41 results on '"Marzoli D"'
Search Results
2. The spectrum of conscious experiences during NREM sleep: there is more than what meets the eye
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Michalak, A., primary, Marzoli, D., additional, Bergamo, D., additional, Pietrogiacomi, F., additional, Elce, V., additional, Pedreschi, B., additional, De Cuntis, I., additional, Avvenuti, G., additional, Ricciardi, E., additional, and Bernardi, G., additional
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- 2024
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3. Vergessene Kontaktzonen - die transsaharischen Verbindungen der Karthager im 6. und 5. Jahrhundert v. Chr
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Schulz, Raimund, Marzoli, D., Schlotzhauer, U., and Wigg-Wolf, D.
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- 2020
4. Affective evaluation of food images according to stimulus and subject characteristics
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Padulo, C., primary, Carlucci, L., additional, Marzoli, D., additional, Manippa, V., additional, Tommasi, L., additional, Saggino, A., additional, Puglisi-Allegra, S., additional, and Brancucci, A., additional
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- 2018
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5. Primera camparia de investigacion geologica-arqueologica en la costa del Ampurdan
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Blech, M., Hoffmann, Gerd, Marzoli, D., Blech, M., Hoffmann, Gerd, and Marzoli, D.
- Published
- 1991
6. Functional lateralization in social-emotional processing: The influence of sexual orientation and gender identity on cradling preferences.
- Author
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Malatesta G, Marzoli D, Lucafò C, D'Anselmo A, Azzilonna T, Prete G, and Tommasi L
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- Humans, Male, Female, Adult, Sexual Behavior psychology, Emotions physiology, Adolescent, Young Adult, Functional Laterality physiology, Gender Identity
- Abstract
The left-cradling bias (i.e., the motor asymmetry for cradling infants on the left side) has often been associated to the right-hemispheric social-emotional specialization, and it has often been reported to be stronger in females than in males. In this study we explored the effects of sexual orientation and gender identity on this lateral bias by means of a web-based investigation in a sample of adults (485 biological females and 196 biological males) recruited through LGBTQIA+ networks and general university forums. We exploited a cradling imagery task to assess participants' cradling-side preference, and standardized questionnaires to assess participants' homosexuality (Klein Sexual Orientation Grid) and gender nonconformity (Gender Identity/Gender Dysphoria Questionnaire for Adults and Adolescents). Results confirmed the expected left-cradling bias across all sexual orientation groups except for heterosexual males. Importantly, higher homosexuality scores were associated with higher proportions of left cradling in males. These results suggest that sexual orientation can influence cradling preference in males, indicating a complex interaction between biological and psychological factors in the laterality of social-emotional processing. Finally, the left-cradling bias seems to confirm its role as a behavioral proxy of social-emotional functional lateralization in humans., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest None., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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7. Environmental and genetic determinants of sensorimotor asymmetries in mother-infant interaction.
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Malatesta G, Marzoli D, and Tommasi L
- Abstract
Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
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- 2022
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8. Author Correction: Preserved wake-dependent cortical excitability dynamics predict cognitive fitness beyond age-related brain alterations.
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Van Egroo M, Narbutas J, Chylinski D, Villar González P, Ghaemmaghami P, Muto V, Schmidt C, Gaggioni G, Besson G, Pépin X, Tezel E, Marzoli D, Le Goff C, Cavalier E, Luxen A, Salmon E, Maquet P, Bahri MA, Phillips C, Bastin C, Collette F, and Vandewalle G
- Published
- 2021
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9. Human Lateralization, Maternal Effects and Neurodevelopmental Disorders.
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Malatesta G, Marzoli D, Prete G, and Tommasi L
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In humans, behavioral laterality and hemispheric asymmetries are part of a complex biobehavioral system in which genetic factors have been repeatedly proposed as developmental determinants of both phenomena. However, no model solely based on genetic factors has proven conclusive, pushing towards the inclusion of environmental and epigenetic factors into the system. Moreover, it should be pointed out that epigenetic modulation might also account for why certain genes are expressed differently in parents and offspring. Here, we suggest the existence of a sensitive period in early postnatal development, during which the exposure to postural and motor lateral biases, expressed in interactive sensorimotor coordination with the caregiver, canalizes hemispheric lateralization in the "typical" direction. Despite newborns and infants showing their own inherent asymmetries, the canalizing effect of the interactive context owes most to adult caregivers (usually the mother), whose infant-directed lateralized behavior might have been specifically selected for as a population-level trait, functional to confer fitness to offspring. In particular, the case of the left-cradling bias (LCB; i.e., the population-level predisposition of mothers to hold their infants on the left side) represents an instance of behavioral trait exhibiting heritability along the maternal line, although no genetic investigation has been carried out so far. Recent evidence, moreover, seems to suggest that the reduction of this asymmetry is related to several unfavorable conditions, including neurodevelopmental disorders. Future studies are warranted to understand whether and how genetic and epigenetic factors affect the lateralization of early mother-infant interaction and the proneness of the offspring to neurodevelopmental disorders., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Malatesta, Marzoli, Prete and Tommasi.)
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- 2021
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10. Early brainstem [18F]THK5351 uptake is linked to cortical hyperexcitability in healthy aging.
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Van Egroo M, Chylinski D, Narbutas J, Besson G, Muto V, Schmidt C, Marzoli D, Cardone P, Vandeleene N, Grignard M, Luxen A, Salmon E, Lambert C, Bastin C, Collette F, Phillips C, Maquet P, Bahri MA, Balteau E, and Vandewalle G
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- Aged, Alzheimer Disease diagnostic imaging, Alzheimer Disease pathology, Alzheimer Disease physiopathology, Amyloid beta-Peptides metabolism, Cerebral Cortex pathology, Cross-Sectional Studies, Early Diagnosis, Electroencephalography, Female, Fluorine Radioisotopes pharmacokinetics, Functional Neuroimaging, Healthy Aging pathology, Healthy Aging physiology, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Positron-Emission Tomography, Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation, tau Proteins metabolism, Aminopyridines pharmacokinetics, Brain Stem diagnostic imaging, Brain Stem metabolism, Cerebral Cortex physiopathology, Healthy Aging metabolism, Quinolines pharmacokinetics, Radiopharmaceuticals pharmacokinetics
- Abstract
BACKGROUNDNeuronal hyperexcitability characterizes the early stages of Alzheimer's disease (AD). In animals, early misfolded tau and amyloid-β (Aβ) protein accumulation - both central to AD neuropathology - promote cortical excitability and neuronal network dysfunction. In healthy humans, misfolded tau and Aβ aggregates are first detected, respectively, in the brainstem and frontomedial and temporobasal cortices, decades prior to the onset of AD cognitive symptoms. Whether cortical excitability is related to early brainstem tau - and its associated neuroinflammation - and cortical Aβ aggregations remains unknown.METHODSWe probed frontal cortex excitability, using transcranial magnetic stimulation combined with electroencephalography, in a sample of 64 healthy late-middle-aged individuals (50-69 years; 45 women and 19 men). We assessed whole-brain [18F]THK5351 PET uptake as a proxy measure of tau/neuroinflammation, and we assessed whole-brain Aβ burden with [18F]Flutemetamol or [18F]Florbetapir radiotracers.RESULTSWe found that higher [18F]THK5351 uptake in a brainstem monoaminergic compartment was associated with increased cortical excitability (r = 0.29, P = 0.02). By contrast, [18F]THK5351 PET signal in the hippocampal formation, although strongly correlated with brainstem signal in whole-brain voxel-based quantification analyses (P value corrected for family-wise error [PFWE-corrected] < 0.001), was not significantly associated with cortical excitability (r = 0.14, P = 0.25). Importantly, no significant association was found between early Aβ cortical deposits and cortical excitability (r = -0.20, P = 0.11).CONCLUSIONThese findings reveal potential brain substrates for increased cortical excitability in preclinical AD and may constitute functional in vivo correlates of early brainstem tau accumulation and neuroinflammation in humans.TRIAL REGISTRATIONEudraCT 2016-001436-35.FUNDINGF.R.S.-FNRS Belgium, Wallonie-Bruxelles International, ULiège, Fondation Simone et Pierre Clerdent, European Regional Development Fund.
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- 2021
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11. The Role of Ethnic Prejudice in the Modulation of Cradling Lateralization.
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Malatesta G, Marzoli D, Morelli L, Pivetti M, and Tommasi L
- Abstract
The left-cradling bias is the tendency to cradle an infant on the left side, regardless of the individuals' handedness, culture or ethnicity. Many studies revealed associations between socio-emotional variables and the left-side bias, suggesting that this asymmetry might be considered as a proxy of the emotional attunement between the cradling and the cradled individuals. In this study we examined whether adult females with high levels of prejudice toward a specific ethnic group would show reduced left-cradling preferences when required to cradle an infant-like doll with ethnical features of the prejudiced group. We manipulated the ethnicity of the cradled individual by asking 336 Caucasian women to cradle a White or a Black doll and then assessed their prejudice levels toward African individuals. Significant correlations were shown only in the Black doll group indicating that the more the prejudice toward Africans, the more the cradling-side preferences shifted toward the right. Furthermore, participants exhibiting low levels-but not those exhibiting high levels-of ethnic prejudice showed a significant left-cradling bias. These findings show that ethnic prejudice toward the specific ethnic group of the cradled individual can interfere with the left preference in the cradling woman. The present study corroborates our suggestion that the left-cradling bias might be considered as a natural index of a positive socio-communicative relationship between the cradling and cradled individuals. On the contrary, the right-cradling bias might be considered as a cue of the presence of affective dysfunctions in the relationship., (© The Author(s) 2020.)
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- 2021
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12. Received Cradling Bias During the First Year of Life: A Retrospective Study on Children With Typical and Atypical Development.
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Malatesta G, Marzoli D, Apicella F, Abiuso C, Muratori F, Forrester GS, Vallortigara G, Scattoni ML, and Tommasi L
- Abstract
A population-level left cradling bias exists whereby 60-90% of mothers hold their infants on the left side. This left biased positioning appears to be mutually beneficial to both the mother and the baby's brain organization for processing of socio-emotional stimuli. Previous research connected cradling asymmetries and Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD), entailing impairment in socio-communicative relationships and characterized by an early hypo-lateralization of brain functions. In this explorative study, we aimed to provide a contribution to the retrospective investigations by looking for early behavioral markers of neurodevelopmental disorders such as ASD. We hypothesized that an atypical trajectory in maternal cradling might be one of the possible signs of an interference in mother-infant socio-emotional communication, and thus of potential neurodevelopmental dysfunctions. To this aim, we examined photos depicting mother-child early cradling interactions by consulting family albums of 27 children later diagnosed with ASD and 63 typically developing children. As regards the first half of the first year of life, no differences were shown between maternal cradling-side preferences in typical and ASD groups, both exhibiting the left-cradling bias in the 0-3 months period, but not in the 3-6 months period. However, our results show dissimilar patterns of cradling preferences during the second half of the first year of life. In particular, the absence of left-cradling shown in typical mothers was not observed in ASD mothers, who exhibited a significant left-cradling bias in the 6-12 months age group. This difference might reflect the fact that mother-infant relationship involving children later diagnosed with ASD might remain "basic" because mothers experience a lack of social activity in such children. Alternatively, it may reflect the overstimulation in which mothers try to engage infants in response to their lack of responsiveness and social initiative. However, further investigations are needed both to distinguish between these two possibilities and to define the role of early typical and reversed cradling experiences on neurodevelopment., (Copyright © 2020 Malatesta, Marzoli, Apicella, Abiuso, Muratori, Forrester, Vallortigara, Scattoni and Tommasi.)
- Published
- 2020
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13. The association between received maternal cradling and neurodevelopment: Is left better?
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Malatesta G, Marzoli D, and Tommasi L
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- Adult, Autism Spectrum Disorder epidemiology, Emotions, Female, Functional Laterality physiology, Humans, Incidence, Infant, Motion Pictures, Photography, Retrospective Studies, Socialization, Visual Fields, Autism Spectrum Disorder etiology, Brain growth & development, Dominance, Cerebral physiology, Maternal Behavior psychology, Mother-Child Relations
- Abstract
The vast majority of women (60-90%) hold infants on their left side. Such a population-level lateral bias has been shown to improve the processing of socio-emotional stimuli in both the woman and the baby. Recently, some studies related cradling lateralization and Autism Spectrum Disorders (which entail socio-communicative deficits and a reduction of the typical lateralization of brain functions), raising the possibility that the asymmetrical cradling behavior experienced during infanthood might be related to the infant's neurodevelopment. Any progress made towards earlier diagnoses could significantly increase the chance of successful intervention for these patients. We here suggest that a wide retrospective investigation on family photo albums and home movies of children diagnosed with Autism might provide useful data about early behavioral signs of this condition. We hypothesize that an atypical trajectory in maternal cradling might be one of the early signs of interference in dyadic socio-emotional communication, and thus of potential neurodevelopmental dysfunctions., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2020
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14. Preserved wake-dependent cortical excitability dynamics predict cognitive fitness beyond age-related brain alterations.
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Van Egroo M, Narbutas J, Chylinski D, Villar González P, Ghaemmaghami P, Muto V, Schmidt C, Gaggioni G, Besson G, Pépin X, Tezel E, Marzoli D, Le Goff C, Cavalier E, Luxen A, Salmon E, Maquet P, Bahri MA, Phillips C, Bastin C, Collette F, and Vandewalle G
- Subjects
- Aged, Brain diagnostic imaging, Brain pathology, Brain Waves, Electroencephalography, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Middle Aged, Positron-Emission Tomography, Reproducibility of Results, Brain physiopathology, Cognition, Cognitive Aging, Cognitive Dysfunction, Cortical Excitability, Wakefulness
- Abstract
Age-related cognitive decline arises from alterations in brain structure as well as in sleep-wake regulation. Here, we investigated whether preserved wake-dependent regulation of cortical function could represent a positive factor for cognitive fitness in aging. We quantified cortical excitability dynamics during prolonged wakefulness as a sensitive marker of age-related alteration in sleep-wake regulation in 60 healthy older individuals (50-69 y; 42 women). Brain structural integrity was assessed with amyloid-beta- and tau-PET, and with MRI. Participants' cognition was investigated using an extensive neuropsychological task battery. We show that individuals with preserved wake-dependent cortical excitability dynamics exhibit better cognitive performance, particularly in the executive domain which is essential to successful cognitive aging. Critically, this association remained significant after accounting for brain structural integrity measures. Preserved dynamics of basic brain function during wakefulness could therefore be essential to cognitive fitness in aging, independently from age-related brain structural modifications that can ultimately lead to dementia., Competing Interests: Competing interestsThe authors declare no competing interests., (© The Author(s) 2019.)
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- 2019
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15. Lateralized embodiment of ambiguous human silhouettes: Data on sex differences.
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Marzoli D, Pagliara A, Prete G, Malatesta G, Lucafò C, Padulo C, Brancucci A, and Tommasi L
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Whereas the role of observers' sex has already been addressed in research on embodied cognition, so far it has been neglected as regards laterality effects in embodied cognition. Here, we report further analyses of the data used in our paper "Hemispheric asymmetries in the processing of body sides: A study with ambiguous human silhouettes" [1], where participants had to indicate the perceived orientation of silhouettes with ambiguous front/back orientation and handedness presented in the right and left hemifield. Specifically, the variables examined in the associated paper (the number of right- and left-sided silhouettes perceived as front- and back-facing in each hemifield; the number of silhouettes perceived as right- and left-handed in each hemifield) are analyzed by also factoring in participant's sex). Moreover, data are provided and analyses are performed both for the total sample of participants and for the sample of right-handed participants only. For further details, as well as for the interpretation and discussion of the data, the reader is referred to the main article [1] and its Supplementary Material.
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- 2019
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16. The left-cradling bias and its relationship with empathy and depression.
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Malatesta G, Marzoli D, Rapino M, and Tommasi L
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- Adult, Affect, Affective Symptoms etiology, Bias, Child, Preschool, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Young Adult, Depression etiology, Empathy, Mother-Child Relations
- Abstract
Women usually cradle their infants to the left of their body midline. Research showed that the left cradling could be altered by affective symptoms in mothers, so that right cradling might be associated with a reduced ability to become emotionally involved with the infant. In this study, we assessed cradling-side bias (using family photo inspection and an imagination task), as well as depression and empathy, in 50 healthy mothers of 0-3 years old children. The main finding was that the strength of the left-cradling bias was negatively related with participants' depression scores and slightly positively related with their empathy scores. Our results thus provide further evidence that cradling-side preferences can represent an evolutionary proxy of mother's affective state, influencing the early development of the infant social brain and behaviour.
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- 2019
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17. The Relationship Between the Left-Cradling Bias and Attachment to Parents and Partner.
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Malatesta G, Marzoli D, Piccioni C, and Tommasi L
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- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Humans, Young Adult, Functional Laterality physiology, Interpersonal Relations, Mother-Child Relations, Object Attachment, Sexual Partners, Social Perception
- Abstract
Mothers usually cradle their infants to the left of their body midline, an asymmetry that seems to be a typically female lateral preference. This bias is deemed to be an evolutionary facilitator of communication between cradling and cradled individuals and is believed to be strongly related to hemispheric specialization for complex socio-affective behaviors. Thus, left cradling might facilitate affective interactions in females with typical brain organization, probably due to a right-hemisphere dominance for social attachment. In this study, we investigated cradling-side preferences in 288 young females as a function of their attachment styles to parents and partners. A left-cradling bias was more frequent in participants experiencing positive relationships with their mother and romantic partners. These findings indicate that the left-cradling bias may be associated with high-quality social attachment behaviors in females and, therefore, can be considered as a natural index of socio-emotional attunement between the cradling and cradled individuals.
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- 2019
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18. Human mating strategies: from past causes to present consequences.
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Marzoli D, Havlíček J, and Roberts SC
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- Animals, Humans, Sex Factors, Sexual Behavior, Animal, Biological Evolution, Competitive Behavior physiology, Sexual Behavior physiology, Social Behavior
- Abstract
In both humans and nonhuman animals, mating strategies represent a set of evolutionary adaptations aimed at promoting individual fitness by means of reproduction with the best possible partners. Given this critical role, mating strategies influence numerous aspects of human life. In particular, between-sex divergence in the intensity of intrasexual competition could account for robust cross-cultural sex differences in psychology and behavior (e.g., personality, psychiatric disorders, social behavior, violence). Several other factors (including individual differences, relationship type and environment) affect-in an evolutionarily consistent manner-variation in mating strategy that individuals pursue (as one example, awareness of one's own attractiveness impinges on mating standards). Here we provide an overview of relevant theoretical frameworks and empirical evidence on variation in mating strategies. Given its multifaceted nature and intense research interest over several decades, this is a challenging task, and we highlight areas where further investigation is warranted in order to achieve a clearer picture and resolve apparent inconsistencies. However, we suggest that addressing outstanding questions using a variety of different methodological approaches, a deeper understanding of the cognitive representations involved in mating strategies is within reach. WIREs Cogn Sci 2018, 9:e1456. doi: 10.1002/wcs.1456 This article is categorized under: Cognitive Biology > Evolutionary Roots of Cognition Neuroscience > Behavior Neuroscience > Cognition., (© 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2018
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19. Hemispheric asymmetries in the processing of body sides: A study with ambiguous human silhouettes.
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Marzoli D, Pagliara A, Prete G, Malatesta G, Lucafò C, Padulo C, Brancucci A, and Tommasi L
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Sex Factors, Young Adult, Form Perception, Functional Laterality, Pattern Recognition, Visual
- Abstract
When required to indicate the perceived orientation of pictures of human silhouettes with ambiguous front/back orientation and handedness, both right- and left-handed participants perceive the figures more frequently as right-handed than as left-handed, which seems to indicate an attentional bias towards the right arm of human bodies. Given that past research exploiting the divided visual field paradigm indicated a processing advantage for contralateral body parts in both hemispheres, we tested whether human silhouettes with ambiguous handedness presented in the right visual field would be interpreted more frequently as right-handed compared with those presented in the left visual field. We confirmed the expected lateralised embodiment of ambiguous human bodies, in line with previous studies showing that right and left limbs are processed faster and/or more accurately when presented in the right and left hemifield, respectively., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2017
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20. Inversion Reveals Perceptual Asymmetries in the Configural Processing of Human Body.
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Marzoli D, Lucafò C, Padulo C, Prete G, Giacinto L, and Tommasi L
- Abstract
Ambiguous human bodies performing unimanual/unipedal actions are perceived more frequently as right-handed/footed rather than left-handed/footed, which suggests a perceptual and attentional bias toward the right side of others' body. A bias toward the right arm of human bodies could be adaptive in social life, most social interactions occurring with right-handed individuals, and the implicit knowledge that the dominant hand of humans is usually placed on their right side might also be included in body configural information. Given that inversion disrupts configural processing for human bodies, we investigated whether inversion reduces the bias toward the right side of human bodies. Consistent with our hypothesis, when presented with ambiguous stimuli depicting humans performing lateralized actions or movements, participants perceived a greater proportion of right-handed figures when the stimuli were shown upright than when the stimuli were shown inverted. The present findings seem to confirm our hypothesis that body configural information may include some form of knowledge about the probable handedness of other individuals, although alternative accounts involving the role of experience cannot be ruled out.
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- 2017
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21. Sex-specific effects of posture on the attribution of handedness to an imagined agent.
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Marzoli D, Lucafò C, Rescigno C, Mussini E, Padulo C, Prete G, D'Anselmo A, Malatesta G, and Tommasi L
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Posture, Young Adult, Functional Laterality physiology, Imagination physiology, Movement physiology, Psychomotor Performance physiology, Sex Characteristics
- Abstract
In a series of previous studies, we found that when participants were required to imagine another person performing a manual action, they imagined a significantly higher proportion of actions performed with their dominant rather than non-dominant hand, which indicates that shared motor representations between the self and the other are involved also during the imagination of others' actions. Interestingly, the activation of lateralized body-specific motor representations (as indexed by the congruence between the participant's handedness and the imagined person's handedness) appeared to be affected by the visual perspective adopted and participants' handedness. Given that past literature indicates that incongruent or unnatural postures interfere with motor imagery, we tested 480 right-handed participants to investigate whether subjects holding their right hand behind their back would have imagined right-handed actions less frequently than those holding their left hand behind their back. Moreover, we examined the effects of participant's sex, action category (simple or complex) and hand shape (open or fist). Contrary to our prediction, female participants holding their right hand behind their back imagined right-handed actions more frequently than those holding their left hand behind their back, whereas no significant effect was observed in male participants. We propose that the muscle contraction needed to keep a hand behind the back could activate the motor representations of that hand so as to increase the likelihood of imagining an action performed with the corresponding hand. Moreover, the sex difference observed is consistent with the greater use of embodied strategies by females than by males.
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- 2017
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22. The influence of memory and attention on the ear advantage in dichotic listening.
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D'Anselmo A, Marzoli D, and Brancucci A
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- Acoustic Stimulation, Female, Functional Laterality physiology, Humans, Male, Models, Psychological, Prohibitins, Reaction Time physiology, Young Adult, Attention physiology, Auditory Perception physiology, Dichotic Listening Tests, Memory physiology
- Abstract
The role of memory retention and attentional control on hemispheric asymmetry was investigated using a verbal dichotic listening paradigm, with the consonant-vowel syllables (/ba/,/da/,/ga/,/ka/,/pa/and/ta/), while manipulating the focus of attention and the time interval between stimulus and response. Attention was manipulated using three conditions: non-forced (NF), forced left (FL) and forced right (FR) attention. Memory involvement was varied using four delays (0, 1, 3 and 4 s) between stimulus presentation and response. Results showed a significant right ear advantage (REA) in the NF condition and an increased REA in the FR condition. A left ear advantage (LEA) was found in FL condition. The REA increased significantly in the NF attention condition at the 3-s compared to the 0-s delay and in the FR condition at the 1-s compared to the 0-s delay. No modulation of the left ear advantage was observed in the FL condition. These results are discussed in terms of an interaction between attentional processes and memory retention., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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23. Laterality effects in the spinning dancer illusion: The viewing-from-above bias is only part of the story.
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Lucafò C, Marzoli D, Prete G, and Tommasi L
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Young Adult, Functional Laterality, Illusions psychology, Movement, Psychomotor Performance, Rotation
- Abstract
The 'silhouette illusion', representing the silhouette of a female dancer pirouetting about her vertical axis, is a bistable stimulus created by Japanese web designer Nobuyuki Kayahara. Although the dancer can be perceived as spinning either clockwise or counterclockwise, the clockwise rotation is usually preferred. Troje and McAdam (i-Perception, 2010, 1, 143) showed that this clockwise bias can be attributed to the tendency to assume a viewpoint from above rather than from below, given that the dancer is portrayed from a vantage point that is not perpendicular to the axis of rotation. Here, we tested whether another possible factor contributing to the observers' interpretation of this bistable stimulus might be the tendency to perceive movements of the right rather than the left foot. We confirmed both the viewing-from-above bias and our hypothesis. The bias to perceive movements of the right leg might be a generalization to lower limbs of a perceptual frequency effect already observed for upper limbs. Such a perceptual and attentional bias towards the right hand/foot could account for the greater ability to predict the outcome of sport actions when observing right- rather than left-limbed movements, and thus the left-handers' and left-footers' advantage observed in a variety of interactive sports., (© 2015 The British Psychological Society.)
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- 2016
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24. GABA levels in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex during the viewing of appetitive and disgusting food images.
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Padulo C, Delli Pizzi S, Bonanni L, Edden RA, Ferretti A, Marzoli D, Franciotti R, Manippa V, Onofrj M, Sepede G, Tartaro A, Tommasi L, Puglisi-Allegra S, and Brancucci A
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Male, Neuropsychological Tests, Prefrontal Cortex diagnostic imaging, Proton Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Young Adult, Emotions physiology, Food, Prefrontal Cortex metabolism, Visual Perception physiology, gamma-Aminobutyric Acid metabolism
- Abstract
Characterizing how the brain appraises the psychological dimensions of reward is one of the central topics of neuroscience. It has become clear that dopamine neurons are implicated in the transmission of both rewarding information and aversive and alerting events through two different neuronal populations involved in encoding the motivational value and the motivational salience of stimuli, respectively. Nonetheless, there is less agreement on the role of the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) and the related neurotransmitter release during the processing of biologically relevant stimuli. To address this issue, we employed magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS), a non-invasive methodology that allows detection of some metabolites in the human brain in vivo, in order to assess the role of the vmPFC in encoding stimulus value rather than stimulus salience. Specifically, we measured gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and, with control purposes, Glx levels in healthy subjects during the observation of appetitive and disgusting food images. We observed a decrease of GABA and no changes in Glx concentration in the vmPFC in both conditions. Furthermore, a comparatively smaller GABA reduction during the observation of appetitive food images than during the observation of disgusting food images was positively correlated with the scores obtained to the body image concerns sub-scale of Body Uneasiness Test (BUT). These results are consistent with the idea that the vmPFC plays a crucial role in processing both rewarding and aversive stimuli, possibly by encoding stimulus salience through glutamatergic and/or noradrenergic projections to deeper mesencephalic and limbic areas., (Copyright © 2016 IBRO. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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25. GABA content within the ventromedial prefrontal cortex is related to trait anxiety.
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Delli Pizzi S, Padulo C, Brancucci A, Bubbico G, Edden RA, Ferretti A, Franciotti R, Manippa V, Marzoli D, Onofrj M, Sepede G, Tartaro A, Tommasi L, Puglisi-Allegra S, and Bonanni L
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Glutamic Acid metabolism, Glutamine metabolism, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Anxiety metabolism, Prefrontal Cortex metabolism, Proton Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy methods, gamma-Aminobutyric Acid metabolism
- Abstract
The ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) plays a key role in emotion processing and regulation. vmPFC dysfunction may lead to disinhibition of amygdala causing high anxiety levels. γ-Aminobutyric acid (GABA) inter-neurons within vmPFC shape the information flow to amygdala. Thus, we hypothesize that GABA content within vmPFC could be relevant to trait anxiety. Forty-three healthy volunteers aged between 20 and 88 years were assessed for trait anxiety with the Subscale-2 of the State-Trait-Anxiety Inventory (STAI-Y2) and were studied with proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy to investigate GABA and Glx (glutamate+glutamine) contents within vmPFC. Total creatine (tCr) was used as internal reference. Partial correlations assessed the association between metabolite levels and STAI-Y2 scores, removing the effect of possible nuisance factors including age, educational level, volumes of gray matter and white matter within magnetic resonance spectroscopy voxel. We observed a positive relationship between GABA/tCr and STAI-Y2 scores. No significant relationships were found between Glx/tCr and STAI-Y2 and between tCr/water and STAI-Y2. No differences were found between males and females as regards to age, STAI-Y2, GABA/tCr, Glx/tCr, tCr/water, gray matter and white matter volumes. We suggest a close relationship between GABA content within vmPFC and trait anxiety providing new insights in the physiology of emotional brain., (© The Author (2015). Published by Oxford University Press. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2016
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26. Hearing it right: Evidence of hemispheric lateralization in auditory imagery.
- Author
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Prete G, Marzoli D, Brancucci A, and Tommasi L
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Prohibitins, Young Adult, Auditory Perception, Cerebrum physiology, Functional Laterality, Hallucinations, Imagination
- Abstract
An advantage of the right ear (REA) in auditory processing (especially for verbal content) has been firmly established in decades of behavioral, electrophysiological and neuroimaging research. The laterality of auditory imagery, however, has received little attention, despite its potential relevance for the understanding of auditory hallucinations and related phenomena. In Experiments 1-4 we find that right-handed participants required to imagine hearing a voice or a sound unilaterally show a strong population bias to localize the self-generated auditory image at their right ear, likely the result of left-hemispheric dominance in auditory processing. In Experiments 5-8 - by means of the same paradigm - it was also ascertained that the right-ear bias for hearing imagined voices depends just on auditory attention mechanisms, as biases due to other factors (i.e., lateralized movements) were controlled. These results, suggesting a central role of the left hemisphere in auditory imagery, demonstrate that brain asymmetries can drive strong lateral biases in mental imagery., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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27. Upright or inverted, entire or exploded: right-hemispheric superiority in face recognition withstands multiple spatial manipulations.
- Author
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Prete G, Marzoli D, and Tommasi L
- Abstract
Background. The ability to identify faces has been interpreted as a cerebral specialization based on the evolutionary importance of these social stimuli, and a number of studies have shown that this function is mainly lateralized in the right hemisphere. The aim of this study was to assess the right-hemispheric specialization in face recognition in unfamiliar circumstances. Methods. Using a divided visual field paradigm, we investigated hemispheric asymmetries in the matching of two subsequent faces, using two types of transformation hindering identity recognition, namely upside-down rotation and spatial "explosion" (female and male faces were fractured into parts so that their mutual spatial relations were left intact), as well as their combination. Results. We confirmed the right-hemispheric superiority in face processing. Moreover, we found a decrease of the identity recognition for more extreme "levels of explosion" and for faces presented upside-down (either as sample or target stimuli) than for faces presented upright, as well as an advantage in the matching of female compared to male faces. Discussion. We conclude that the right-hemispheric superiority for face processing is not an epiphenomenon of our expertise, because we are not often exposed to inverted and "exploded" faces, but rather a robust hemispheric lateralization. We speculate that these results could be attributable to the prevalence of right-handedness in humans and/or to early biases in social interactions.
- Published
- 2015
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28. Single-pulse Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation Reveals Contribution of Premotor Cortex to Object Shape Recognition.
- Author
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Uithol S, Franca M, Heimann K, Marzoli D, Capotosto P, Tommasi L, and Gallese V
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation, Motor Cortex physiology, Pattern Recognition, Visual
- Abstract
Background: It is known that ventral premotor cortex responds selectively to the visual perception of object shapes. However, it is unclear whether this activation also contributes to visual processing., Objective: In this study we want to assess whether activation in premotor areas contributes to visual perception of objects., Methods: We measure performance on a perception task while delivering single pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) to the left premotor cortex at different latencies after stimulus onset., Results: We show that in cases of limited visual consciousness, disturbing the left premotor cortex 150 ms after stimulus onset results in a decrease in the capacity to recognize shapes, compared both to other latencies and to stimulation of the vertex., Conclusion: Premotor cortex plays a constitutive role in object shape recognition., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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29. Perceptual and motor laterality effects in pianists during music sight-reading.
- Author
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D'Anselmo A, Giuliani F, Marzoli D, Tommasi L, and Brancucci A
- Subjects
- Adult, Communication, Female, Humans, Male, Reaction Time, Young Adult, Functional Laterality, Hand physiology, Music, Pattern Recognition, Visual physiology, Psychomotor Performance physiology
- Abstract
Forty-six right-handed pianists were tested in a music sight-reading task in which they had to perform on a keyboard. Stimuli were single notes or single triads (chords) presented tachistoscopically in the left or right visual field in form of musical notation or verbal labels. Left-hand, right-hand or two-hands performance was required. Results showed, besides the expected Simon effect producing faster responses for stimuli to be performed with the hand ipsilateral to the side of presentation, a complex pattern of laterality which depended primarily upon the requested motor output. A tendency in favor of the left hemisphere (right visual field, RVF) was observed, this asymmetry being significant only in the single-hand tasks. On the contrary, in the two-hands task an opposite asymmetry was observed with musical notation. Moreover, a strong unexpected role of the bass clef was observed, which penalized left hand performance in particular with LVF stimuli. This effect even overcame the Simon effect, suggesting the presence of a bias in favor of the left hemisphere in musical transposition. Results point to a variegated pattern of hemispheric asymmetries in music sight-reading which depend on both stimulus coding and motor output type (e.g. two- or single-hand performance). A RH asymmetry was observed during two-hands playing with musical notation. Conversely, playing with one hand seems more leftward lateralized. This pattern of asymmetry would reflect a LH ability in simple "core" music reading together with a RH ability in the coordination of simultaneous responses by the two hands., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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30. Both right- and left-handers show a bias to attend others' right arm.
- Author
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Marzoli D, Lucafò C, Pagliara A, Cappuccio R, Brancucci A, and Tommasi L
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Analysis of Variance, Female, Humans, Linear Models, Male, Photic Stimulation, Physical Stimulation, Psychomotor Performance physiology, Young Adult, Arm physiology, Bias, Functional Laterality physiology, Hand physiology, Orientation physiology
- Abstract
The common-coding hypothesis suggests that the more similar an observed action is to the way the observer would perform it, the stronger is the ensuing activation of motor representations. Therefore, producing actions could prime perception so that observers would be particularly responsive to (i.e. biased to perceive) actions that are related to, and share features with, their own actions. If this similarity principle also applies to handedness, right- and left-handers should be more likely to perceive actions as performed with their dominant rather than non-dominant hand. In two experiments, participants were required to indicate the perceived orientation (front or back view) of pictures of ambiguous human silhouettes performing one-handed manual actions. Experiment 1, in which 300 right-handers and 60 left-handers reported the orientation of a single silhouette seen for as much as they wished, showed that participants perceived the figures more frequently in an orientation congruent with a movement performed with the right rather than the left hand. Experiment 2, in which 12 right-handers and 12 left-handers reported the orientation of 52 silhouettes seen for 300 ms, showed similar results when multiple responses per participant were collected rather than only one. Contrary to our expectations, no difference was observed between right- and left-handers, which might suggest an attentional bias towards the right arm of human bodies in both groups. Moreover, participants were more likely to perceive the figure as front-facing than as back-facing, possibly due to the greater adaptive relevance of approaching compared to receding individuals.
- Published
- 2015
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31. The processing of chimeric and dichotic emotional stimuli by connected and disconnected cerebral hemispheres.
- Author
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Prete G, Marzoli D, Brancucci A, Fabri M, Foschi N, and Tommasi L
- Subjects
- Adult, Facial Expression, Female, Happiness, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Auditory Perception, Cerebrum physiology, Emotions, Functional Laterality physiology, Split-Brain Procedure, Visual Perception
- Abstract
Hemispheric asymmetries have been widely explored in both the visual and the auditory domain, but little is known about hemispheric asymmetries in audio-visual integration. We compared the performance of a partially callosotomized patient, a total split-brain patient and a control group during the evaluation of the emotional valence of chimeric faces and dichotic syllables (an emotional syllable in one ear and white noise in the other ear) presented unimodally (only faces or only syllables) or bimodally (faces and syllables presented simultaneously). Stimuli could convey happy and sad expressions and participants were asked to evaluate the emotional content of each presentation, using a 5-point Likert scale (from very sad to very happy). In unimodal presentations, the partially callosotomized patient's judgments depended on the emotional valence of the stimuli processed by the right hemisphere, whereas those of the total split-brain patient showed the opposite lateralization; in these conditions, the control group did not show asymmetries. Moreover, in bimodal presentations, results provided support for the valence hypothesis (i.e., left asymmetry for positive emotions and vice versa) in both the control group and the partially callosotomized patient, whereas the total split-brain patient showed a tendency to evaluate the emotional content of the right hemiface even when asked to focus on the acoustic modality. We conclude that partial and total hemispheric disconnections reveal opposite patterns of hemispheric asymmetry in auditory, visual and audio-visual emotion processing. These results are discussed in the light of the right-hemisphere hypothesis and the valence hypothesis., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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32. Perceptual asymmetries and handedness: a neglected link?
- Author
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Marzoli D, Prete G, and Tommasi L
- Abstract
Healthy individuals tend to weigh in more the left than the right side of visual space in a variety of contexts, ranging from pseudoneglect to perceptual asymmetries for faces. Among the common explanations proposed for the attentional and perceptual advantages of the left visual field, a link with the prevalence of right-handedness in humans has never been suggested, although some evidence seems to converge in favor of a bias of spatial attention toward the region most likely coincident with another person's right hand during a face-to-face interaction. Such a bias might imply an increased efficiency in monitoring both communicative and aggressive acts, the right limb being more used than the left in both types of behavior. Although attentional and perceptual asymmetries could be linked to right-handedness at the level of phylogeny because of the evolutionarily advantage of directing attention toward the region where others' dominant hand usually operates, it is also legitimate to question whether, at the ontogenetic level, frequent exposure to right-handed individuals may foster leftward biases. These views are discussed in the light of extant literature, and a number of tests are proposed in order to assess our hypotheses.
- Published
- 2014
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33. Environmental influences on mate preferences as assessed by a scenario manipulation experiment.
- Author
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Marzoli D, Moretto F, Monti A, Tocci O, Roberts SC, and Tommasi L
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Quantitative Trait, Heritable, Young Adult, Choice Behavior, Sexual Partners, Social Environment
- Abstract
Many evolutionary psychology studies have addressed the topic of mate preferences, focusing particularly on gender and cultural differences. However, the extent to which situational and environmental variables might affect mate preferences has been comparatively neglected. We tested 288 participants in order to investigate the perceived relative importance of six traits of an ideal partner (wealth, dominance, intelligence, height, kindness, attractiveness) under four different hypothetical scenarios (status quo/nowadays, violence/post-nuclear, poverty/resource exhaustion, prosperity/global well-being). An equal number of participants (36 women, 36 men) was allotted to each scenario; each was asked to allocate 120 points across the six traits according to their perceived value. Overall, intelligence was the trait to which participants assigned most importance, followed by kindness and attractiveness, and then by wealth, dominance and height. Men appraised attractiveness as more valuable than women. Scenario strongly influenced the relative importance attributed to traits, the main finding being that wealth and dominance were more valued in the poverty and post-nuclear scenarios, respectively, compared to the other scenarios. Scenario manipulation generally had similar effects in both sexes, but women appeared particularly prone to trade off other traits for dominance in the violence scenario, and men particularly prone to trade off other traits for wealth in the poverty scenario. Our results are in line with other correlational studies of situational variables and mate preferences, and represent strong evidence of a causal relationship of environmental factors on specific mate preferences, corroborating the notion of an evolved plasticity to current ecological conditions. A control experiment seems to suggest that our scenarios can be considered as realistic descriptions of the intended ecological conditions.
- Published
- 2013
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34. Imagining others' handedness: visual and motor processes in the attribution of the dominant hand to an imagined agent.
- Author
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Marzoli D, Menditto S, Lucafò C, and Tommasi L
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Young Adult, Functional Laterality physiology, Imagination physiology, Movement physiology, Psychomotor Performance physiology, Reaction Time physiology
- Abstract
In a previous study, we found that when required to imagine another person performing an action, participants reported a higher correspondence between their own dominant hand and the hand used by the imagined person when the agent was visualized from the back compared to when the agent was visualized from the front. This suggests a greater involvement of motor representations in the back-view perspective, possibly indicating a greater proneness to put oneself in the agent's shoes in such a condition. In order to assess whether bringing to the foreground the right or left hand of an imagined agent can foster the activation of the corresponding motor representations, we required 384 participants to imagine a person-as seen from the right or left side-performing a single manual action and to indicate the hand used by the imagined person during movement execution. The proportion of right- versus left-handed reported actions was higher in the right-view condition than in the left-view condition, suggesting that a lateral vantage point may activate the corresponding hand motor representations, which is in line with previous research indicating a link between the hemispheric specialization of one's own body and the visual representation of others' bodies. Moreover, in agreement with research on hand laterality judgments, the effect of vantage point was stronger for left-handers (who reported a higher proportion of right- than left-handed actions in the right-view condition and a slightly higher proportion of left- than right-handed actions in the left-view condition) than for right-handers (who reported a higher proportion of right- than left-handed actions in both view conditions), indicating that during the mental simulation of others' actions, right-handers rely on sensorimotor processes more than left-handers, while left-handers rely on visual processes more than right-handers.
- Published
- 2013
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35. Sun-induced frowning fosters aggressive feelings.
- Author
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Marzoli D, Custodero M, Pagliara A, and Tommasi L
- Subjects
- Affect, Anger, Feedback, Physiological radiation effects, Female, Humans, Male, Self Report, Aggression psychology, Facial Expression, Sunlight
- Abstract
We tested whether aggressiveness can be triggered by the involuntary frowning that occurs when people face the sun, due to the fact that sun-induced frowning involves the same pattern of facial muscle activation as in the expression of anger (interestingly, Charles Darwin remarked on the sunshade-like nature of frowning). In line with data showing that experimentally and unobtrusively induced facial and body displays facilitate congruent feelings, we found that participants walking against the sun without sunglasses scored higher in a self-report measure of anger and aggression compared to those walking with the sun behind and/or wearing sunglasses. We also suggest that frowning at the sun affects mood very quickly, because we did not find any effect of walking time on self-reported aggressiveness. Our results provide the first evidence of the ecological validity of the facial feedback hypothesis.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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36. Corticospinal facilitation during observation of graspable objects: a transcranial magnetic stimulation study.
- Author
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Franca M, Turella L, Canto R, Brunelli N, Allione L, Andreasi NG, Desantis M, Marzoli D, and Fadiga L
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Hand physiology, Humans, Male, Young Adult, Evoked Potentials, Motor physiology, Hand Strength physiology, Motor Cortex pathology, Motor Neurons physiology, Muscle, Skeletal physiology, Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation methods
- Abstract
In 1979, Gibson first advanced the idea that the sight of graspable objects automatically activates in the observer the repertoire of actions necessary to interact with them, even in the absence of any intention to act ("affordance effect"). The neurophysiological substrate of this effect was later identified in a class of bimodal neurons, the so-called "canonical" neurons, located within monkey premotor cortex. In humans, even if different behavioral studies supported the existence of affordance effect, neurophysiological investigations exploring its neural substrates showed contradictory results. Here, by means of Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS), we explored the time-course of the "affordance effect" elicited by the observation of everyday-life graspable objects on motor cortex of resting observers. We recorded motor evoked potentials (MEP) from three intrinsic hand muscles (two "synergic" for grasping, OP and FDI and one "neutral", ADM). We found that objects' vision determined an increased excitability at 120 milliseconds after their presentation. Moreover, this modulation was proved to be specific to the cortical representations of synergic muscles. From an evolutionary perspective, this timing perfectly fits with a fast recruitment of the motor system aimed at rapidly and accurately choosing the appropriate motor plans in a competitive environment filled with different opportunities.
- Published
- 2012
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37. Eye gaze cannot be ignored (but neither can arrows).
- Author
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Galfano G, Dalmaso M, Marzoli D, Pavan G, Coricelli C, and Castelli L
- Subjects
- Adult, Analysis of Variance, Cues, Female, Functional Laterality, Humans, Male, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Photic Stimulation, Reaction Time physiology, Students, Universities, Young Adult, Attention physiology, Fixation, Ocular physiology, Orientation physiology
- Abstract
Recent studies have tried to shed light on the automaticity of attentional shifts triggered by gaze and arrows with mixed results. In the present research, we aimed at testing a strong definition of resistance to suppression for orienting of attention elicited by these two cues. In five experiments, participants were informed with 100% certainty about the future location of a target they had to react to by presentation of either a direction word at the beginning of each trial or instructions at the beginning of each block. Gaze and arrows were presented before the target as uninformative distractors irrelevant for the task. The results showed similar patterns for gaze and arrows-namely, an interference effect when the distractors were incongruent with the upcoming target location. This suggests that the orienting of attention mediated by gaze and arrows can be considered as strongly automatic.
- Published
- 2012
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38. The handedness of imagined bodies in action and the role of perspective taking.
- Author
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Marzoli D, Mitaritonna A, Moretto F, Carluccio P, and Tommasi L
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Hand, Humans, Male, Neuropsychological Tests, Psychomotor Performance, Functional Laterality, Imagination, Judgment, Movement, Orientation, Space Perception
- Abstract
Past research at the nexus of motor control and perception investigated the role of perspective taking in many behavioral and neuroimaging studies. Some investigators addressed the issue of one's own vs. others' action imagination, but the possible effects of a front or a back view in imagining others' actions have so far been neglected. We report two 'single trial' experiments in which a total of 640 participants were asked to imagine a person performing a manual action - either in a front or in a back view - and then to indicate the hand used by the imagined person during movement execution. In such a task, we assume the existence of two distinct biases: a perceptual-mnemonic bias due to subjects' visual experience of others' actions, encouraging them to imagine right-handed movements, and a motor bias due to subjects' experience of self-made actions, encouraging them to imagine movements performed with the same hand as their dominant hand. We hypothesized that a greater involvement of motor representations in the back view compared to the front view could result in an increased correspondence between one's own manual preference and the hand used by the imagined agent in the former condition. The results of both experiments were consistent with this hypothesis, suggesting that while imagining others' actions we employ motor simulations in different degrees according to the perspective adopted., (Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2011
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39. The relation between self-reported empathy and motor identification with imagined agents.
- Author
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Marzoli D, Palumbo R, Di Domenico A, Penolazzi B, Garganese P, and Tommasi L
- Subjects
- Cues, Female, Humans, Male, Self-Assessment, Sex Factors, Empathy physiology, Identification, Psychological, Imagination physiology, Psychomotor Performance physiology
- Abstract
Background: In a previous study, we found that when required to imagine another person performing an action, participants reported a higher correspondence between their own handedness and the hand used by the imagined person when the agent was seen from the back compared to when the agent was seen from the front. This result was explained as evidence of a greater involvement of motor areas in the back-view perspective, possibly indicating a greater proneness to put oneself in the agent's shoes in such a condition. In turn, the proneness to put oneself in another's shoes could also be considered as a cue of greater identification with the other, that is a form of empathy. If this is the case, the proportion of lateral matches vs mismatches should be different for subjects with high and low self-reported empathy. In the present study, we aimed at testing this hypothesis., Methodology/principal Findings: Participants were required to imagine a person performing a single manual action in a back view and to indicate the hand used by the imagined person during movement execution. Consistent with our hypothesis, the proportion of matching between the handedness of participants and the handedness of agents imagined was higher for participants scoring high in a self-report measure of empathy. Importantly, this relationship was specific for females., Conclusions/significance: At least for females, our data seem to corroborate the idea of a link between self-reported empathy and motor identification with imagined agents. This sex-specific result is consistent with neuroimaging studies indicating a stronger involvement of action representations during emotional and empathic processing in females than in males. In sum, our findings underline the possibility of employing behavioral research as a test-bed for theories deriving from functional studies suggesting a link between empathic processing and the activation of motor-related areas.
- Published
- 2011
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40. Effects of Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation on episodic memory related to emotional visual stimuli.
- Author
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Penolazzi B, Di Domenico A, Marzoli D, Mammarella N, Fairfield B, Franciotti R, Brancucci A, and Tommasi L
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Task Performance and Analysis, Time Factors, Brain physiology, Electric Stimulation methods, Emotions physiology, Mental Recall physiology, Photic Stimulation
- Abstract
The present study investigated emotional memory following bilateral transcranial electrical stimulation (direct current of 1 mA, for 20 minutes) over fronto-temporal cortical areas of healthy participants during the encoding of images that differed in affective arousal and valence. The main result was a significant interaction between the side of anodal stimulation and image emotional valence. Specifically, right anodal/left cathodal stimulation selectively facilitated the recall of pleasant images with respect to both unpleasant and neutral images whereas left anodal/right cathodal stimulation selectively facilitated the recall of unpleasant images with respect to both pleasant and neutral images. From a theoretical perspective, this double dissociation between the side of anodal stimulation and the advantage in the memory performance for a specific type of stimulus depending on its pleasantness supported the specific-valence hypothesis of emotional processes, which assumes a specialization of the right hemisphere in processing unpleasant stimuli and a specialization of the left hemisphere in processing pleasant stimuli. From a methodological point of view, first we found tDCS effects strictly dependent on the stimulus category, and second a pattern of results in line with an interfering and inhibitory account of anodal stimulation on memory performance. These findings need to be carefully considered in applied contexts, such as the rehabilitation of altered emotional processing or eye-witness memory, and deserve to be further investigated in order to understand their underlying mechanisms of action.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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41. Side biases in humans (Homo sapiens): three ecological studies on hemispheric asymmetries.
- Author
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Marzoli D and Tommasi L
- Subjects
- Adult, Animals, Auditory Perception, Behavior physiology, Behavior, Animal physiology, Bystander Effect physiology, Ear physiology, Female, Hearing physiology, Humans, Male, Music, Social Behavior, Speech, Speech Perception physiology, Young Adult, Brain physiology, Functional Laterality physiology
- Abstract
Hemispheric asymmetries and side biases have been studied in humans mostly in laboratory settings, and evidence obtained in naturalistic settings is scarce. We here report the results of three studies on human ear preference observed during social interactions in noisy environments, i.e., discotheques. In the first study, a spontaneous right-ear preference was observed during linguistic exchange between interacting individuals. This lateral bias was confirmed in a quasi-experimental study in which a confederate experimenter evoked an ear-orienting response in bystanders, under the pretext of approaching them with a whispered request. In the last study, subjects showed a greater proneness to meet an experimenter's request when it was directly addressed to the right rather than the left ear. Our findings are in agreement both with laboratory studies on hemispheric lateralization for language and approach/avoidance behavior in humans and with animal research. The present work is one of the few studies demonstrating the natural expression of hemispheric asymmetries, showing their effect in everyday human behavior.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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