lines were sequenced in pools, are precise and biologically coherent, while competing methods failed: our approach led to the detection of signals involving genes known to act on social responsiveness or autistic traits. This local score approach is general and can be applied to other genome-wide analyzes such as GWAS or genome scans for selection., Comment: 32 pages, 4 figures
- Published
- 2015
19. Cumulative incidence and risk factors for radiation induced leukoencephalopathy in high grade glioma long term survivors
- Author
-
Robert Terziev, Dimitri Psimaras, Yannick Marie, Loic Feuvret, Giulia Berzero, Julian Jacob, Caroline Dehais, Flavie Bompaire, Wolf Mueller, Ben Kinnersley, Jean-Yves Delattre, Ahmed Idbaih, Khe Hoang-Xuan, Marc Sanson, and Damien Ricard
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract The incidence and risk factors associated with radiation-induced leukoencephalopathy (RIL) in long-term survivors of high-grade glioma (HGG) are still poorly investigated. We performed a retrospective research in our institutional database for patients with supratentorial HGG treated with focal radiotherapy, having a progression-free overall survival > 30 months and available germline DNA. We reviewed MRI scans for signs of leukoencephalopathy on T2/FLAIR sequences, and medical records for information on cerebrovascular risk factors and neurological symptoms. We investigated a panel of candidate single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) to assess genetic risk. Eighty-one HGG patients (18 grade IV and 63 grade III, 50M/31F) were included in the study. The median age at the time of radiotherapy was 48 years old (range 18–69). The median follow-up after the completion of radiotherapy was 79 months. A total of 44 patients (44/81, 54.3%) developed RIL during follow-up. Twenty-nine of the 44 patients developed consistent symptoms such as subcortical dementia (n = 28), gait disturbances (n = 12), and urinary incontinence (n = 9). The cumulative incidence of RIL was 21% at 12 months, 42% at 36 months, and 48% at 60 months. Age > 60 years, smoking, and the germline SNP rs2120825 (PPARg locus) were associated with an increased risk of RIL. Our study identified potential risk factors for the development of RIL (age, smoking, and the germline SNP rs2120825) and established the rationale for testing PPARg agonists in the prevention and management of late-delayed radiation-induced neurotoxicity.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Dual Passive Reactive Brain-Computer Interface: A Novel Approach to Human-Machine Symbiosis
- Author
-
Frédéric Dehais, Simon Ladouce, Ludovic Darmet, Tran-Vu Nong, Giuseppe Ferraro, Juan Torre Tresols, Sébastien Velut, and Patrice Labedan
- Subjects
passive and reactive Brain Computer Interface ,electroencephalography ,flight simulator ,user experience ,Visual Evoked Potential (VEP) ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
The present study proposes a novel concept of neuroadaptive technology, namely a dual passive-reactive Brain-Computer Interface (BCI), that enables bi-directional interaction between humans and machines. We have implemented such a system in a realistic flight simulator using the NextMind classification algorithms and framework to decode pilots' intention (reactive BCI) and to infer their level of attention (passive BCI). Twelve pilots used the reactive BCI to perform checklists along with an anti-collision radar monitoring task that was supervised by the passive BCI. The latter simulated an automatic avoidance maneuver when it detected that pilots missed an incoming collision. The reactive BCI reached 100% classification accuracy with a mean reaction time of 1.6 s when exclusively performing the checklist task. Accuracy was up to 98.5% with a mean reaction time of 2.5 s when pilots also had to fly the aircraft and monitor the anti-collision radar. The passive BCI achieved a F1−score of 0.94. This first demonstration shows the potential of a dual BCI to improve human-machine teaming which could be applied to a variety of applications.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Retrospective on the First Passive Brain-Computer Interface Competition on Cross-Session Workload Estimation
- Author
-
Raphaëlle N. Roy, Marcel F. Hinss, Ludovic Darmet, Simon Ladouce, Emilie S. Jahanpour, Bertille Somon, Xiaoqi Xu, Nicolas Drougard, Frédéric Dehais, and Fabien Lotte
- Subjects
benchmarking ,dataset ,passive brain-computer interface ,workload ,EEG ,cross-session variability ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
As is the case in several research domains, data sharing is still scarce in the field of Brain-Computer Interfaces (BCI), and particularly in that of passive BCIs—i.e., systems that enable implicit interaction or task adaptation based on a user's mental state(s) estimated from brain measures. Moreover, research in this field is currently hindered by a major challenge, which is tackling brain signal variability such as cross-session variability. Hence, with a view to develop good research practices in this field and to enable the whole community to join forces in working on cross-session estimation, we created the first passive brain-computer interface competition on cross-session workload estimation. This competition was part of the 3rd International Neuroergonomics conference. The data were electroencephalographic recordings acquired from 15 volunteers (6 females; average 25 y.o.) who performed 3 sessions—separated by 7 days—of the Multi-Attribute Task Battery-II (MATB-II) with 3 levels of difficulty per session (pseudo-randomized order). The data -training and testing sets—were made publicly available on Zenodo along with Matlab and Python toy code (https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5055046). To this day, the database was downloaded more than 900 times (unique downloads of all version on the 10th of December 2021: 911). Eleven teams from 3 continents (31 participants) submitted their work. The best achieving processing pipelines included a Riemannian geometry-based method. Although better than the adjusted chance level (38% with an α at 0.05 for a 3-class classification problem), the results still remained under 60% of accuracy. These results clearly underline the real challenge that is cross-session estimation. Moreover, they confirmed once more the robustness and effectiveness of Riemannian methods for BCI. On the contrary, chance level results were obtained by one third of the methods—4 teams- based on Deep Learning. These methods have not demonstrated superior results in this contest compared to traditional methods, which may be due to severe overfitting. Yet this competition is the first step toward a joint effort to tackle BCI variability and to promote good research practices including reproducibility.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. An integrative atlas of chicken long non-coding genes and their annotations across 25 tissues
- Author
-
Frédéric Jehl, Kévin Muret, Maria Bernard, Morgane Boutin, Laetitia Lagoutte, Colette Désert, Patrice Dehais, Diane Esquerré, Hervé Acloque, Elisabetta Giuffra, Sarah Djebali, Sylvain Foissac, Thomas Derrien, Frédérique Pitel, Tatiana Zerjal, Christophe Klopp, and Sandrine Lagarrigue
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Long non-coding RNAs (LNC) regulate numerous biological processes. In contrast to human, the identification of LNC in farm species, like chicken, is still lacunar. We propose a catalogue of 52,075 chicken genes enriched in LNC ( http://www.fragencode.org/ ), built from the Ensembl reference extended using novel LNC modelled here from 364 RNA-seq and LNC from four public databases. The Ensembl reference grew from 4,643 to 30,084 LNC, of which 59% and 41% with expression ≥ 0.5 and ≥ 1 TPM respectively. Characterization of these LNC relatively to the closest protein coding genes (PCG) revealed that 79% of LNC are in intergenic regions, as in other species. Expression analysis across 25 tissues revealed an enrichment of co-expressed LNC:PCG pairs, suggesting co-regulation and/or co-function. As expected LNC were more tissue-specific than PCG (25% vs. 10%). Similarly to human, 16% of chicken LNC hosted one or more miRNA. We highlighted a new chicken LNC, hosting miR155, conserved in human, highly expressed in immune tissues like miR155, and correlated with immunity-related PCG in both species. Among LNC:PCG pairs tissue-specific in the same tissue, we revealed an enrichment of divergent pairs with the PCG coding transcription factors, as for example LHX5, HXD3 and TBX4, in both human and chicken.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Benchmarking cEEGrid and Solid Gel-Based Electrodes to Classify Inattentional Deafness in a Flight Simulator
- Author
-
Bertille Somon, Yasmina Giebeler, Ludovic Darmet, and Frédéric Dehais
- Subjects
electroencephalography ,machine learning ,Riemannian Geometry ,flight simulator ,inattentional deafness ,Event-Related Spectral Perturbation (ERSP) ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Transfer from experiments in the laboratory to real-life tasks is challenging due notably to the inability to reproduce the complexity of multitasking dynamic everyday life situations in a standardized lab condition and to the bulkiness and invasiveness of recording systems preventing participants from moving freely and disturbing the environment. In this study, we used a motion flight simulator to induce inattentional deafness to auditory alarms, a cognitive difficulty arising in complex environments. In addition, we assessed the possibility of two low-density EEG systems a solid gel-based electrode Enobio (Neuroelectrics, Barcelona, Spain) and a gel-based cEEGrid (TMSi, Oldenzaal, Netherlands) to record and classify brain activity associated with inattentional deafness (misses vs. hits to odd sounds) with a small pool of expert participants. In addition to inducing inattentional deafness (missing auditory alarms) at much higher rates than with usual lab tasks (34.7% compared to the usual 5%), we observed typical inattentional deafness-related activity in the time domain but also in the frequency and time-frequency domains with both systems. Finally, a classifier based on Riemannian Geometry principles allowed us to obtain more than 70% of single-trial classification accuracy for both mobile EEG, and up to 71.5% for the cEEGrid (TMSi, Oldenzaal, Netherlands). These results open promising avenues toward detecting cognitive failures in real-life situations, such as real flight.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Author Correction: An integrative atlas of chicken long non-coding genes and their annotations across 25 tissues
- Author
-
Jehl, Frédéric, Muret, Kévin, Bernard, Maria, Boutin, Morgane, Lagoutte, Laetitia, Désert, Colette, Dehais, Patrice, Esquerré, Diane, Acloque, Hervé, Giuffra, Elisabetta, Djebali, Sarah, Foissac, Sylvain, Derrien, Thomas, Pitel, Frédérique, Zerjal, Tatiana, Klopp, Christophe, and Lagarrigue, Sandrine
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Cumulative incidence and risk factors for radiation induced leukoencephalopathy in high grade glioma long term survivors
- Author
-
Terziev, Robert, Psimaras, Dimitri, Marie, Yannick, Feuvret, Loic, Berzero, Giulia, Jacob, Julian, Dehais, Caroline, Bompaire, Flavie, Mueller, Wolf, Kinnersley, Ben, Delattre, Jean-Yves, Idbaih, Ahmed, Hoang-Xuan, Khe, Sanson, Marc, and Ricard, Damien
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Mechanisms and therapeutic implications of hypermutation in gliomas
- Author
-
Touat, Mehdi, Li, Yvonne Y., Boynton, Adam N., Spurr, Liam F., Iorgulescu, J. Bryan, Bohrson, Craig L., Cortes-Ciriano, Isidro, Birzu, Cristina, Geduldig, Jack E., Pelton, Kristine, Lim-Fat, Mary Jane, Pal, Sangita, Ferrer-Luna, Ruben, Ramkissoon, Shakti H., Dubois, Frank, Bellamy, Charlotte, Currimjee, Naomi, Bonardi, Juliana, Qian, Kenin, Ho, Patricia, Malinowski, Seth, Taquet, Leon, Jones, Robert E., Shetty, Aniket, Chow, Kin-Hoe, Sharaf, Radwa, Pavlick, Dean, Albacker, Lee A., Younan, Nadia, Baldini, Capucine, Verreault, Maïté, Giry, Marine, Guillerm, Erell, Ammari, Samy, Beuvon, Frédéric, Mokhtari, Karima, Alentorn, Agusti, Dehais, Caroline, Houillier, Caroline, Laigle-Donadey, Florence, Psimaras, Dimitri, Lee, Eudocia Q., Nayak, Lakshmi, McFaline-Figueroa, J. Ricardo, Carpentier, Alexandre, Cornu, Philippe, Capelle, Laurent, Mathon, Bertrand, Barnholtz-Sloan, Jill S., Chakravarti, Arnab, Bi, Wenya Linda, Chiocca, E. Antonio, Fehnel, Katie Pricola, Alexandrescu, Sanda, Chi, Susan N., Haas-Kogan, Daphne, Batchelor, Tracy T., Frampton, Garrett M., Alexander, Brian M., Huang, Raymond Y., Ligon, Azra H., Coulet, Florence, Delattre, Jean-Yves, Hoang-Xuan, Khê, Meredith, David M., Santagata, Sandro, Duval, Alex, Sanson, Marc, Cherniack, Andrew D., Wen, Patrick Y., Reardon, David A., Marabelle, Aurélien, Park, Peter J., Idbaih, Ahmed, Beroukhim, Rameen, Bandopadhayay, Pratiti, Bielle, Franck, and Ligon, Keith L.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The level of activity of the alternative lengthening of telomeres correlates with patient age in IDH-mutant ATRX-loss-of-expression anaplastic astrocytomas
- Author
-
Nathalie Grandin, Bruno Pereira, Camille Cohen, Pauline Billard, Caroline Dehais, Catherine Carpentier, Ahmed Idbaih, Franck Bielle, François Ducray, Dominique Figarella-Branger, Jean-Yves Delattre, Marc Sanson, Patrick Lomonte, Delphine Poncet, Pierre Verrelle, Michel Charbonneau, and POLA network
- Subjects
Anaplastic astrocytoma ,Secondary glioblastoma ,Alternative lengthening of telomeres ,IDH1/2 mutations ,ATRX loss of expression ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Abstract All cancer cells need to maintain functional telomeres to sustain continuous cell division and proliferation. In human diffuse gliomas, functional telomeres are maintained due either to reactivation of telomerase expression, the main pathway in most cancer types, or to activation of a mechanism called the alternative lengthening of telomeres (ALT). The presence of IDH1/2 mutations (IDH-mutant) together with loss of ATRX expression (ATRX-lost) are frequently associated with ALT in diffuse gliomas. However, detection of ALT, and a fortiori its quantification, are rarely, if ever, measured in neuropathology laboratories. We measured the level of ALT activity using the previously described quantitative “C-circle” assay and analyzed it in a well characterized cohort of 104 IDH-mutant and ATRX-lost adult diffuse gliomas. We report that in IDH-mutant ATRX-lost anaplastic astrocytomas, the intensity of ALT was inversely correlated with age (p
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Successful treatment of Trichosporon asahii fungemia with isavuconazole in a patient with hematologic malignancies
- Author
-
Feugray G, Krzisch D, Dehais M, Razakandrainibe R, Gargala G, Favennec L, Lepretre S, Camus V, and Costa D
- Subjects
fungemia ,Trichosporon asahii ,isavuconazole ,acute lymphoid leukemia ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Guillaume Feugray,1 Daphné Krzisch,2 Marion Dehais,1 Romy Razakandrainibe,3 Gilles Gargala1,3, Loic Favennec1,3, Stéphane Lepretre,2 Vincent Camus,2 Damien Costa1,31Department of Parasitology/Mycology, Rouen University Hospital, Rouen, France; 2Department of Hematology, Centre Henri Becquerel, Normandie Univ UNIROUEN, Inserm U1245, Rouen, France; 3Department of Parasitology/Mycology, University of Medicine Pharmacy Rouen EA ESCAPE 7510, Rouen, FranceAbstract: Trichosporon spp. are yeast-like microorganisms responsible for skin, urinary, pulmonary, or bloodstream infections. Due to intrinsic resistance to echinocandins, poor susceptibility to polyenes, and preferred occurrence in immunocompromised patients, such infections are often of poor prognosis. Yet no consensual therapeutic guidelines are presently available. Several clinical cases of Trichosporon infections have been successfully treated with azole therapy, including voriconazole which appeared frequently effective against Trichosporon both in vitro and in vivo. However, the low efficacy associated with some Trichosporon genotypes, complex pharmacokinetics, and the side effects of voriconazole represent limitations for its use and has prompted a search for other therapeutic options. Here, we report a case of T. asahii fungemia in a patient with B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia which was successfully treated with isavuconazole consecutive to stopping voriconazole therapy due to severe side effects. This observation suggests that isavuconazole with a similar spectrum to voriconazole, fewer pharmacology interactions, and side effects may be considered as a valuable therapeutic option against Trichosporon infections.Keywords: fungemia, Trichosporon asahii, isavuconazole, acute lymphoid leukemia
- Published
- 2019
29. Species Identification and In Vitro Antifungal Susceptibility of Paecilomyces/Purpureocillium Species Isolated from Clinical Respiratory Samples: A Multicenter Study
- Author
-
Lorra Monpierre, Nawel Aït-Ammar, Isabel Valsecchi, Anne-Cécile Normand, Juliette Guitard, Arnaud Riat, Antoine Huguenin, Christine Bonnal, Boualem Sendid, Lilia Hasseine, Hélène Raberin, Marion Dehais, Stéphane Ranque, Christophe Hennequin, Renaud Piarroux, Eric Dannaoui, and Françoise Botterel
- Subjects
Paecilomyces variotii ,Paecilomyces maximus ,Purpureocillium lilacinum ,antifungal susceptibility testing ,molecular identification ,MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Paecilomyces spp. are emerging fungal pathogens, where Paecilomyces lilacinus and Paecilomyces variotii are the most reported species. Taxonomic and phylogenetic revisions in this genus have shown that P. variotii represents a species complex, whereas P. lilacinus is related to another genus called Purpureocillium. The aims of this study were to identify clinical isolates of Paecilomyces spp. at the species level, and to determine their antifungal susceptibility profiles. 70 clinical Paecilomyces spp. isolates were identified by MALDI-TOF Mass Spectrometry (MS) and by multilocus rDNA genes sequencing including ITS and the D1/D2 genes. Among the 70 Paecilomyces spp. isolates, 28 were identified as P. lilacinum, 26 as P. variotii stricto sensu, and 16 as P. maximus. For antifungal susceptibility testing, Minimal Inhibitory Concentrations (MICs) or Minimal Effective Concentrations (MECs) were determined for 8 antifungals. All P. lilacinum isolates had high MICs and MECs of amphotericin B and echinocandins, respectively, unlike P. variotii and P. maximus. For azole drugs, MICs were molecule- and species- dependent. The differences in in vitro susceptibility to antifungals underline the importance of accurate species identification. The MALDI–TOF MS can be a good alternative in routine laboratory to ensure fast identification of Paecilomyces spp. and P. lilacinum.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Degraded States of Engagement in Air Traffic Control
- Author
-
Yannick Migliorini, Jean-Paul Imbert, Raphaëlle N. Roy, Alex Lafont, and Frédéric Dehais
- Subjects
air traffic control ,performance ,safety ,inattentional blindness ,mind wandering ,inattentional deafness ,Industrial safety. Industrial accident prevention ,T55-55.3 ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Safety studies have identified attention as a recurring cause of incidents and accidents in air traffic control. However, little is known of the precise attentional states that lead to degraded ATC performance. Therefore, we surveyed 150 French en route air traffic controllers on the causes of and impacts on perceived cooperation, safety, and performance of seven degraded attentional states from the literature: task-related and task-unrelated mind wandering, mental overload, inattentional deafness and blindness, attentional entropy, and perseveration. Our findings indicated that task-related and task-unrelated mind wandering were the most prevalent but had the least impact on perceived safety. Conversely, inattentional blindness and attentional entropy were less reported but were considered a significant safety concern, while inattentional deafness affected cooperation. Most states were experienced in workload levels consistent with the literature. However, no other factor such as shift work was identified as a cause of these states. Overall, these findings suggest that “attention” is not a specific enough subject for ATC, as attentional issues can occur in various conditions and have different impacts. As far as safety is concerned, inattentional blindness should be the prime target for further research. Neuroergonomics in particular could help develop dynamic countermeasures to mitigate its impact.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. An integrative atlas of chicken long non-coding genes and their annotations across 25 tissues
- Author
-
Jehl, Frédéric, Muret, Kévin, Bernard, Maria, Boutin, Morgane, Lagoutte, Laetitia, Désert, Colette, Dehais, Patrice, Esquerré, Diane, Acloque, Hervé, Giuffra, Elisabetta, Djebali, Sarah, Foissac, Sylvain, Derrien, Thomas, Pitel, Frédérique, Zerjal, Tatiana, Klopp, Christophe, and Lagarrigue, Sandrine
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Editorial: High Performance Cognition: Information-Processing in Complex Skills, Expert Performance, and Flow
- Author
-
Benjamin Ultan Cowley, Frederic Dehais, Stephen Fairclough, Alexander John Karran, Jussi Palomäki, and Otto Lappi
- Subjects
high performance cognition ,cognitive neuroscience ,expert performance ,psychophysiology ,flow ,deliberate practice ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Rare Primary Central Nervous System Tumors in Adults: An Overview
- Author
-
Enrico Franceschi, Didier Frappaz, Roberta Rudà, Peter Hau, Matthias Preusser, Caroline Houillier, Giuseppe Lombardi, Sofia Asioli, Caroline Dehais, Franck Bielle, Vincenzo Di Nunno, Martin van den Bent, Alba A. Brandes, Ahmed Idbaih, EURACAN Domain, Paul Clement Radek, Lakomý Nicolai El-Hindy, Jean-Yves Delattre, Ville Vuorinen, Silvia Scoccianti, Riccardo SoffiettiLucia Monti, Andrea Pace, Gaetano Finocchiaro, Arimantas TamasauskasMark ter Laan, Anja Gijtenbeek, Michiel Wagemakers, David NoskeUroš Smrdel, Puneet Plaha, and Naomi Fersht
- Subjects
pineal tumors ,mesenchymal non meningothelial intracranial tumors ,CNS lymphoma ,germ cell tumors ,pituitary tumor ,glioneural tumor ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Overall, tumors of primary central nervous system (CNS) are quite common in adults with an incidence rate close to 30 new cases/100,000 inhabitants per year. Significant clinical and biological advances have been accomplished in the most common adult primary CNS tumors (i.e., diffuse gliomas). However, most CNS tumor subtypes are rare with an incidence rate below the threshold defining rare disease of 6.0 new cases/100,000 inhabitants per year. Close to 150 entities of primary CNS tumors have now been identified by the novel integrated histomolecular classification published by the World Health Organization (WHO) and its updates by the c-IMPACT NOW consortium (the Consortium to Inform Molecular and Practical Approaches to CNS Tumor Taxonomy). While these entities can be better classified into smaller groups either by their histomolecular features and/or by their location, assessing their treatment by clinical trials and improving the survival of patients remain challenging. Despite these tumors are rare, research, and advances remain slower compared to diffuse gliomas for instance. In some cases (i.e., ependymoma, medulloblastoma) the understanding is high because single or few driver mutations have been defined. The European Union has launched European Reference Networks (ERNs) dedicated to support advances on the clinical side of rare diseases including rare cancers. The ERN for rare solid adult tumors is termed EURACAN. Within EURACAN, Domain 10 brings together the European patient advocacy groups (ePAGs) and physicians dedicated to improving outcomes in rare primary CNS tumors and also aims at supporting research, care and teaching in the field. In this review, we discuss the relevant biological and clinical characteristics, clinical management of patients, and research directions for the following types of rare primary CNS tumors: medulloblastoma, pineal region tumors, glioneuronal and rare glial tumors, ependymal tumors, grade III meningioma and mesenchymal tumors, primary central nervous system lymphoma, germ cell tumors, spinal cord tumors and rare pituitary tumors.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. A Neuroergonomics Approach to Mental Workload, Engagement and Human Performance
- Author
-
Frédéric Dehais, Alex Lafont, Raphaëlle Roy, and Stephen Fairclough
- Subjects
neuroergonomics ,performance prediction ,degraded attentional and executive mental states ,task engagement ,mental workload ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
The assessment and prediction of cognitive performance is a key issue for any discipline concerned with human operators in the context of safety-critical behavior. Most of the research has focused on the measurement of mental workload but this construct remains difficult to operationalize despite decades of research on the topic. Recent advances in Neuroergonomics have expanded our understanding of neurocognitive processes across different operational domains. We provide a framework to disentangle those neural mechanisms that underpin the relationship between task demand, arousal, mental workload and human performance. This approach advocates targeting those specific mental states that precede a reduction of performance efficacy. A number of undesirable neurocognitive states (mind wandering, effort withdrawal, perseveration, inattentional phenomena) are identified and mapped within a two-dimensional conceptual space encompassing task engagement and arousal. We argue that monitoring the prefrontal cortex and its deactivation can index a generic shift from a nominal operational state to an impaired one where performance is likely to degrade. Neurophysiological, physiological and behavioral markers that specifically account for these states are identified. We then propose a typology of neuroadaptive countermeasures to mitigate these undesirable mental states.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Volumetric Food Quantification Using Computer Vision on a Depth-Sensing Smartphone: Preclinical Study
- Author
-
Herzig, David, Nakas, Christos T, Stalder, Janine, Kosinski, Christophe, Laesser, Céline, Dehais, Joachim, Jaeggi, Raphael, Leichtle, Alexander Benedikt, Dahlweid, Fried-Michael, Stettler, Christoph, and Bally, Lia
- Subjects
Information technology ,T58.5-58.64 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
BackgroundQuantification of dietary intake is key to the prevention and management of numerous metabolic disorders. Conventional approaches are challenging, laborious, and lack accuracy. The recent advent of depth-sensing smartphones in conjunction with computer vision could facilitate reliable quantification of food intake. ObjectiveThe objective of this study was to evaluate the accuracy of a novel smartphone app combining depth-sensing hardware with computer vision to quantify meal macronutrient content using volumetry. MethodsThe app ran on a smartphone with a built-in depth sensor applying structured light (iPhone X). The app estimated weight, macronutrient (carbohydrate, protein, fat), and energy content of 48 randomly chosen meals (breakfasts, cooked meals, snacks) encompassing 128 food items. The reference weight was generated by weighing individual food items using a precision scale. The study endpoints were (1) error of estimated meal weight, (2) error of estimated meal macronutrient content and energy content, (3) segmentation performance, and (4) processing time. ResultsIn both absolute and relative terms, the mean (SD) absolute errors of the app’s estimates were 35.1 g (42.8 g; relative absolute error: 14.0% [12.2%]) for weight; 5.5 g (5.1 g; relative absolute error: 14.8% [10.9%]) for carbohydrate content; 1.3 g (1.7 g; relative absolute error: 12.3% [12.8%]) for fat content; 2.4 g (5.6 g; relative absolute error: 13.0% [13.8%]) for protein content; and 41.2 kcal (42.5 kcal; relative absolute error: 12.7% [10.8%]) for energy content. Although estimation accuracy was not affected by the viewing angle, the type of meal mattered, with slightly worse performance for cooked meals than for breakfasts and snacks. Segmentation adjustment was required for 7 of the 128 items. Mean (SD) processing time across all meals was 22.9 seconds (8.6 seconds). ConclusionsThis study evaluated the accuracy of a novel smartphone app with an integrated depth-sensing camera and found highly accurate volume estimation across a broad range of food items. In addition, the system demonstrated high segmentation performance and low processing time, highlighting its usability.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Somatostatin receptor 2A protein expression characterizes anaplastic oligodendrogliomas with favorable outcome
- Author
-
Romain Appay, Emeline Tabouret, Mehdi Touat, Catherine Carpentier, Carole Colin, François Ducray, Ahmed Idbaih, Karima Mokhtari, Emmanuelle Uro-Coste, Caroline Dehais, Dominique Figarella-Branger, and the POLA network
- Subjects
Somatostatin receptor subtype 2A (SSTR2A) ,Glioma ,Biomarker ,Therapeutic target ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Abstract Diffuse gliomas are classified according to the 2016 WHO Classification of Tumors of the Central Nervous System, which now defines entities by both histology and molecular features. Somatostatin receptor subtype 2A (SSTR2A) expression has been reported in various solid tumors as associated with favorable outcomes. Its expression has been reported in gliomas with uncertain results regarding its prognostic value. The objective of this study was to assess the prognostic impact of SSTR2A protein expression in a large cohort of grade III and IV gliomas classified according to the updated 2016 WHO classification. We further validated our result with an independent cohort of low grade glioma using dataset generated by The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) Research Network. We analyzed clinical and molecular data from 575 patients. SSTR2A protein expression was evaluated using immunohistochemistry on tissue microarrays. High expression of SSTR2A protein associated with the anaplastic oligodendroglioma IDH-mutant and 1p/19q-codeleted subgroup (p
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Author Correction: An integrative atlas of chicken long non-coding genes and their annotations across 25 tissues
- Author
-
Frédéric Jehl, Kévin Muret, Maria Bernard, Morgane Boutin, Laetitia Lagoutte, Colette Désert, Patrice Dehais, Diane Esquerré, Hervé Acloque, Elisabetta Giuffra, Sarah Djebali, Sylvain Foissac, Thomas Derrien, Frédérique Pitel, Tatiana Zerjal, Christophe Klopp, and Sandrine Lagarrigue
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Modeling Complex EEG Data Distribution on the Riemannian Manifold Toward Outlier Detection and Multimodal Classification
- Author
-
Yamamoto, Maria Sayu, Sadatnejad, Khadijeh, Tanaka, Toshihisa, Islam, Md. Rabiul, Dehais, Frederic, Tanaka, Yuichi, and Lotte, Fabien
- Abstract
Objective: The usage of Riemannian geometry for Brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) has gained momentum in recent years. Most of the machine learning techniques proposed for Riemannian BCIs consider the data distribution on a manifold to be unimodal. However, the distribution is likely to be multimodal rather than unimodal since high-data variability is a crucial limitation of electroencephalography (EEG). In this paper, we propose a novel data modeling method for considering complex data distributions on a Riemannian manifold of EEG covariance matrices, aiming to improve BCI reliability. Methods: Our method, Riemannian spectral clustering (RiSC), represents EEG covariance matrix distribution on a manifold using a graph with proposed similarity measurement based on geodesic distances, then clusters the graph nodes through spectral clustering. This allows flexibility to model both a unimodal and a multimodal distribution on a manifold. RiSC can be used as a basis to design an outlier detector named outlier detection Riemannian spectral clustering (odenRiSC) and a multimodal classifier named multimodal classifier Riemannian spectral clustering (mcRiSC). All required parameters of odenRiSC/mcRiSC are selected in data-driven manner. Moreover, there is no need to pre-set a threshold for outlier detection and the number of modes for multimodal classification. Results: The experimental evaluation revealed odenRiSC can detect EEG outliers more accurately than existing methods and mcRiSC outperformed the standard unimodal classifier, especially on high-variability datasets. Conclusion: odenRiSC/mcRiSC are anticipated to contribute to making real-life BCIs outside labs and neuroergonomics applications more robust. Significance: RiSC can work as a robust EEG outlier detector and multimodal classifier.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. POMDP-BCI: A Benchmark of (Re)Active BCI Using POMDP to Issue Commands
- Author
-
Torre Tresols, Juan J., Chanel, Caroline P. C., and Dehais, Frederic
- Abstract
Objective: Past research in Brain-Computer Interfaces (BCI) have presented different decoding algorithms for different modalities. Meanwhile, highly specific decision making processes have been developed for some of these modalities, while others lack such a component in their classic pipeline. The present work proposes a model based on Partially Observable Markov Decission Process (POMDP) that works as a high-level decision making framework for three different active/reactive BCI modalities. Methods: We tested our approach on three different BCI modalities using publicly available datasets. We compared the general POMDP model as a decision making process with state of the art methods for each BCI modality. Accuracy, false positive (FP) trials, no-action (NA) trials and average decision time are presented as metrics. Results: Our results show how the presented POMDP models achieve comparable or better performance to the presented baseline methods, while being usable for the three proposed experiments without significant changes. Crucially, it offers the possibility of taking no-action (NA) when the decoding does not perform well.Conclusion: The present work implements a flexible POMDP model that acts as a sequential decision framework for BCI systems that lack such a component, and perform comparably to those that include it. Significance: We believe the proposed POMDP framework provides several interesting properties for future BCI developments, mainly the generalizability to any BCI modality and the possible integration of other physiological or brain data pipelines under a unified decision-making framework.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Integrated multi-omics analysis of oligodendroglial tumours identifies three subgroups of 1p/19q co-deleted gliomas
- Author
-
Aurélie Kamoun, Ahmed Idbaih, Caroline Dehais, Nabila Elarouci, Catherine Carpentier, Eric Letouzé, Carole Colin, Karima Mokhtari, Anne Jouvet, Emmanuelle Uro-Coste, Nadine Martin-Duverneuil, Marc Sanson, Jean-Yves Delattre, Dominique Figarella-Branger, Aurélien de Reyniès, François Ducray, and POLA network
- Subjects
Science - Abstract
Oligodendroglial tumours are characterized into three different molecular subtypes. Here, the authors use genomic data to identify a further three subgroups of 1p/19q co-deleted tumours and demonstrate an association with an aggressive phenotype.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Same-day genomic and epigenomic diagnosis of brain tumors using real-time nanopore sequencing
- Author
-
Euskirchen, Philipp, Bielle, Franck, Labreche, Karim, Kloosterman, Wigard P., Rosenberg, Shai, Daniau, Mailys, Schmitt, Charlotte, Masliah-Planchon, Julien, Bourdeaut, Franck, Dehais, Caroline, Marie, Yannick, Delattre, Jean-Yves, and Idbaih, Ahmed
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. The Spatial Release of Cognitive Load in Cocktail Party Is Determined by the Relative Levels of the Talkers
- Author
-
Andéol, Guillaume, Suied, Clara, Scannella, Sébastien, and Dehais, Frédéric
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Long-term outcomes of refractory neurosarcoidosis treated with infliximab
- Author
-
Cohen Aubart, Fleur, Bouvry, Diane, Galanaud, Damien, Dehais, Caroline, Mathey, Guillaume, Psimaras, Dimitri, Haroche, Julien, Pottier, Corinne, Hie, Miguel, Mathian, Alexis, Devilliers, Hervé, Nunes, Hilario, Valeyre, Dominique, and Amoura, Zahir
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. How Can Physiological Computing Benefit Human-Robot Interaction?
- Author
-
Raphaëlle N. Roy, Nicolas Drougard, Thibault Gateau, Frédéric Dehais, and Caroline P. C. Chanel
- Subjects
human-robot interaction ,telerobotics ,teleoperation ,physiological computing ,mental state monitoring ,passive BCI ,Mechanical engineering and machinery ,TJ1-1570 - Abstract
As systems grow more automatized, the human operator is all too often overlooked. Although human-robot interaction (HRI) can be quite demanding in terms of cognitive resources, the mental states (MS) of the operators are not yet taken into account by existing systems. As humans are no providential agents, this lack can lead to hazardous situations. The growing number of neurophysiology and machine learning tools now allows for efficient operators’ MS monitoring. Sending feedback on MS in a closed-loop solution is therefore at hand. Involving a consistent automated planning technique to handle such a process could be a significant asset. This perspective article was meant to provide the reader with a synthesis of the significant literature with a view to implementing systems that adapt to the operator’s MS to improve human-robot operations’ safety and performance. First of all, the need for this approach is detailed regarding remote operation, an example of HRI. Then, several MS identified as crucial for this type of HRI are defined, along with relevant electrophysiological markers. A focus is made on prime degraded MS linked to time-on-task and task demands, as well as collateral MS linked to system outputs (i.e., feedback and alarms). Lastly, the principle of symbiotic HRI is detailed and one solution is proposed to include the operator state vector into the system using a mixed-initiative decisional framework to drive such an interaction.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Towards Mixed-Initiative Human–Robot Interaction: Assessment of Discriminative Physiological and Behavioral Features for Performance Prediction
- Author
-
Caroline P. C. Chanel, Raphaëlle N. Roy, Frédéric Dehais, and Nicolas Drougard
- Subjects
human–robot interaction ,physiological computing ,intelligent sensors ,performance prediction ,human behavior ,Chemical technology ,TP1-1185 - Abstract
The design of human−robot interactions is a key challenge to optimize operational performance. A promising approach is to consider mixed-initiative interactions in which the tasks and authority of each human and artificial agents are dynamically defined according to their current abilities. An important issue for the implementation of mixed-initiative systems is to monitor human performance to dynamically drive task allocation between human and artificial agents (i.e., robots). We, therefore, designed an experimental scenario involving missions whereby participants had to cooperate with a robot to fight fires while facing hazards. Two levels of robot automation (manual vs. autonomous) were randomly manipulated to assess their impact on the participants’ performance across missions. Cardiac activity, eye-tracking, and participants’ actions on the user interface were collected. The participants performed differently to an extent that we could identify high and low score mission groups that also exhibited different behavioral, cardiac and ocular patterns. More specifically, our findings indicated that the higher level of automation could be beneficial to low-scoring participants but detrimental to high-scoring ones, and vice versa. In addition, inter-subject single-trial classification results showed that the studied behavioral and physiological features were relevant to predict mission performance. The highest average balanced accuracy (74%) was reached using the features extracted from all input devices. These results suggest that an adaptive HRI driving system, that would aim at maximizing performance, would be capable of analyzing such physiological and behavior markers online to further change the level of automation when it is relevant for the mission purpose.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. In silico vs. Over the Clouds: On-the-Fly Mental State Estimation of Aircraft Pilots, Using a Functional Near Infrared Spectroscopy Based Passive-BCI
- Author
-
Thibault Gateau, Hasan Ayaz, and Frédéric Dehais
- Subjects
fNIRS ,BCI ,working memory ,prefrontal cortex ,simulated and real flight ,neuroergonomics ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
There is growing interest for implementing tools to monitor cognitive performance in naturalistic work and everyday life settings. The emerging field of research, known as neuroergonomics, promotes the use of wearable and portable brain monitoring sensors such as functional near infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) to investigate cortical activity in a variety of human tasks out of the laboratory. The objective of this study was to implement an on-line passive fNIRS-based brain computer interface to discriminate two levels of working memory load during highly ecological aircraft piloting tasks. Twenty eight recruited pilots were equally split into two groups (flight simulator vs. real aircraft). In both cases, identical approaches and experimental stimuli were used (serial memorization task, consisting in repeating series of pre-recorded air traffic control instructions, easy vs. hard). The results show pilots in the real flight condition committed more errors and had higher anterior prefrontal cortex activation than pilots in the simulator, when completing cognitively demanding tasks. Nevertheless, evaluation of single trial working memory load classification showed high accuracy (>76%) across both experimental conditions. The contributions here are two-fold. First, we demonstrate the feasibility of passively monitoring cognitive load in a realistic and complex situation (live piloting of an aircraft). In addition, the differences in performance and brain activity between the two experimental conditions underscore the need for ecologically-valid investigations.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Detecting Pilot's Engagement Using fNIRS Connectivity Features in an Automated vs. Manual Landing Scenario
- Author
-
Kevin J. Verdière, Raphaëlle N. Roy, and Frédéric Dehais
- Subjects
fNIRS ,passive brain-computer-interface ,classification ,functional connectivity ,wavelet coherence ,engagement ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Monitoring pilot's mental states is a relevant approach to mitigate human error and enhance human machine interaction. A promising brain imaging technique to perform such a continuous measure of human mental state under ecological settings is Functional Near-InfraRed Spectroscopy (fNIRS). However, to our knowledge no study has yet assessed the potential of fNIRS connectivity metrics as long as passive Brain Computer Interfaces (BCI) are concerned. Therefore, we designed an experimental scenario in a realistic simulator in which 12 pilots had to perform landings under two contrasted levels of engagement (manual vs. automated). The collected data were used to benchmark the performance of classical oxygenation features (i.e., Average, Peak, Variance, Skewness, Kurtosis, Area Under the Curve, and Slope) and connectivity features (i.e., Covariance, Pearson's, and Spearman's Correlation, Spectral Coherence, and Wavelet Coherence) to discriminate these two landing conditions. Classification performance was obtained by using a shrinkage Linear Discriminant Analysis (sLDA) and a stratified cross validation using each feature alone or by combining them. Our findings disclosed that the connectivity features performed significantly better than the classical concentration metrics with a higher accuracy for the wavelet coherence (average: 65.3/59.9 %, min: 45.3/45.0, max: 80.5/74.7 computed for HbO/HbR signals respectively). A maximum classification performance was obtained by combining the area under the curve with the wavelet coherence (average: 66.9/61.6 %, min: 57.3/44.8, max: 80.0/81.3 computed for HbO/HbR signals respectively). In a general manner all connectivity measures allowed an efficient classification when computed over HbO signals. Those promising results provide methodological cues for further implementation of fNIRS-based passive BCIs.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Somatostatin receptor 2A protein expression characterizes anaplastic oligodendrogliomas with favorable outcome
- Author
-
Appay, Romain, Tabouret, Emeline, Touat, Mehdi, Carpentier, Catherine, Colin, Carole, Ducray, François, Idbaih, Ahmed, Mokhtari, Karima, Uro-Coste, Emmanuelle, Dehais, Caroline, Figarella-Branger, Dominique, and the POLA network
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Prognostic impact of the 2016 WHO classification of diffuse gliomas in the French POLA cohort
- Author
-
Tabouret, Emeline, Nguyen, Anh Tuan, Dehais, Caroline, Carpentier, Catherine, Ducray, François, Idbaih, Ahmed, Mokhtari, Karima, Jouvet, Anne, Uro-Coste, Emmanuelle, Colin, Carole, Chinot, Olivier, Loiseau, Hugues, Moyal, Elisabeth, Maurage, Claude-Alain, Polivka, Marc, Lechapt-Zalcman, Emmanuèle, Desenclos, Christine, Meyronet, David, Delattre, Jean-Yves, Figarella-Branger, Dominique, and For POLA Network
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Monitoring Pilot’s Mental Workload Using ERPs and Spectral Power with a Six-Dry-Electrode EEG System in Real Flight Conditions
- Author
-
Frédéric Dehais, Alban Duprès, Sarah Blum, Nicolas Drougard, Sébastien Scannella, Raphaëlle N. Roy, and Fabien Lotte
- Subjects
dry-electrode EEG ,real flight conditions ,Artifact Subspace Reconstruction (ASR) ,oddball ,auditory attention ,neuroergonomics ,mobi ,Chemical technology ,TP1-1185 - Abstract
Recent technological progress has allowed the development of low-cost and highly portable brain sensors such as pre-amplified dry-electrodes to measure cognitive activity out of the laboratory. This technology opens promising perspectives to monitor the “brain at work” in complex real-life situations such as while operating aircraft. However, there is a need to benchmark these sensors in real operational conditions. We therefore designed a scenario in which twenty-two pilots equipped with a six-dry-electrode EEG system had to perform one low load and one high load traffic pattern along with a passive auditory oddball. In the low load condition, the participants were monitoring the flight handled by a flight instructor, whereas they were flying the aircraft in the high load condition. At the group level, statistical analyses disclosed higher P300 amplitude for the auditory target (Pz, P4 and Oz electrodes) along with higher alpha band power (Pz electrode), and higher theta band power (Oz electrode) in the low load condition as compared to the high load one. Single trial classification accuracy using both event-related potentials and event-related frequency features at the same time did not exceed chance level to discriminate the two load conditions. However, when considering only the frequency features computed over the continuous signal, classification accuracy reached around 70% on average. This study demonstrates the potential of dry-EEG to monitor cognition in a highly ecological and noisy environment, but also reveals that hardware improvement is still needed before it can be used for everyday flight operations.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.