437 results on '"Girelli L."'
Search Results
2. Cognitive Reserve Potential: Capturing cognitive resilience capability in adolescence
- Author
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Conte, F, Rinaldi, L, Gerosa, T, Mondini, S, Costantini, G, Girelli, L, Conte F., Rinaldi L., Gerosa T., Mondini S., Costantini G., Girelli L., Conte, F, Rinaldi, L, Gerosa, T, Mondini, S, Costantini, G, Girelli, L, Conte F., Rinaldi L., Gerosa T., Mondini S., Costantini G., and Girelli L.
- Abstract
Cognitive reserve (CR) represents the adaptive response of the cognitive system responsible for preserving normal functioning in the face of brain damage. Experiential factors such as education, occupation, and leisure activities influence the development of CR. Theoretically, such factors build up from childhood and across adulthood. Thus, appropriate tools to define and measure CR as early as adolescence are essential to understand its developmental processes. To this aim, we introduce the construct of “Cognitive Reserve Potential” (CRP) and its corresponding index of experiential factors tailored to youth. We investigated prototypical youth exposures potentially associated with the lifelong development of CR (e.g., sport practice, musical experiences, cultural activities, and relationships with peers and family). Principal component analysis and confirmatory factor analysis identified and replicated the CRP factor structure on two independent samples of Italian students: N = 585 (295 F) and N = 351 (201 F), ages 11 to 20. CRP was associated mainly with family socio-cultural status (i.e., socioeconomic status [SES], Home Possessions, and Books at Home). Results confirmed the strength of the factorial model and warranted the proposal of the CRP-questionnaire as an innovative tool for understanding CR evolutionary dynamics.
- Published
- 2023
3. Cognitive Reserve Potential: Capturing cognitive resilience capability in adolescence
- Author
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Conte, F., Rinaldi, L., Gerosa, T., Mondini, S., Costantini, G., Girelli, L., Conte, F, Rinaldi, L, Gerosa, T, Mondini, S, Costantini, G, and Girelli, L
- Subjects
Cognitive Reserve ,Cognitive Reserve Potential ,Cognitive Reserve, Adolescence, Self-report, Cognitive Reserve Potential, Experiential Factors, Lifelong Development ,Lifelong Development ,Experiential Factors ,Self-report ,Adolescence - Abstract
Cognitive reserve (CR) represents the adaptive response of the cognitive system responsible for preserving normal functioning in the face of brain damage. Experiential factors such as education, occupation, and leisure activities influence the development of CR. Theoretically, such factors build up from childhood and across adulthood. Thus, appropriate tools to define and measure CR as early as adolescence are essential to understand its developmental processes. To this aim, we introduce the construct of "Cognitive Reserve Potential" (CRP) and its corresponding index of experiential factors tailored to youth. We investigated prototypical youth exposures potentially associated with the lifelong development of CR (e.g., sport practice, musical experiences, cultural activities, relationships with peers and family). Principal component analysis and confirmatory factor analysis identified and replicated the CRP factor structure on two independent samples of Italian students: N=585 (295 F) and N=351 (201 F), ages 11-20. CRP was associated mainly with family socio-cultural status (i.e., SES, Home Possessions and Books at Home). Results confirmed the strength of the factorial model and warranted the proposal of the CRP-questionnaire as an innovative tool for understanding CR evolutionary dynamics.
- Published
- 2023
4. Nonsymbolic numerosity in sets with illusory-contours exploits a context-sensitive, but contrast-insensitive, visual boundary formation process
- Author
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Adriano, A, Rinaldi, L, Girelli, L, Adriano A., Rinaldi L., Girelli L., Adriano, A, Rinaldi, L, Girelli, L, Adriano A., Rinaldi L., and Girelli L.
- Abstract
The visual mechanisms underlying approximate numerical representation are still intensely debated because numerosity information is often confounded with continuous sensory cues (e.g., texture density, area, convex hull). However, numerosity is underestimated when a few items are connected by illusory contours (ICs) lines without changing other physical cues, suggesting in turn that numerosity processing may rely on discrete visual input. Yet, in these previous works, ICs were generated by black-on-gray inducers producing an illusory brightness enhancement, which could represent a further continuous sensory confound. To rule out this possibility, we tested participants in a numerical discrimination task in which we manipulated the alignment of 0, 2, or 4 pairs of open/closed inducers and their contrast polarity. In Experiment 1, aligned open inducers had only one polarity (all black or all white) generating ICs lines brighter or darker than the gray background. In Experiment 2, open inducers had always opposite contrast polarity (one black and one white inducer) generating ICs without strong brightness enhancement. In Experiment 3, reverse-contrast inducers were aligned but closed with a line preventing ICs completion. Results showed that underestimation triggered by ICs lines was independent of inducer contrast polarity in both Experiment 1 and Experiment 2, whereas no underestimation was found in Experiment 3. Taken together, these results suggest that mere brightness enhancement is not the primary cause of the numerosity underestimation induced by ICs lines. Rather, a boundary formation mechanism insensitive to contrast polarity may drive the effect, providing further support to the idea that numerosity processing exploits discrete inputs.
- Published
- 2022
5. Temporal perception in closed-skill sports: An experimental study on expert swimmers and runners
- Author
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Perrone, S, Rinaldi, L, Gatti, D, Girelli, L, Perrone, S, Rinaldi, L, Gatti, D, and Girelli, L
- Abstract
The cognitive benefits of closed-skill sports practice have so far been scantily investigated. Here, we thus focused on the potential impact of swimming and running - two sports that highly rely on a precise control of timing - on time processing. To investigate the impact of these closed-skill sports on time perception and estimation, three groups of participants (for a total of eighty-four young adults) took part in the present study: expert swimmers, expert runners, and non-athletes. The ability to process temporal information in the milliseconds and seconds range was assessed through a time reproduction and a finger-tapping tasks, while a motor imagery paradigm was adopted to assess temporal estimation of sport performance in a wider interval range. We also employed the Vividness of Movement Imagery Questionnaire to assess the individual's ability of motor imagery. Results showed that closed-skill sports, specifically time-related disciplines, enhance motor imagery and time perception abilities. Swimmers were more accurate and consistent in perceiving time when compared to runners, probably thanks to the sensory muffled environment that leads these athletes to be more focused on the perception of their internal rhythm.
- Published
- 2023
6. What does gender has to do with math? Complex questions require complex answers
- Author
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Girelli, L and Girelli, L
- Abstract
Whether mathematics is a gendered domain or not is a long-lasting issue bringing along major social and educational implications. The females' underrepresentation in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) has been considered one of the key signs of the math gender gap, although the current view largely attributes the origin of this phenomenon to sociocultural factors. Indeed, recent approaches to math gender differences reached the universal conclusion that nature and nurture exert reciprocal effects on each other, establishing the need for approaching the study of the math gender issue only once its intrinsic complexity has been accepted. Building upon a flourishing literature, this review provides an updated synthesis of the evidence for math gender equality at the start, and for math gender inequality on the go, challenging the role of biological factors. In particular, by combining recent findings from different research areas, the paper discusses the persistence of the “math male myth” and the associated “female are not good at math myth,” drawing attention to the complex interplay of social and cultural forces that support such stereotypes. The suggestion is made that longevity of these myths results from the additive effects of two independent cognitive biases associated with gender stereotypes and with math stereotypes, respectively. Scholars' responsibility in amplifying these myths by pursuing some catching lines of research is also discussed.
- Published
- 2023
7. Variabilità nella frequenza cardiaca e nella conduttanza cutanea come misura di attenzione sostenuta. Uno studio comparativo
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Conte, F, Bricolo, E, Cocchia, L, De Benedictis, G, Gasparini, F, Girelli, L, Petilli, M, Daini, R, Conte Federica, Bricolo Emanuela, Cocchia Lisa, De Benedictis Gaia, Gasparini Francesca, Girelli Luisa, Petilli Marco, Daini Roberta, Conte, F, Bricolo, E, Cocchia, L, De Benedictis, G, Gasparini, F, Girelli, L, Petilli, M, Daini, R, Conte Federica, Bricolo Emanuela, Cocchia Lisa, De Benedictis Gaia, Gasparini Francesca, Girelli Luisa, Petilli Marco, and Daini Roberta
- Abstract
L'attenzione sostenuta, la capacità di mantenere l'attenzione su un compito per un periodo di tempo prolungato senza distrarsi, è alla base di molte attività quotidiane. I questionari di autovalutazione tipicamente usati per misurarla presentano notevoli limiti: valutare la propria attenzione durante lo svolgimento di un compito può interferire con il compito stesso, mentre valutarla a posteriori difficilmente permette di coglierne i cambiamenti nel tempo. Al contrario, alcuni parametri fisiologici potrebbero costituire una misura oggettiva dell’attivazione cognitiva nel tempo senza alterare l’attività svolta. La recente disponibilità di strumenti accurati e poco invasivi per registrare questi parametri permetterebbe di studiarli anche in situazioni più vicine all’esperienza quotidiana. Questo studio mira a validare, come indicatori di attenzione sostenuta, misure basate sulla variabilità della frequenza cardiaca e della conduttanza cutanea. Un gruppo di 30 partecipanti volontari (20-28 anni) ha eseguito al computer due test neuropsicologici di attenzione sostenuta: il Jumping Square Task e il Sustained-Pace Finger Tapping task, indossando contemporaneamente un device da polso per la registrazione dei parametri fisiologici. La capacità di attenzione sostenuta è stata operazionalizzata dal punto di vista comportamentale come il cambiamento in correttezza e in tempi di risposta tra la prima e la seconda metà di ciascun compito. I parametri fisiologici sono stati analizzati in modo analogo. I risultati mostrano un'associazione, anche se moderata, tra la capacità di attenzione cognitiva e il cambiamento nei parametri fisiologici.
- Published
- 2023
8. Caratteristiche socio-economiche degli studenti e motivazione al-lo studio: un approccio basato sulla network analysis
- Author
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Girelli, L, Maganzini, M, Cavicchiolo, E, Manganelli, S, Cozzolino, M, Lucidi, F, Palombi, T, and Alivernini, F
- Subjects
Settore M-PSI/03 - Psicometria - Published
- 2023
9. What does gender has to do with math? Complex questions require complex answers
- Author
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Girelli, L and Girelli, L
- Subjects
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,gender stereotype ,mathematical learning ,gender difference ,math myth ,math anxiety - Abstract
Whether mathematics is a gendered domain or not is a long-lasting issue bringing along major social and educational implications. The females' underrepresentation in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) has been considered one of the key signs of the math gender gap, although the current view largely attributes the origin of this phenomenon to sociocultural factors. Indeed, recent approaches to math gender differences reached the universal conclusion that nature and nurture exert reciprocal effects on each other, establishing the need for approaching the study of the math gender issue only once its intrinsic complexity has been accepted. Building upon a flourishing literature, this review provides an updated synthesis of the evidence for math gender equality at the start, and for math gender inequality on the go, challenging the role of biological factors. In particular, by combining recent findings from different research areas, the paper discusses the persistence of the “math male myth” and the associated “female are not good at math myth,” drawing attention to the complex interplay of social and cultural forces that support such stereotypes. The suggestion is made that longevity of these myths results from the additive effects of two independent cognitive biases associated with gender stereotypes and with math stereotypes, respectively. Scholars' responsibility in amplifying these myths by pursuing some catching lines of research is also discussed.
- Published
- 2022
10. Developmental Coordination Disorder and Developmental Dyspraxia. Towards a shared knowledge and clinical practice? [Disturbo di sviluppo della coordinazione motoria e disprassia evolutiva È possibile una condivisione di conoscenze e pratiche cliniche?]
- Author
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Zoia, S, Biancotto, M, Girelli, L, Zoia, S, Biancotto, M, and Girelli, L
- Subjects
Developmental Dyspraxia ,atypical motor development ,clinical recommendation ,Verbal Dyspraxia ,Developmental Coordination Disorder ,M-PSI/02 - PSICOBIOLOGIA E PSICOLOGIA FISIOLOGICA - Abstract
Despite increasing attention towards Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD), as reflected by the publication of the International Clinical Practice Recommendations (Blank et al., 2012; 2019), the absence of prevalence data in the Italian population well attests the extent to which this clinical condition is overlooked and misrecognised in our country. Aim of this discussion is to call for a concerted effort in understanding the reasons for which DCD is still unfamiliar to most of the clinicians facing with the assessment and the diagnosis of neurodevelopmental disorders. By defining DCD and Developmental dyspraxia respectively, as well as by promoting general awareness on the psychosocial consequences of DCD, the hope is to extend to the Italian community recognition, early identification, and targeted support to individuals with developmental coordination disorders.
- Published
- 2022
11. Visual illusions as a tool to hijack numerical perception: Disentangling nonsymbolic number from its continuous visual properties
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Adriano, A, Rinaldi, L, Girelli, L, Adriano A., Rinaldi L., Girelli L., Adriano, A, Rinaldi, L, Girelli, L, Adriano A., Rinaldi L., and Girelli L.
- Abstract
The past few years have witnessed a fervent theoretical debate about the exact visual mechanisms supporting nonsymbolic number processing. The idea that quantity information is extracted through a primitive visual segmentation algorithm has been challenged by recent models, which rather tap on low-level features confounded with numerosity (i.e., density, convex hull, or total area). Here we used an original manipulation based on visual illusions to disentangle whether visual numerosity processing operates over discrete units or rather over continuous variables. In particular, we generated a set of stimuli composed by open inducers (e.g., like a pac-man shape) that simulate physical connections with Kanizsa-like illusory contours (ICs). Test sets contained pairs of collinear open inducers items that prompted 0 IC, 2 IC, or 4 IC lines connecting 2 objects. Critically, low-level visual features were fully controlled across connectedness levels. We found a systematic underestimation as we increased the IC connections when participants had to select the larger between 2 sets of objects (Experiment 1) but not in the case of aligned closed inducers preventing illusory lines (Experiments 2A and 2B). We also found a systematic numerosity underestimation when both IC connections and continuous features (e.g., convex hull) were independently manipulated in test stimuli (Experiment 3). Finally, these results were shown to be task independent because the same effects of IC connections were replicated in an estimation task (Experiment 4). Taken together, our findings indicate that numerosity perception relies on basic visual-segmentation mechanisms, pointing out the need of new theoretical frameworks integrating both continuous and discrete perceptual number signals. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved) Public Significance Statement—This study indicates that our brain is endowed with the ability to rapidly extract approximate information about the number o
- Published
- 2021
12. The ratio effect in visual numerosity comparisons is preserved despite spatial frequency equalisation
- Author
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Adriano, A, Girelli, L, Rinaldi, L, Adriano A., Girelli L., Rinaldi L., Adriano, A, Girelli, L, Rinaldi, L, Adriano A., Girelli L., and Rinaldi L.
- Abstract
How non-symbolic numerosity is visually extracted remains a matter of intense debate. Most evidence suggests that numerosity is directly extracted on individual objects following Weber's law, at least for a moderate numerical range. Alternative accounts propose that, whatever the range, numerosity is indirectly derived from summary texture-statistics of the raw image such as spatial frequency (SF). Here, to disentangle these accounts, we tested whether the well-known behavioural signature of numerosity encoding (ratio effect) is preserved despite the equalisation of the SF content. In Experiment 1, participants had to select the numerically larger of two briefly presented moderate-range numerical sets (i.e., 8–18 dots) carefully matched for SF; the ratio between numerosities was manipulated by levels of increasing difficulty (e.g., 0.66, 0.75, 0.8). In Experiment 2, participants performed the same task, but they were presented with both the original and SF equalised stimuli. In both experiments, the results clearly showed a ratio-dependence of the performance: numerosity discrimination became harder and slower as the ratio between numerosities increased. Moreover, this effect was found to be independent of the stimulus type, although the overall performance was better with the original rather than the SF equalised stimuli (Experiment 2). Taken together, these findings indicate that the power spectrum per se cannot explain the main behavioural signature of Weber-like encoding of numerosities (the ratio effect), at least over the tested numerical range, partially challenging alternative indirect accounts of numerosity processing.
- Published
- 2021
13. UPFRONT SURGERY AS FIRST-LINE TREATMENT IN PATHOLOGICAL N2 NON-SMALL CELL LUNG CANCER
- Author
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BERTOLACCINI, L., primary, PRISCIANDARO, E., additional, SEDDA, G., additional, GIRELLI, L., additional, and SPAGGIARI, L., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Intellect is not that expensive: differential association of cultural and socio-economic factors with crystallized intelligence in a sample of Italian adolescents
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Conte, F, Costantini, G, Rinaldi, L, Gerosa, T, Girelli, L, Conte F., Costantini G., Rinaldi L., Gerosa T., Girelli L., Conte, F, Costantini, G, Rinaldi, L, Gerosa, T, Girelli, L, Conte F., Costantini G., Rinaldi L., Gerosa T., and Girelli L.
- Abstract
Current theories of intelligence maintain that intellectual development is the expression of a strict interplay among different cognitive abilities and the environment. Yet, the environment in which the individual develops has often been reduced to a single measure in empirical research, which thus loses sight of its inherent multifaceted structure. This work stems from the need to grasp such multifaceted complexity, by differentiating the associations of cultural and socioeconomic factors with crystallized and fluid intelligence in adolescence. An updated and digitalized version of the Verbal task from the Primary Mental Abilities battery (PMA Verbal) was administered to a large group of Italian adolescents as a measure of crystallized intelligence. Item Response Theory confirmed the good psychometric properties of the test. The relationship among cognitive abilities and the environment was explored through a Network Analysis on measures of crystallized intelligence (PMA Verbal), fluid intelligence (Raven SPM) and various environmental dimensions (socioeconomic status, home possessions, books at home, reading habits). Network Analysis is particularly suited for highlighting the individual role of each variable within such a complex system. Our results illustrated a key role of books at home, which was positively connected to verbal abilities on the one hand and to reading habits on the other, whereas no relationship to fluid intelligence was found. Crucially, these findings were independent of socioeconomic status. This study indicates that a more detailed conceptualization of the environment provides a better understanding of how cognitive abilities develop.
- Published
- 2020
15. Number is not just an illusion: Discrete numerosity is encoded independently from perceived size
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Adriano, A, Girelli, L, Rinaldi, L, Adriano, Andrea, Girelli, Luisa, Rinaldi, Luca, Adriano, A, Girelli, L, Rinaldi, L, Adriano, Andrea, Girelli, Luisa, and Rinaldi, Luca
- Abstract
While seminal theories suggest that nonsymbolic visual numerosity is mainly extracted from segmented items, more recent views advocate that numerosity cannot be processed independently of nonnumeric continuous features confounded with the numerical set (i.e., such as the density, the convex hull, etc.). To disentangle these accounts, here we employed two different visual illusions presented in isolation or in a merged condition (e.g., combining the effects of the two illusions). In particular, in a number comparison task, we concurrently manipulated both the perceived object segmentation by connecting items with Kanizsa-like illusory lines, and the perceived convex-hull/density of the set by embedding the stimuli in a Ponzo illusion context, keeping constant other low-level features. In Experiment 1, the two illusions were manipulated in a compatible direction (i.e., both triggering numerical underestimation), whereas in Experiment 2 they were manipulated in an incompatible direction (i.e., with the Ponzo illusion triggering numerical overestimation and the Kanizsa illusion numerical underestimation). Results from psychometric functions showed that, in the merged condition, the biases of each illusion summated (i.e., largest underestimation as compared with the conditions in which illusions were presented in isolation) in Experiment 1, while they averaged and competed against each other in Experiment 2. These findings suggest that discrete nonsymbolic numerosity can be extracted independently from continuous magnitudes. They also point to the need of more comprehensive theoretical views accounting for the operations by which both discrete elements and continuous variables are computed and integrated by the visual system.
- Published
- 2022
16. Mathematical Skills in Prader-Willi Syndrome
- Author
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Bertella, L., Girelli, L., and Grugni, G.
- Abstract
This paper investigates mathematical skills in Prader-Willi Syndrome (PWS), a pathological condition because of congenital alterations of chromosome pair 15. The following questions were addressed: (1) Are mathematical skills in PWS relatively more impaired with respect to other cognitive functions (as has been repeatedly but anecdotally reported)?; and (2) What is the nature of the mathematical impairment? The first study employed the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS) and an extensive battery of cognitive tasks for which norms are known. Both batteries include a mathematical section. The second study used a theoretically motivated series of mathematical tasks specifically designed to individually assess the different cognitive components underlying mathematical skills. Mathematical skills were found to be the most impaired cognitive abilities together with short-term memory capacity. No specific mathematical domain was seen to be unaffected in PWS participants. The clearest deficits observed concern syntactic processes in number transcoding, multiplication, number facts retrieval and calculation procedures. Failure of mathematical skills is the most distinctive feature in the cognitive profile of PWS. However, to determine whether this is indeed a specific pattern of performance related to PWS, results must be compared with those obtained with patients manifesting other genetic disorders.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Geographical heterogeneity of clinical and serological phenotypes of systemic sclerosis observed at tertiary referral centres. The experience of the Italian SIR-SPRING registry and review of the world literature
- Author
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Clodoveo Ferri a, Rossella De Angelis b, Dilia Giuggioli a, Gianluigi Bajocchi c, Lorenzo Dagna d, Giovanni Zanframundo e, Rosario Foti f, Fabio Cacciapaglia g, Giovanna Cuomo, Alarico Ariani i, Edoardo Rosato j, Serena Guiducci k, Francesco Girelli l, Valeria Riccieri m, Elisabetta Zanatta n, Silvia Bosello o, Ilaria Cavazzana p, Francesca Ingegnoli q, Maria De Santisr, Giuseppe Murdaca s, Giuseppina Abignano t, Nicoletta Romeo u, Alessandra Della Rossa v, Maurizio Caminiti w, Annamaria Iuliano x, Giovanni Ciano y, Lorenzo Beretta z, Gianluca Bagnato aa, Ennio Lubrano ab, Ilenia De Andres ac, Alessandro Giollo ad, Marta Saracco ae, Cecilia Agnes af, Federica Lumetti a, Amelia Spinella a, Luca Magnani c, Corrado Campochiaro d, Giacomo De Luca d, Veronica Codullo e, Elisa Visalli f, Francesco Masini h, Antonietta Gigante j, Silvia Bellando-Randone k, Greta Pellegrino m, Erika Pigatto ag, Maria Grazia Lazzaroni p, Franco Franceschini p, Elena Generali r, Gianna Mennillo t, Simone Barsotti v, Giuseppa Pagano Mariano w, Francesca Calabrese w, Federica Furini ah, Licia Vultaggio ah, Simone Parisi ai, Clara Lisa Peroni ai, Davide Rozza aj, Anna Zanetti aj, Greta Carrara aj, Giampiero Landolfi aj, Carlo Alberto Scir`e aj, Gerolamo Bianchi al, Enrico Fusaro ai, Gian Domenico Sebastiani x, Marcello Govoni ah, Salvatore D’Angelo t, Franco Cozzi ag, Andrea Doria n, Florenzo Iannone g, Carlo Salvarani c, Marco Matucci-Cerinic d, k, On behalf of SPRING-SIR (Systemic Sclerosis PRogression INvestiGation group of the Italian Society of Rheumatology), A, Clodoveo Ferri, B, Rossella De Angeli, A, Dilia Giuggioli, C, Gianluigi Bajocchi, D, Lorenzo Dagna, E, Giovanni Zanframundo, F, Rosario Foti, G, Fabio Cacciapaglia, Cuomo, Giovanna, I, Alarico Ariani, J, Edoardo Rosato, K, Serena Guiducci, L, Francesco Girelli, M, Valeria Riccieri, N, Elisabetta Zanatta, O, Silvia Bosello, P, Ilaria Cavazzana, Q, Francesca Ingegnoli, De Santisr, Maria, S, Giuseppe Murdaca, T, Giuseppina Abignano, U, Nicoletta Romeo, V, Alessandra Della Rossa, W, Maurizio Caminiti, X, Annamaria Iuliano, Y, Giovanni Ciano, Z, Lorenzo Beretta, Bagnato aa, Gianluca, Lubrano ab, Ennio, De Andres ac, Ilenia, Giollo ad, Alessandro, Saracco ae, Marta, Agnes af, Cecilia, A, Federica Lumetti, A, Amelia Spinella, C, Luca Magnani, D, Corrado Campochiaro, D, Giacomo De Luca, E, Veronica Codullo, F, Elisa Visalli, H, Francesco Masini, J, Antonietta Gigante, K, Silvia Bellando-Randone, M, Greta Pellegrino, Pigatto ag, Erika, P, Maria Grazia Lazzaroni, P, Franco Franceschini, R, Elena Generali, T, Gianna Mennillo, V, Simone Barsotti, W, Giuseppa Pagano Mariano, W, Francesca Calabrese, Furini ah, Federica, Vultaggio ah, Licia, Parisi ai, Simone, Lisa Peroni ai, Clara, Rozza aj, Davide, Zanetti aj, Anna, Carrara aj, Greta, Landolfi aj, Giampiero, Alberto Scir`e aj, Carlo, Ak, Bianchi al, Gerolamo, Fusaro ai, Enrico, X, Gian Domenico Sebastiani, Govoni ah, Marcello, T, Salvatore D’Angelo, Cozzi ag, Franco, N, Andrea Doria, G, Florenzo Iannone, C, Carlo Salvarani, D, Marco Matucci-Cerinic, K, and behalf of SPRING-SIR (Systemic Sclerosis PRogression INvestiGation group of the Italian Society of Rheumatology), On
- Subjects
Systemic sclerosis Scleroderma Geographical areas Macro-areas Environmental Referral - Published
- 2022
18. Adolescents at a Distance
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Cavicchiolo, E, Manganelli, S, Girelli, L, Cozzolino, M, Lucidi, F, and Alivernini, F
- Subjects
Settore M-PSI/03 - Psicometria - Published
- 2021
19. Non-symbolic numerosity encoding escapes spatial frequency equalization
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Adriano, A, Girelli, L, Rinaldi, L, Adriano, Andrea, Girelli, Luisa, Rinaldi, Luca, Adriano, A, Girelli, L, Rinaldi, L, Adriano, Andrea, Girelli, Luisa, and Rinaldi, Luca
- Abstract
The exact visual mechanisms underpinning the approximate number system are still debated. Recent evidence suggests that numerosity is extracted on segmented visual objects, at least for a moderate numerical range (e.g., < 100 items), whereas alternative models rather propose that numerosity is derived from low-level features (e.g., power spectrum) of an unsegmented image, independently from the range. Here, to disentangle these accounts, we generated stimuli that were equalized for spatial frequency amplitude spectrum and luminance across sets of moderate range numerosities (e.g., 9-15 dots), while independently manipulating the perceived item segmentation by connecting dots with illusory contours (ICs). In Experiment 1, participants performed a numerical discrimination task, in which they had to select the numerically larger between two stimuli: a reference stimulus (always 12 dots) and a test stimulus (from 9 to 15 dots) containing 0, 2 or 4 pairs of dots grouped by ICs lines. In Experiment 2, participants were presented only the test stimulus and performed an estimation task. Results clearly showed that in both experiments participants' performance followed well-known numerical signatures (e.g., distance effect and scalar variability), with numerosity that was underestimated as the illusory connections increased. Crucially, this was found despite spatial frequencies and luminance were kept constant across all the experimental stimuli and these variables were thus uninformative about numerosity. Taken together, these findings indicate that power spectrum in its own cannot explain numerical processing. Rather, visual segmentation mechanisms may be crucial in such processing at least for a moderate numerosity range.
- Published
- 2021
20. 89P Long-term clinical outcomes and prognostic factors of upfront surgery as a first-line therapy in pathological N2 NSCLC
- Author
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Bertolaccini, L., primary, Prisciandaro, E., additional, Sedda, G., additional, Girelli, L., additional, and Spaggiari, L., additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. What makes a word so attractive? Disclosing the urge to read while bisecting
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Girelli, L, Previtali, P, Arduino, L, Girelli L., Previtali P., Arduino L. S., Girelli, L, Previtali, P, Arduino, L, Girelli L., Previtali P., and Arduino L. S.
- Abstract
Expert readers have been repeatedly reported to misperceive the centre of visual stimuli, shifting systematically to the left the bisection of any lines (pseudoneglect) while showing a cross-over effect while bisecting different types of orthographic strings (Arduino et al., 2010, Neuropsychologia, 48, 2140). This difference has been attributed to asymmetrical allocation of attention that visuo-verbal material receives when lexical access occurs (e.g., Fischer, 2004, Cognitive Brain Research, 4, 163). The aim of this study was to further examine which visual features guide recognition of potentially orthographic materials. To disentangle the role of orthography, heterogeneity, and visuo-perceptual discreteness, we presented Italian unimpaired adults with four experiments exploiting the bisection paradigm. The results showed that a cross-over effect emerges in most discrete strings, especially when their internal structure, that is being composed of heterogeneous elements, is suggestive of orthographically relevant material. Interestingly, the cross-over effect systematically characterized the processing of letter strings (Experiment 2) and words (Experiments 3 and 4), whether visually discrete or not. Overall, this pattern of results suggests that neither discreteness nor heterogeneity per se are responsible for activating visual scanning mechanisms implied in text exploration, although both contribute to increasing the chance of a visual stimulus undergoing a perceptual analysis dedicated to pre-lexical processing
- Published
- 2018
22. The effects of hemispheric dominance, literacy acquisition, and handedness on the development of visuospatial attention: A study in preschoolers and second graders
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Rinaldi, L, di Luca, S, Toneatto, C, Girelli, L, Rinaldi Luca, di Luca Samuel, Toneatto Carlo, Girelli Luisa, Rinaldi, L, di Luca, S, Toneatto, C, Girelli, L, Rinaldi Luca, di Luca Samuel, Toneatto Carlo, and Girelli Luisa
- Abstract
A tendency to over-attend the left side of the space (i.e., pseudoneglect) has been repeatedly reported in Western adult populations and is supposed to reflect a right hemisphere dominance in the control of visuospatial attention. This neurobiological hypothesis has been partially challenged by growing evidence showing that pseudoneglect is profoundly triggered by cultural practices such as reading and writing habits. Accordingly, more recent theoretical accounts suggest a strict coupling between nature and nurture dimensions at the origins of such bias. To further explore this possibility, here we first administered a digitized cancellation task to right-handed Western children before and after literacy acquisition. Results showed an incremental leftward shift of attention in the cancellation of the first target and an increasing preference for a left-to-right visual search from preschoolers to second graders. Yet, despite these differences, the overall distribution of visuospatial attention was biased to the left in both groups. To explore the role of handedness in visuospatial asymmetries, we also tested a group of left-handed second graders. Results showed an impact of handedness on visuospatial performance, with an accentuated rightward-oriented visual search for left-handed children, although the overall distribution of attention was again biased to the left hemispace. Taken together, these findings do not provide support to a pure neurobiological view of visuospatial biases. Rather, our study indicates that the control of visuospatial attention is mediated by a dynamic interplay among biological (i.e., right hemisphere dominance), biomechanical (i.e., hand dominance), and cultural (i.e., reading habits) factors.
- Published
- 2020
23. How difficult is it for adolescents to maintain attention? The differential effects of video games and sports
- Author
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Petilli, M, Rinaldi, L, Trisolini, D, Girelli, L, Vecchio, L, Daini, R, Petilli, Marco Alessandro, Rinaldi, Luca, Trisolini, Daniela Carmen, Girelli, Luisa, Vecchio, Luca Piero, Daini, Roberta, Petilli, M, Rinaldi, L, Trisolini, D, Girelli, L, Vecchio, L, Daini, R, Petilli, Marco Alessandro, Rinaldi, Luca, Trisolini, Daniela Carmen, Girelli, Luisa, Vecchio, Luca Piero, and Daini, Roberta
- Abstract
Despite a large body of evidence suggests positive effects of playing action video games and practising sports on various visual attentional skills, the impact of these activities on the ability to maintain attention over prolonged periods of time (i.e., sustained attention) has been largely neglected. Here, we first explored free-time habits on a group of 310 adolescents by means of a self-reported questionnaire. We found an inverse relationship between the time spent with sports and video games, but not with other extra-scholastic activities: the time spent practising sports and playing video games clearly competed with each other, with the more-intensive-sport practitioners being less involved in video game play. Next, we directly measured sustained attention and other attentional skills in a subgroup of 76 participants, divided as a function of their time spent in sports and action video games. In particular, sustained attention was assessed by means of two tasks: a classic exogenous task, requiring participants to attend to a flashing visual stimulus; and an internal (endogenous) sustained attention task, requiring participants to synchronise their manual responses to the rhythm of auditory pulses presented in an earlier phase. As previously documented, we found that action video game players displayed worse ability to maintain attention over time, as compared with non-action players. In striking contrast, intensive sports practice was associated with an increased ability to maintain attention over time. Overall, these findings unveil distinct cascading effects on sustained attention induced by doing sport and playing action video games.
- Published
- 2020
24. 92P Predictors, surrogate and patient-reported outcomes in neoadjuvant immunotherapy for lung cancer: A single-center retrospective study
- Author
-
Bertolaccini, L., Mohamed, S., Galetta, D., Petrella, F., Casiraghi, M., Diotti, C., Mazzella, A., Iacono, G. Lo, Girelli, L., Sedda, G., de Marinis, F., and Spaggiari, L.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Colours + Numbers differs from colours of numbers: cognitive and visual illusions in grapheme-colour synaesthesia
- Author
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Ranzini, M, Girelli, L, Ranzini, Mariagrazia, Girelli, Luisa, Ranzini, M, Girelli, L, Ranzini, Mariagrazia, and Girelli, Luisa
- Abstract
This study investigates the bi-directionality of synaestesic experience by means of a flanked bisection paradigm in TT, a number-colour synaesthete. Previous studies have shown that bisection is shifted towards the larger digit flanker (e.g., Ranzini & Girelli, 2012). TT and controls performed line bisections with lines flanked by black digits (experiment 1), by TT’s photism colours (experiment 2), and by congruently (experiment 3), or incongruently coloured digits (experiment 4). While the results of the control group mainly replicated previous findings, only the colour-digit congruence elicited in TT the larger-digit bias. TT’s absence of effects in the other conditions was not due to reduced sensitivity to luminance effects (experiment 5), or to mathematical expertise (experiment 6). We suggest that grapheme-colour synaesthesia might be characterised by a rigid access to semantic representation when the inducer is task-irrelevant.
- Published
- 2019
26. Misure di resistenza all’impatto attraverso pendolo di Charpy strumentato
- Author
-
Fortini, A., Merlin, M., Garagnani, G. L., Tocci, M., Girelli, L., and Montesano, L.
- Subjects
NO - Published
- 2018
27. The representation of episodic and autobiographical events in working memory: evidence for different Mental Time Lines
- Author
-
Rizzi, E, Rinaldi, L, Girelli, L, Rizzi, E, Rinaldi, L, and Girelli, L
- Abstract
Humans from different cultures tend to represent time on a spatially oriented Mental Time Line (MTL). This is supported by research showing that response selection is faster when salient features of the stimulus (i.e., past and future) and of the response (i.e., left and right, or back and forward) are congruent to each other in working memory. Yet, whether the spatial frame of reference onto which the MTL is anchored (i.e., horizontal or sagittal) depends on the specific content to be processed (i.e., autobiographical and episodic) is still unknown. The present study aims to investigate whether personal and non-personal events activate different spatial frame of reference in WM. Fifty-one university students performed a computerized stimulus-response compatibility task and they classified as past or future, personal (e.g., First Kiss) and non-personal (e.g., Twin Towers) events with manual movements along the horizontal plane (i.e., leftward/rightward oriented movements) and along the sagittal plane (i.e., by making backward/forward movements). Results showed that the preferential spatial mapping representation depends on the nature of the event. In particular, non-personal events were represented only along the horizontal plane (i.e., past/future events responded faster with leftward/rightward movements compared to the opposite condition). On the contrary, personal events were represented only along the sagittal plane (i.e., past/future events responded faster with backward/forward movements). These findings indicate that the content (i.e., autobiographical, episodic) of a word in working memory may activate different spatial frames of reference onto which the MTL is mapped.
- Published
- 2018
28. More far is more right: Manual and ocular line bisections, but not the Judd illusion, depend on radial space
- Author
-
Rinaldi, L, Bertolini, G, Bockisch, C, Maravita, A, Girelli, L, Brugger, P, Bockisch, CJ, Rinaldi, L, Bertolini, G, Bockisch, C, Maravita, A, Girelli, L, Brugger, P, and Bockisch, CJ
- Abstract
Line bisection studies generally find a left-to-right shift in bisection bias with increasing distance between the observer and the target line, which may be explained by hemispheric differences in the processing of proximo-distal information. In the present study, the segregation between near and far space was further characterized across the motor system and contextual cues. To this aim, 20 right-handed participants were required to perform a manual bisection task of simple lines presented at three different distances (60, 90, 120 cm). Importantly, the horizontal spatial location of the line was manipulated along with the viewing distance to investigate more deeply the hemispheric engagement in the transition from near to far space. As the motoric component of the manual task producing activations of left premotor and motor areas may be partially responsible for the observed transition, participants were also involved in an ocular bisection task. Further, participants were required to bisect Judd variants of the target lines, which are known to elicit a Müller-Lyer-type illusion. Since the Judd illusion depends on areas in the ventral visual stream, we predicted that line bisections of Judd-type lines would be unaffected by viewing distance. Results showed that manual bisection of simple lines was modulated separately by viewing distance and the hemispace of presentation, with this pattern being similar for ocular bisection. Critically, bisections in the Judd illusion task were not modulated by viewing distance, whether performed by hand or by eye. Overall, these findings support the hypothesis that the right hemisphere plays a dominant role in the processing of space close to the body. They also present novel evidence for a general reduction of this dominance at farther distances, whether hand motor actions are involved or not. Finally, our study documents a dissociation between the processing of pure visuospatial information and that of a visual illusion as a f
- Published
- 2018
29. Smelling the Space Around Us: Odor Pleasantness Shifts Visuospatial Attention in Humans
- Author
-
Rinaldi, L, Maggioni, E, Olivero, N, Maravita, A, Girelli, L, Rinaldi, L, Maggioni, E, Olivero, N, Maravita, A, and Girelli, L
- Abstract
The prompt recognition of pleasant and unpleasant odors is a crucial regulatory and adaptive need of humans. Reactive answers to unpleasant odors ensure survival in many threatening situations. Notably, although humans typically react to certain odors by modulating their distance from the olfactory source, the effect of odor pleasantness over the orienting of visuospatial attention is still unknown. To address this issue, we first trained participants to associate visual shapes with pleasant and unpleasant odors, and then we assessed the impact of this association on a visuospatial task. Results showed that the use of trained shapes as flankers modulates performance in a line bisection task. Specifically, it was found that the estimated midpoint was shifted away from the visual shape associated with the unpleasant odor, whereas it was moved toward the shape associated with the pleasant odor. This finding demonstrates that odor pleasantness selectively shifts human attention in the surrounding space. (PsycINFO Database Record
- Published
- 2018
30. Arithmetic, working memory, and visuospatial imagery abilities in children with poor geometric learning
- Author
-
Bizzaro, M, Giofrè, D, Girelli, L, Cornoldi, C, BIZZARO, MARZIA LUCIA, Giofrè, David, Girelli, Luisa, CORNOLDI, CESARE, Bizzaro, M, Giofrè, D, Girelli, L, Cornoldi, C, BIZZARO, MARZIA LUCIA, Giofrè, David, Girelli, Luisa, and CORNOLDI, CESARE
- Abstract
Many children fail in geometric learning, but factors underlying these failures have not been explored in detail. The present study addresses this issue by comparing fifth and sixth-grade children who had good or poor geometric learning, and were otherwise comparable on verbal intelligence, gender and age. Results showed that children with poor geometric learning have deficits in both arithmetic and geometric problem solving but they are more impaired in the latter. Results also showed that poor geometric learners have weaknesses in working memory, calculation, and visuospatial mental imagery. The results from logistic regressions pointed out that mental imagery skills and arithmetic problem solving ability had the highest discriminatory power in distinguishing between the two groups. Theoretical and practical implications of this research for designing interventions to help poor geometric learners are discussed.
- Published
- 2018
31. Active lifestyles in older adults: An integrated predictive model of physical activity and exercise
- Author
-
Galli, F., Chirico, A., Mallia, L., Girelli, L., and Lucidi, F.
- Subjects
Elderly ,Exercise ,IBC model ,Physical activity - Published
- 2017
32. Single synchronous pulmonary metastasis from placental site trophoblastic tumor and teratoma
- Author
-
Billè A, Girelli L, Colecchia M, Pastorino U, Billè, A, Girelli, L, Colecchia, M, and Pastorino, U
- Published
- 2015
33. Commentary: From 'sense of number' to 'sense of magnitude' - The role of continuous magnitudes in numerical cognition
- Author
-
Rinaldi, L, Girelli, L, Rinaldi, L, and Girelli, L
- Published
- 2017
34. Infants' detection of increasing numerical order comes before detection of decreasing number
- Author
-
de Hevia, Md, Addabbo, Margaret, Nava, E, Croci, E, Girelli, L, Cassia, Vm, Addabbo, M (ORCID:0000-0002-8414-6853), de Hevia, Md, Addabbo, Margaret, Nava, E, Croci, E, Girelli, L, Cassia, Vm, and Addabbo, M (ORCID:0000-0002-8414-6853)
- Abstract
Ordinality is a fundamental aspect of numerical cognition. However, preverbal infants' ability to represent numerical order is poorly understood. In the present study we extended the evidence provided by Macchi Cassia, Picozzi, Girelli, and de Hevia (2012), showing that 4-month-old infants detect ordinal relationships within size-based sequences, to numerical sequences. In three experiments, we showed that at 4 months of age infants fail to represent increasing and decreasing numerical order when numerosities differ by a 1:2 ratio (Experiment 1), but they succeed when numerosities differ by a 1:3 ratio (Experiments 2 and 3). Critically, infants showed the same behavioral signature (i.e., asymmetry) described by Macchi Cassia et al. for discrimination of ordinal changes in area: they succeed at detecting increasing but not decreasing order (Experiments 2 and 3). These results support the idea of a common (or at least parallel) development of ordinal representation for the two quantitative dimensions of size and number. Moreover, the finding that the asymmetry signature, previously reported for size-based sequences, extends to numerosity, points to the existence of a common constraint in ordinal magnitude processing in the first months of life. The present findings are discussed in the context of possible evolutionary and developmental sources of the ordinal asymmetry, as well as their implication for other related cognitive abilities. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2017
35. Distancing the present self from the past and the future: Psychological distance in anxiety and depression
- Author
-
Rinaldi, L, Locati, F, Parolin, L, Girelli, L, RINALDI, LUCA, LOCATI, FRANCESCA, PAROLIN, LAURA ANTONIA LUCIA, GIRELLI, LUISA, Rinaldi, L, Locati, F, Parolin, L, Girelli, L, RINALDI, LUCA, LOCATI, FRANCESCA, PAROLIN, LAURA ANTONIA LUCIA, and GIRELLI, LUISA
- Abstract
Humans show a systematic tendency to perceive the future as psychologically closer than the past. Based on the clinical hypothesis that anxiety would be associated more with future threat life events, whereas depression with past loss events, here we explored whether people with anxiety- and depression-related personality traits perceive differently the psychological distance of temporal events. Results showed that the common tendency to perceive the future as psychologically closer than the past is exaggerated in individuals with anxiety-related personality traits, whereas this asymmetry drastically shrinks in individuals with depression-related personality traits. Beyond substantiating the hypothesis that the past and the future are differently faced by people with depression- and anxiety-related personality traits, the present findings suggest that temporal orientation of one’s self may be greatly altered in anxiety and depression.
- Published
- 2017
36. Cultural and biological factors modulate spatial biases over development
- Author
-
Girelli, L, Marinelli, C, Grossi, G, Arduino, L, GIRELLI, LUISA, Arduino, L., Girelli, L, Marinelli, C, Grossi, G, Arduino, L, GIRELLI, LUISA, and Arduino, L.
- Abstract
Increasing evidence supports the contribution of both biological and cultural factors to visuospatial processing. The present study adds to the literature by exploring the interplay of perceptual and linguistic mechanisms in determining visuospatial asymmetries in adults (Experiment 1) and children (Experiment 2). In particular, pre-schoolers (3 and 5 year-olds), school-aged children (8 year-old), and adult participants were required to bisect different types of stimuli, that is, lines, words, and figure strings. In accordance with the literature, results yielded a leftward bias for lines and words and a rightward bias for figure strings, in adult participants. More critically, different biases were found for lines, words, and figure strings in children as a function of age, reflecting the impact of both cultural and biological factors on the processing of different visuospatial materials. Specifically, an adult-like pattern of results emerged only in the older group of children (8 year-old), but not in pre-schoolers. Results are discussed in terms of literacy, reading habits exposure, and biological maturation.
- Published
- 2017
37. Infants’ detection of increasing numerical order comes before detection of decreasing number
- Author
-
de Hevia, M, Addabbo, M, Nava, E, Croci, E, Girelli, L, MACCHI CASSIA, V, de Hevia, MD, ADDABBO, MARGARET, NAVA, ELENA HAE KYUNG, CROCI, EMANUELA, GIRELLI, LUISA, MACCHI CASSIA, VIOLA MARINA, de Hevia, M, Addabbo, M, Nava, E, Croci, E, Girelli, L, MACCHI CASSIA, V, de Hevia, MD, ADDABBO, MARGARET, NAVA, ELENA HAE KYUNG, CROCI, EMANUELA, GIRELLI, LUISA, and MACCHI CASSIA, VIOLA MARINA
- Abstract
Ordinality is a fundamental aspect of numerical cognition. However, preverbal infants’ ability to represent numerical order is poorly understood. In the present study we extended the evidence provided by Macchi Cassia, Picozzi, Girelli, and de Hevia (2012), showing that 4-month-old infants detect ordinal relationships within size-based sequences, to numerical sequences. In three experiments, we showed that at 4 months of age infants fail to represent increasing and decreasing numerical order when numerosities differ by a 1:2 ratio (Experiment 1), but they succeed when numerosities differ by a 1:3 ratio (Experiments 2 and 3). Critically, infants showed the same behavioral signature (i.e., asymmetry) described by Macchi Cassia et al. for discrimination of ordinal changes in area: they succeed at detecting increasing but not decreasing order (Experiments 2 and 3). These results support the idea of a common (or at least parallel) development of ordinal representation for the two quantitative dimensions of size and number. Moreover, the finding that the asymmetry signature, previously reported for size-based sequences, extends to numerosity, points to the existence of a common constraint in ordinal magnitude processing in the first months of life. The present findings are discussed in the context of possible evolutionary and developmental sources of the ordinal asymmetry, as well as their implication for other related cognitive abilities.
- Published
- 2017
38. Radial bisection of words and lines in right-brain-damaged patients with spatial neglect
- Author
-
Veronelli, L, Arduino, L, Girelli, L, Vallar, G, VERONELLI, LAURA, GIRELLI, LUISA, VALLAR, GIUSEPPE, Veronelli, L, Arduino, L, Girelli, L, Vallar, G, VERONELLI, LAURA, GIRELLI, LUISA, and VALLAR, GIUSEPPE
- Abstract
The bisection of lines positioned radially (with the two ends of the line close and far, with respect to the participant's body) has been less investigated than that of lines placed horizontally (with their two ends left and right, with respect to the body's midsagittal plane). In horizontal bisection, patients with left neglect typically show a rightward bias for both lines and words, greater with longer stimuli. As for radial bisection, available data indicate that neurologically unimpaired participants make a distal error, while results from right-brain-damaged patients with left spatial neglect are contradictory. We investigated the bisection of radially oriented words, with the prediction that, during bisection, linguistic material would be recoded to its canonical left-to-right format in reading, with the performance of neglect patients being similar to that for horizontal words. Thirteen right-brain-damaged patients (seven with left spatial neglect) and fourteen healthy controls were asked to manually bisect 40 radial and 40 horizontal words (5-10 letters), and 80 lines, 40 radial and 40 horizontal, of comparable length. Right-brain-damaged patients with spatial neglect exhibited a proximal bias in the bisection of short radial words, with the proximal part corresponding to the final right part of horizontally oriented words. This proximal error was not found in patients without neglect and healthy controls. For bisection, short radial words may be recoded to the canonical orthographic horizontal format, unveiling the impact of left neglect on radially oriented stimuli
- Published
- 2017
39. Uma intervenção baseada na teoria de auto-determinação para promover a alimentação saudável e atividade física em crianças em idade escolar
- Author
-
Girelli, L., Manganelli, S., Alivernini, F., and Lucidi, F.
- Subjects
da escola primária crianças ,physical activity ,Teoría de la autodeterminación ,teoria da autodeterminação ,atividade física ,actividad física ,niños de las escuelas primarias ,primary school children ,Self-determination theory ,healthy eating ,alimentación saludable ,intervenção ,alimentação saudável ,intervención ,intervention - Abstract
Childhood overweight and obesity in both girls and boys is reaching epidemic proportions over the world, Italy included. Childhood obesity has been linked to deleterious health consequences. There is a need to develop theory based and cost-effective interventions to promote healthy eating and physical activity with the aim to reduce obesity. The purpose of this study was to evaluate a long-term theory-based intervention to promote healthy lifestyles in underserved school-aged children. A quasi experimental design was adopted, in order to evaluate the effectiveness of the intervention, considering information from their parents. Parents were asked to rate their children attitude, motivation and behavior regarding two energy balance-related behaviors. Results indicate that pupils involved in the intervention were more likely to do physical activity in leisure time and have more positive attitudes toward exercise compared to the control group. About eating habits, children involved in the intervention were more likely to choose healthy foods and less likely to choose fat foods compare to the control group. Changes in attitude and motivation between the baseline and the follow up and the two groups are also shown, even if not significant. Despite several limitations in the design, this study provided further support to the argument that Self-determination theory-based interventions could result in meaningful health-behavior changes. Niñez sobrepeso y obesidad en niños y niñas está alcanzando proporciones epidémicas en el mundo entero, Italia incluida. La obesidad infantil se ha relacionado con consecuencias perjudiciales para la salud. Hay una necesidad de desarrollar intervenciones teoría basada y rentables para promover la alimentación saludable y la actividad física con el objetivo de reducir la obesidad. El propósito de este estudio fue evaluar una intervención basada en la teoría de largo plazo para promover estilos de vida saludables en niños en edad escolar de escasos recursos. Se adoptó un diseño cuasi experimental, con el fin de evaluar la eficacia de la intervención, teniendo en cuenta la información de sus padres. Se pide a los padres para evaluar a sus hijos la actitud, la motivación y el comportamiento con respecto a los comportamientos relacionados con saldo de dos energías. Los resultados indican que los alumnos que participan en la intervención tenían más probabilidades de hacer actividad física en el tiempo libre y tienen actitudes más positivas hacia el ejercicio en comparación con el grupo control. Acerca de los hábitos alimenticios, los niños que participaron en la intervención eran más propensos a elegir alimentos saludables y menos propensos a elegir alimentos ricos en grasas en comparación con el grupo control. Los cambios en la actitud y la motivación entre el inicio y el seguimiento y los dos grupos se muestran también, aunque no significativamente. A pesar de varias limitaciones en el diseño, este estudio proporcionan más apoyo al argumento de que las intervenciones basadas en teoría de la autodeterminación podrían resultar en cambios significativos que afectan a su salud significativamente. Infância sobrepeso e obesidade em meninas e meninos Ambas está atingindo proporções epidêmicas no mundo inteiro, Itália incluído. Infância a obesidade tem-se ligado a consequências para a saúde deletérios. ere a necessidade de desenvolver a teoria com base e de custo-e intervenções ective para promover saudável comer e atividade física Com o objetivo de reduzir a obesidade. e efeitos de estudo ESTA foi avaliar uma intervenção baseada na teoria de longo prazo para promover estilos de vida saudáveis em crianças em idade escolar carentes. Um projeto quase-experimental foi adotado, a fim de avaliar o ectiveness da intervenção, considerando as informações de seus pais. Os pais foram convidados a avaliar sua atitude infantil, motivação e comportamento em relação dois comportamentos relacionados com o balanço de dois energia. Os resultados indicam que alunos envolvidos na intervenção eram mais propensos a fazer atividade física no tempo livre e têm atitudes mais positivas em relação ao exercício comparado ao grupo controle. Sobre os hábitos alimentares, as crianças na intervenção envolvidos eram mais propensos a escolher alimentos saudáveis e menos propensos a escolher alimentos ricos em gordura comparar com o grupo de controle. Mudanças de atitude e motivação Entre a linha de base e o acompanhamento e os dois grupos são mostrados Além disso, mesmo que não seja significante. Apesar das limitações na concepção Vários, Este estudo forneceu ainda apoio ao argumento de que intervenções baseadas em teoria da autodeterminação poderia resultar em mudanças de comportamento de saúde significativos.
- Published
- 2016
40. Una intervención basada en la teoría de la autodeterminación para promover la alimentación saludable y la actividad física en los niños en edad escolar
- Author
-
Girelli, L., Manganelli, S., Alivernini, F., and Fabio Lucidi
- Subjects
Niños de las escuelas primarias ,Atividade física ,physical activity ,Da escola primária crianças ,Self-determination theory ,intervention ,healthy eating ,primary school children ,159.9 – Psicología ,79 – Diversiones. Espectáculos. Cine. Teatro. Danza. Juegos. Deportes ,Alimentação saudável ,Actividad física ,Alimentación saludable - Abstract
Childhood overweight and obesity in both girls and boys is reaching epidemic proportions over the world, Italy included. Childhood obesity has been linked to deleterious health consequences. There is a need to develop theory based and cost-effective interventions to promote healthy eating and physical activity with the aim to reduce obesity. The purpose of this study was to evaluate a long-term theory-based intervention to promote healthy lifestyles in underserved school-aged children. A quasi experimental design was adopted, in order to evaluate the effectiveness of the intervention, considering information from their parents. Parents were asked to rate their children attitude, motivation and behavior regarding two energy balance-related behaviors. Results indicate that pupils involved in the intervention were more likely to do physical activity in leisure time and have more positive attitudes toward exercise compared to the control group. About eating habits, children involved in the intervention were more likely to choose healthy foods and less likely to choose fat foods compare to the control group. Changes in attitude and motivation between the baseline and the follow up and the two groups are also shown, even if not significant. Despite several limitations in the design, this study provided further support to the argument that Self-determination theory-based interventions could result in meaningful health-behavior changes. RESUMEN: Niñez sobrepeso y obesidad en niños y niñas está alcanzando proporciones epidémicas en el mundo entero, Italia incluida. La obesidad infantil se ha relacionado con consecuencias perjudiciales para la salud. Hay una necesidad de desarrollar intervenciones teoría basada y rentables para promover la alimentación saludable y la actividad física con el obje- tivo de reducir la obesidad. El propósito de este estudio fue evaluar una intervención basada en la teoría de largo plazo para promover estilos de vida saludables en niños en edad escolar de escasos recursos. Se adoptó un diseño cuasi experimental, con el fin de evaluar la eficacia de la intervención, teniendo en cuenta la información de sus padres. Se pide a los padres para evaluar a sus hijos la actitud, la motivación y el comportamiento con respec- to a los comportamientos relacionados con saldo de dos energías. Los resul- tados indican que los alumnos que participan en la intervención tenían más probabilidades de hacer actividad física en el tiempo libre y tienen actitudes más positivas hacia el ejercicio en comparación con el grupo control. Acerca de los hábitos alimenticios, los niños que participaron en la intervención eran más propensos a elegir alimentos saludables y menos propensos a elegir alimentos ricos en grasas en comparación con el grupo control. Los cambios en la actitud y la motivación entre el inicio y el seguimiento y los dos grupos se muestran también, aunque no significativamente. A pesar de varias limi- taciones en el diseño, este estudio proporcionan más apoyo al argumento de que las intervenciones basadas en teoría de la autodeterminación podrían resultar en cambios significativos que afectan a su salud significativamente. RESUMO: Infância sobrepeso e obesidade em meninas e meninos Ambas está atingindo proporções epidêmicas no mundo inteiro, Itália incluído. Infância a obesidade tem-se ligado a consequências para a saúde deletérios. ere a necessidade de desenvolver a teoria com base e de custo-e intervenções ective para promover saudável comer e atividade física Com o objetivo de reduzir a obesidade. e efeitos de estudo ESTA foi avaliar uma intervenção baseada na teoria de longo prazo para promover estilos de vida saudáveis em crianças em idade escolar carentes. Um projeto quase-experimental foi adotado, a fim de avaliar o ectiveness da intervenção, considerando as infor- mações de seus pais. Os pais foram convidados a avaliar sua atitude infantil, motivação e comportamento em relação dois comportamentos relacionados com o balanço de dois energia. Os resultados indicam que alunos envolvi- dos na intervenção eram mais propensos a fazer atividade física no tempo livre e têm atitudes mais positivas em relação ao exercício comparado ao grupo controle. Sobre os hábitos alimentares, as crianças na intervenção envolvidos eram mais propensos a escolher alimentos saudáveis e menos propensos a escolher alimentos ricos em gordura comparar com o grupo de controle. Mudanças de atitude e motivação Entre a linha de base e o acom- panhamento e os dois grupos são mostrados Além disso, mesmo que não seja significante. Apesar das limitações na concepção Vários, Este estudo forneceu ainda apoio ao argumento de que intervenções baseadas em teoria da autodeterminação poderia resultar em mudanças de comportamento de saúde significativos.
- Published
- 2016
41. A helping hand putting in order? Language dependent constraints underlying order-fingers mapping
- Author
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Rinaldi, L, Di Luca, S, Henik, A, Girelli, L, RINALDI, LUCA, Girelli, L., Rinaldi, L, Di Luca, S, Henik, A, Girelli, L, RINALDI, LUCA, and Girelli, L.
- Published
- 2013
42. Organizzare i numeri nello spazio aiuta: evidenze in età prescolare
- Author
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Rinaldi, L, Girelli, L, RINALDI, LUCA, Girelli, L., Rinaldi, L, Girelli, L, RINALDI, LUCA, and Girelli, L.
- Published
- 2013
43. Optimization of heat treatment parameters for additive manufacturing and gravity casting AlSi10Mg alloy
- Author
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Girelli, L, primary, Tocci, M, additional, Montesano, L, additional, Gelfi, M, additional, and Pola, A, additional
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. A helping hand putting in order? Language dependent constraints underlying order-fingers mapping
- Author
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RINALDI, LUCA, Di Luca, S, Henik, A, Girelli, L., Rinaldi, L, Di Luca, S, Henik, A, and Girelli, L
- Subjects
Finger counting, Embodied cognition, Spatial-numerical associations - Published
- 2013
45. Organizzare i numeri nello spazio aiuta: evidenze in età prescolare
- Author
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RINALDI, LUCA, Girelli, L., Rinaldi, L, and Girelli, L
- Subjects
Sviluppo numerico, Associazioni numero-spazio - Published
- 2013
46. A helping hand putting in order: Visuomotor routines organize numerical and non-numerical sequences in space
- Author
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Rinaldi, L, di Luca, S, Henik, A, Girelli, L, RINALDI, LUCA, GIRELLI, LUISA, Rinaldi, L, di Luca, S, Henik, A, Girelli, L, RINALDI, LUCA, and GIRELLI, LUISA
- Abstract
Theories of embodied cognition emphasize the importance of sensorimotor schemas linked to external world experience for representing conceptual knowledge. Accordingly, some researchers have proposed that the spatial representation of numerical and non-numerical sequences relies on visuomotor routines, like reading habit and finger counting. There is a growing interest in how these two routines contribute to the spatial representation of ordinal sequences, although no investigation has so far directly compared them. The present study aims to investigate how these routines contribute to represent ordinal information in space. To address this issue, bilingual participants reading either from left-to-right or right-to-left were required to map ordinal information to all fingers of their right dominant hand. Critically, we manipulated both the direction of the mapping and the language of the verbal information. More specifically, a finger-mapping compatibility task was adopted in three experiments to explore the spatial representation of numerical (digit numbers and number words) and non-numerical (days of the week, presented in Hebrew and in English) sequences. Results showed that numerical information was preferentially mapped according to participants' finger counting habits, regardless of hand posture (prone and supine), number notation and reading habit. However, for non-numerical ordinal sequences, reading and finger counting directions both contributed to determine a preferential spatial mapping. These findings indicate that abstract knowledge representation relies on multiple over-trained visuomotor routines. More generally, these results highlight the capacity of our cognitive system to flexibly represent abstract ordered information, by relying on different directional experiences (finger counting, reading direction) depending on the stimuli and on the task at hand.
- Published
- 2016
47. A Place for Zero in the Brain
- Author
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Rinaldi, L, Girelli, L, RINALDI, LUCA, GIRELLI, LUISA, Rinaldi, L, Girelli, L, RINALDI, LUCA, and GIRELLI, LUISA
- Abstract
It has long been thought that the primary cognitive and neural systems responsible for processing numerosities are not predisposed to encode empty sets (i.e., numerosity zero). A new study challenges this view by demonstrating that zero is translated into an abstract quantity along the numerical continuum by the primate parietofrontal magnitude system.
- Published
- 2016
48. Walking on a mental time line: Temporal processing affects step movements along the sagittal space
- Author
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Rinaldi, L, Locati, F, Parolin, L, Bernardi, N, Girelli, L, RINALDI, LUCA, LOCATI, FRANCESCA, PAROLIN, LAURA ANTONIA LUCIA, BERNARDI, NICOLO' FRANCESCO, GIRELLI, LUISA, Rinaldi, L, Locati, F, Parolin, L, Bernardi, N, Girelli, L, RINALDI, LUCA, LOCATI, FRANCESCA, PAROLIN, LAURA ANTONIA LUCIA, BERNARDI, NICOLO' FRANCESCO, and GIRELLI, LUISA
- Abstract
Time is often conceptualized in terms of space (mental time line; MTL). A prevalent representation of temporal concepts, indeed, construes the past and the future as respectively behind and in front of the ego. Insofar, however, a major omission of this line of research is that manual responses were restricted to the frontal space. This work provides the first striking demonstration that temporal processing affects the motor programming of active whole-body movements. Participants initiated steps backward much faster in response to past-than to future-related words, whereas they were faster to step forward in response to future-than past-related words. Furthermore, since the reported compatibility effect was limited to movement initiation time, it is likely that the processing of temporal information acted on the early stages of response selection (see Ulrich et al., 2012). Beyond substantiating the longstanding hypothesis that humans spatialize time on an egocentric spatial frame of reference, our findings demonstrate that the intangible domain of time extends to the more concrete domain of space through our body's action in the physical world.
- Published
- 2016
49. Manual actions cover symbolic distances at different speed
- Author
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Girelli, L, Perrone, G, Croccolo, F, Roman, E, Bricolo, E, Mancin, M, Rinaldi, L, GIRELLI, LUISA, PERRONE, GELSOMINA ANTONIA, CROCCOLO, FABRIZIO, BRICOLO, EMANUELA, MANCIN, MARCO, RINALDI, LUCA, Girelli, L, Perrone, G, Croccolo, F, Roman, E, Bricolo, E, Mancin, M, Rinaldi, L, GIRELLI, LUISA, PERRONE, GELSOMINA ANTONIA, CROCCOLO, FABRIZIO, BRICOLO, EMANUELA, MANCIN, MARCO, and RINALDI, LUCA
- Abstract
A privileged way of representing numbers in the human mind is along an oriented mental number line. Activation of this representation has been proposed to account for the impact of numbers on motor tasks, such as on grasping, pointing, and eye movements. Here we evaluated the impact of numbers on motor control, by exploiting the evidence that the speed reached by the manual connection of two points is correlated with their physical distance. We reasoned that, if irrelevant numbers induce a mis-perception of the distance between two points, this should be reflected in the movement speed. Results showed a speed difference in the manual connection of two numerically close numbers (i.e., connected slower) and two numerically distant numbers (i.e., connected faster), placed at equal physical distance. This representational length effect indicates not only that symbolic distance modulates speed movement as physical distance does, but suggests that the impact of numbers on action planning does not only involve action initiation but it extends to the definition of kinematic parameters. More generally, the reported findings show that the representation of numbers along a mental space affects our behaviour in the physical space.
- Published
- 2016
50. Spatial-numerical consistency impacts on preschoolers' numerical representation: Children can count on both peripersonal and personal space
- Author
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Rinaldi, L, Gallucci, M, Girelli, L, RINALDI, LUCA, GALLUCCI, MARCELLO, GIRELLI, LUISA, Rinaldi, L, Gallucci, M, Girelli, L, RINALDI, LUCA, GALLUCCI, MARCELLO, and GIRELLI, LUISA
- Abstract
Although the existence of an association between numbers and space has been largely documented in educated adults, the origin of this association still remains debated. Recent evidence suggests that associations between numbers and space might originate during the preschool years from the repeated action of counting in peripersonal space. However, it is also possible that preschoolers may additionally acquire directional preferences by counting on their own body, specifically on their fingers. To address this hypothesis, the present study explores the presence of early directional indexes in processing numerical information in both peripersonal and personal space in a sample of 90 preschoolers. We identified children who consistently exhibited a counting directional bias and generalized it to their processing of numbers in space. Moreover, given the tight connection between counting routine and numerical knowledge, we investigated the relation between these indexes and numerical achievement, evaluated by means of various tasks. Results indicate that distinct spatial-numerical associations, in both peripersonal and personal space, coexist from an early age and can be used flexibly. However, regardless of its directionality, the presence of a consistent spatial-numerical association appears to be related to numerical comprehension.
- Published
- 2016
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