78 results on '"Mazzarella E"'
Search Results
2. The endocannabinoid system in renal cells: regulation of Na+ transport by CB1 receptors through distinct cell signalling pathways
- Author
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Sampaio, L S, Da Silva, Taveira R, Lima, D, Sampaio, C L C, Iannotti, F A, Mazzarella, E, Di Marzo, V, Vieyra, A, Reis, R A M, and Einicker-Lamas, M
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Life and being. The twofold beginning of heidegger’s seinsfrage
- Author
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Mazzarella E. and Mazzarella, E.
- Subjects
Life ,Ontology ,Historicity ,Being ,Existence - Abstract
Heidegger has always stated that the distinctive feature of his ontology is the question of Being. But actually, the question with which Heidegger faces philosophy is by no means addressed to Being. It is addressed to “life”, i.e. to the connection, in life, of existence and history as a “living spirit”. It is this question that holds back the mature question on the being from resolving itself in a pure speculative scholasticism on Being and its history. It is this question that fecundates with the question of being the philosophically important nucleus: existential analytics; dialogue with poetry and the work of art; the great question about technique. In the thought that looks into Being in its character as an event, the theme that remains alive is that Being for us is ultimately the world we inhabit.
- Published
- 2020
4. 51. A novel algorithm (DirectDensity™) for reconstruction of simulation CT images used in radiotherapy treatment planning: dosimetric evaluation
- Author
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D’Alessio, A., primary, D’Ippolito, E., additional, Tenconi, C., additional, Giandini, T., additional, Meroni, S., additional, Cavallo, A., additional, Carrara, M., additional, Mongioj, V., additional, Stucchi, C.G., additional, Cosentino, V., additional, Mazzarella, E., additional, and Pignoli, E., additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Su Hegel e l'ebraismo
- Author
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Adinolfi, M., Bellantone, A., Benso, S., Bensussan, G., Cacciari, M., Cantillo, G., Carillo, G., Courtine, J. -. F., De Giovanni, B., Di Cesare, D., Di Tommaso, G., Donà, M., Duque, F., Esposito, R., Fabris, A., Ferrari, F., Forcellino, E., Forte, B., Gasparotti, R., Giorello, G., Goria, G., Lisciani-petrini, E., Mazzarella, E., Mirri, E., Moro, G., Petrarca, G., Rametta, G., Radaelli, E., Rocco Lonzano, V., Ronchi, R., Severino, E., Sini, C., Tagliapietra, A., Tarca, L. V., Tessitore, F., Tomatis, F., Trione, A., Valagussa, F., and Invrenizzi, C.
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antisemitismo ,religione ,ebraismo ,Hegel ,Hegel, religione, ebraismo, antisemitismo - Published
- 2017
6. La lampada di Vitiello. Sulla potenza e sul possibile
- Author
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Adinolfi, M., Bellantone, A., Bensussan, G., Cacciari, M., Cantillo, G., Courtine, J. -. F., Carill, G., De Giovanni, B., Di Cesare, D., Di Tommaso, G., Donà, M., Duque, F., Fabris, A., Forcellino, E., Forte, B., Gasparotti, R., Giorello, G., Goria, G., LISCIANI PETRINI, Enrica, Mazzarella, E., Mirri, E., Moro, G., Petrarca, G., Rametta, G., Redaelli, E., Lozano, V., Ronchi, R., Severino, E., Sini, C., Tagliapietra, A., Tarca, L., Tessitore, F., Tomatis, F., Trione, A., Valagussa, F., and Invernizz, C.
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potenza, possibile, megarici, Parmenide, Severino, Aristotele, possest, Cusano ,potenza ,possibile ,Cusano ,Severino ,Parmenide ,megarici ,Aristotele ,possest - Published
- 2017
7. EP-1785: use of rectal tube in vaginal cuff HDR-brachytherapy: an unexpected advantage
- Author
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Cerrotta, A., primary, Tenconi, C., additional, Pappalardi, B., additional, Giandini, T., additional, Naimo, S., additional, Mazzeo, D., additional, Mazzarella, E., additional, Grisotto, S., additional, Borroni, M., additional, Fallai, C., additional, and Carrara, M., additional
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. L‘influenza dello sguardo e dell’azione altrui nella codifica di posizioni spaziali
- Author
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Mazzarella E, Mastromauro B, CONSON, Massimiliano, Mazzarella, E, Mastromauro, B, and Conson, Massimiliano
- Published
- 2009
9. EP-1990: Comparison of dose optimisation methods for vaginal HDR brachytherapy with multichannel applicators
- Author
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Cusumano, D., primary, Carrara, M., additional, Borroni, M., additional, Tenconi, C., additional, Grisotto, S., additional, Mazzarella, E., additional, Cerrotta, A., additional, Pappalardi, B., additional, Fallai, C., additional, and Pignoli, E., additional
- Published
- 2016
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10. Project of an automatic system for traditional radiology equipments and image detectors quality controls
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Grisotto, S., primary, Mazzarella, E., additional, Borroni, M., additional, Greco, F.G., additional, Pignoli, E., additional, and Marchianò, A., additional
- Published
- 2016
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- View/download PDF
11. Retrospective dose evaluation in adults undergoing recurring CT examinations: Last five years experience in our institution
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Grisotto, S., primary, Mazzarella, E., additional, Borroni, M., additional, Gallo, R., additional, Greco, F.G., additional, Pignoli, E., additional, and Marchianò, A., additional
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. The endocannabinoid system in renal cells: regulation of Na+transport by CB1receptors through distinct cell signalling pathways
- Author
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Sampaio, L S, primary, Taveira Da Silva, R, additional, Lima, D, additional, Sampaio, C L C, additional, Iannotti, F A, additional, Mazzarella, E, additional, Di Marzo, V, additional, Vieyra, A, additional, Reis, R A M, additional, and Einicker-Lamas, M, additional
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. The endocannabinoid system in renal cell: Regulation of Na+ transport by CB1receptors through distinct cell signaling pathways
- Author
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Sampaio, L S, primary, Taveira da Silva, R, additional, Lima, D, additional, Sampaio, C L C, additional, Iannotti, F A, additional, Mazzarella, E, additional, Di Marzo, V, additional, Vieyra, A, additional, Reis, R A M, additional, and Einicker-Lamas, M, additional
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. B.268 - Project of an automatic system for traditional radiology equipments and image detectors quality controls
- Author
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Grisotto, S., Mazzarella, E., Borroni, M., Greco, F.G., Pignoli, E., and Marchianò, A.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. B.267 - Retrospective dose evaluation in adults undergoing recurring CT examinations: Last five years experience in our institution
- Author
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Grisotto, S., Mazzarella, E., Borroni, M., Gallo, R., Greco, F.G., Pignoli, E., and Marchianò, A.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Developmental trajectories of mental rotation abilities across adolescence
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Conson, M., primary, Mazzarella, E., additional, and Trojano, L., additional
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- 2011
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17. The endocannabinoid system in renal cells: regulation of Na+ transport by CB1 receptors through distinct cell signalling pathways.
- Author
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Sampaio, L S, Taveira Da Silva, R, Lima, D, Sampaio, C L C, Iannotti, F A, Mazzarella, E, Di Marzo, V, Vieyra, A, Reis, R A M, and Einicker ‐ Lamas, M
- Subjects
KIDNEY physiology ,CANNABINOIDS ,SODIUM ions ,CELL communication ,ADENOSINE triphosphatase ,IMMUNOMODULATORS - Abstract
Background and Purpose The function of the endocannabinoid system ( ECS) in renal tissue is not completely understood. Kidney function is closely related to ion reabsorption in the proximal tubule, the nephron segment responsible for the re-absorption of 70-80% of the filtrate. We studied the effect of compounds modulating the activity of cannabinoid ( CB) receptors on the active re-absorption of Na
+ in LLC- PK1 cells. Experimental Approach Changes in Na+ / K+ -ATPase activity were assessed after treatment with WIN55,212-2 ( WIN), a non-selective lipid agonist, and haemopressin ( HP), an inverse peptide agonist at CB1 receptors. Pharmacological tools were used to investigate the signalling pathways involved in the modulation of Na+ transport. Key Results In addition to CB1 and CB2 receptors and TRPV1 channels, the mRNAs encoding for enzymes of the ECS were also expressed in LLC- PK1. WIN (10−7 M) and HP (10−6 M) altered Na+ re-absorption in LLC- PK1 in a dual manner. They both acutely (after 1 min) increased Na+ / K+ - ATPase activity in a TRPV1 antagonist-sensitive way. WIN's stimulating effect persisted for 30 min, and this effect was partially blocked by a CB1 antagonist or a PKC inhibitor. In contrast, HP inhibited Na+ / K+ - ATPase after 30 min incubation, and this effect was attenuated by a CB1 antagonist or a PKA inhibitor. Conclusion and Implications The ECS is expressed in LLC- PK1 cells. Both CB1 receptors and TRPV1 channels regulate Na+ / K+ - ATPase activity in these cells, and are modulated by lipid and peptide CB1 receptor ligands, which act via different signalling pathways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. The Seismicity in the Southern Tyrrhenian Area and its Neural Forecasting
- Author
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Falco, I. De, primary, Iazzetta, A., additional, and Luongo, A. Mazzarella, E. Tarantino, G., additional
- Published
- 2000
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- View/download PDF
19. 51. A novel algorithm (DirectDensity™) for reconstruction of simulation CT images used in radiotherapy treatment planning: dosimetric evaluation.
- Author
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D'Alessio, A., D'Ippolito, E., Tenconi, C., Giandini, T., Meroni, S., Cavallo, A., Carrara, M., Mongioj, V., Stucchi, C.G., Cosentino, V., Mazzarella, E., and Pignoli, E.
- Abstract
Purpose CT imaging in radiotherapy represents the standard for treatment planning. The calculation of dose distribution requires appropriate energy-dependent calibration curves to convert Hounsfield Units (HU) into electronic densities relative to water (rEDs). To obtain optimal image quality and reduce dose, it could be useful to modulate X-ray tube potential based on patient size, but in radiotherapy treatment planning this practice requires the use of several calibration curves. A novel algorithm (DirectDensity™, DD™ recently developed by Siemens Healthcare, uses CT projection data to reconstruct images directly proportional to rEDs, independently of kVp used, thus removing the need of different curves. The purpose of the study is to evaluate this algorithm for clinical use. Methods The CIRS Density Phantom with different tissue equivalent inserts was scanned at 70, 80, 100, 120 and 140 kVp with the new Siemens Confidence CT scanner. Images were reconstructed with the DD™ algorithm to assess the correspondence of rEDs obtained from imaging with those certified. Afterwards the images of 7 patients scanned at 120 kVp were reconstructed with standard filtered backprojection (FBP) and DD™ algorithm. Treatment plans were calculated on both FBP and DD™ images by using standard HU-rEDs curve and linear CTvalue-rEDs relationship respectively (Fig. 1). Dose differences were evaluated through γ -analysis (1 mm, 1%). Results The rEDs measured from images (by reversing the linear relationship between CTvalue and rED) in regions corresponding to phantom inserts were compared to certified rEDs: differences were reported in Table 1. Minimal dosimetric differences were found between treatment plans calculated on both FBP and DD™ images. DVHs showed differences in Dmean, D98, D2 and V95 for PTVs and OARs smaller than 1%. γ -analysis indicated negligible differences between dose distributions, with lowest passing rate at 97%. Conclusions This study proved the equivalence between DD™ and FBP, including the possibility to modulate kVp during CT acquisition, thus reducing patient dose without complicating treatment planning workflow. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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20. Effectiveness and tolerability of tapentadol PR in the management of vertebral fracture pain due to bone fragility
- Author
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Elsa Mazzarella, Antonio Del Puente, Alfonso Oriente, Oriente, A., Mazzarella, E., and Del Puente, A.
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business.industry ,Osteoporosi ,Pain ,Bone fragility ,Tapentadol ,Tolerability ,Anesthesia ,Medicine ,Fracture pain ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Surgery ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background: Fragility fractures are frequent complications of osteoporosis and are associated with acute pain that very often evolves into chronic pain. MetHOdS: this prospective, open-label, single-center, observational study evaluated effectiveness and tolerability of tapentadol prolonged release and assessed the association of tapentadol treatment with sleep quality, physical well-being, patient satisfaction and quality of life in patients with pain after vertebral fracture due to bone fragility. RESULTS: Among 35 patients, a total of 29 (83%) achieved a ≥30% reduction of pain intensity and 13 (37%) patients showed a reduction of the pain on movement and at rest ≥50% after 180 days of treatment. A total of 24 adverse events occurred in 16 patients (46%), 15 of them were mild and nine were moderate, the most frequent events were headache and sleepiness. Sleep quality, physical well-being, Brief pain inventory Questionnaire scores and SF12 Questionnaire scores significantly improved (P
- Published
- 2021
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21. Apprendere ad abitare il mondo. Riflessioni pedagogiche e filosofiche sulla consegna educativa
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Antonio Bellingreri, Agnello, C, Caldarone, R, Cicatello, A, Lupo, RM, Palumbo, G, Ardovino, A, Camera, F, Carapezza, M, Cavalleri, M, Chiereghin, F, Chiurazzi, G, Cortella, L, Costa, V, D'Addelfio, G, Di Martino, C, Duque, F, Galanti Grollo, S, Gembillo, G, Guglielminetti, E, Gulli, M, Illetterati, L, La Mantia, F, Lanfredini, R, Mazzarella, E, Nobile, M, Roccaro, G, Rodriguez, R, Russino, G, Vanzago, L, Venturelli, D, Vergani, M, Vitiello, V, Auteri, L, Ciancio, C, Colonnello, P, Di Stefano, E, Lo Piparo, F, Naro, M, Pepi, L, Picone, G, Rosciglione, C, Rostagno, S, and Antonio Bellingreri
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education ontology, in-depth analysis of the experience, a fundamental pedagogy, the consignment of a meaning heritage, the self-realization, a philosophy of education ,Settore M-PED/01 - Pedagogia Generale E Sociale - Abstract
The text draws the lines of an education ontology, according to progressive levels of in-depth analysis of the experience. The first one is proper of the fundamental pedagogy and sets up its central category: the educative relationship is consignment of a meaning heritage to self-realization. The second one is proper of the philosophy of education, whose purpose is justifying a more original consignment, beyond its ethos, to the history and the being. As a matter of fact, both the immanence in the history and the conscience of a correlated transcendence are constitutive of the consignment. This is a further level and the task becomes foundational: what is not explained within the experience and the spontaneous and scientific knowledge is cleared, so that you can reach certainties that are founded in a profound way. If you do not justify rationally, ideas and ideals tend to deteriorate into ideologies.
- Published
- 2020
22. Ricerca della verità e crescita interiore. Il percoros letterario e umano di Christoph Martin Wieland (Biberach 1733-Weimar 1813)
- Author
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auteri, laura, Agnello, C, Caldarone, R, Cicatello, A, Lupo RM, Palumbo, G, Ardovino, A, Bellingreri, A, Camera F, Carapoezza, M, Cavalleri, M, Chiereghin F, Chiurazzi, G, Cortella, L, Costa, V, D'Addelgio, G, Di Martino, C, Duque, F, Galanti Grollo, S, Gembillo, G, Guglielminetti, E, Gulli, M, Illetterati, L, La Mantia, F, Lanfredini, R, Mazzarella, E, Nobile, M, Roccaro, G, Rodrìguez, R, Russini, G, Vanzago, L, Venturelli, D, Vergani, M, Vitiello, V, Ciancio, C, Colonnello, P, Di Stefano, E, Lo Piparo, F, Naro, M, Pepi, L, Picone, G, Rosciglione, C, Rosragno, S, and auteri, laura
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Settore L-LIN/13 - Letteratura Tedesca ,Dibattito filosofico e pedagogico nel 700 di lingua tedesca ,la posizione di Ch.M. Wieland ,ricerca della verità - Abstract
Il saggio esplora la posizione di Ch. M. Wieland all'interno del dibattito filosofico-pedagogico del 700 di lingua tedesca, sia per quanto attiene alla conoscenza sia per quanto attiene alla possibilità di crescita e di formazione dell'individuo. Ci si propone di evidenziare come l'autore nel corso del tempoo rimanga sostanzialmente fedele alla convinzione che ci si debba aprire al confronto con gli altri, e che socraticamente si debba partire dalla conoscenza di sé per intraprendere qualsiasi percorso formativo
- Published
- 2020
23. Pascal e la critica del dominio
- Author
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Affronti, F., Agnello, C, Caldarone, R, Cicatello, A, Lupo, RM, Palumbo, G, Affronti, F, Alvira, R, Borutti, S, Canullo, C, Cislaghi, A, Dalmasso, G, Danani, C, Di Piazza, S, Fabris, A, Ferrarin, A, Ferretti, G, Koch, AF, Labate S, Le Moli, A, Licata, G, Magris, A, Mancini, R, Mancini, S, Marcolungo, FL, Nicolaci, G, Paltrinieri, GL, Palumbo, P, Perone, U, Piazza, F, Pugliese, A, Resta, C, Sesta, L, Stadtler, M, Tedesco, S, Totaro, F, Valori, F, Vercellone, F, Vigna, C, Ardovino, A, Bellingreri, A, Camera, F, Carapezza, M, Cavalleri, M, Chiereghin, F, Chiurazzi, G, Cortella, L, Costa, V, D'Addelfio, G, Di Martino, C, Duque, F, Galanti Grollo, S, Gembillo, G, Guglielminetti, E, Gulli, M, Illetterati, L, La Mantia, F, Lanfredini, R, Mazzarella, E, Nobile, M, Roccaro, G, Rodriguez, R, Russino, G, Vanzago, L, Venturelli, D, Vergani, M, Vitiello, V, Auteri, L, Ciancio, C, Colonnello, P, Di Stefano, E, Lo Piparo, F, Naro, M, Pepi, L, Picone, G, Rosciglione, C, Rostagno, S, and Affronti, F.
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Settore M-FIL/01 - Filosofia Teoretica ,Pascal, knowledge, thought, truth, domination, intuition, geometry, science, charity - Abstract
The article aims to show the critique of domination and power by means of some texts by Blaise Pascal. The topic focuses on cognitive activity and the faculty of knowledge.
- Published
- 2020
24. Metafisica e poesia
- Author
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Caldarone, R., Agnello, C, Caldarone, R, Cicatello, A, Lupo RM, Palumbo, G., Affronti, F, Alvira, R, Borutti, S, Canullo, C, Cislaghi, A, Dalmasso, G, Danani, C, Di Piazza, S, Fabris, A, Ferrarin, A, Ferretti, G, Koch, AF, Labate, S, Le Moli, A, Licata, G, Magris, A, Mancini, R, Mancini, S, Marcolungo FL, Nicolaci, G, Paltrinieri GL, Palumbo, G, Palumbo, P, Perone, U, Piazza, F, Pugliese, A, Resta, C, Sesta, L, Stadtler, M, Tedesco, S, Totaro, F, Valori, F, Vercellone, F, Vigna, C, Ardovino, A, Bellingreri, A, Camera, F, Carapezza, M, Cavalleri, M, Chiereghin, F, Chiurazzi, G, Cortella, L, Costa, V, D'Addelfio, G, Di Martino, C, Duque, F, Galanti Grillo, S, Gembillo, G, Guglielminetti, E, Gulli, M, Illetterati, L, La Mantia, F, Lanfredini, R, Mazzarella, E, Nobile, M, Roccaro, G, Rodriguez, R, Russino, G, Vanzago, L, Venturelli, D, Vergani, M, Vitiello, V, Auteri, L, Ciancio, C, Colonnello, P, Di Stefano, E, Lo Piparo, F, Caro, M, Pepi, L, Picone, G, Rosciglione, C, Rostagno, S., and Caldarone, R.
- Subjects
Metaphysic ,Aristotle ,philosophy ,Settore M-FIL/01 - Filosofia Teoretica ,Celan ,poetry ,Plato - Abstract
The essay shows, between autobiography and theoretical reflection, the link between metaphysics and poetry in the reflection of the philosopher Leonardo Samonà. The author uses the concept of "retraction" to cross both the vision of Samonà's metaphysics and the vision of poetry.
- Published
- 2020
25. Brain systems for visual perspective taking and action perception
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Antonia F. de C. Hamilton, Elisabetta Mazzarella, Richard Ramsey, Massimiliano Conson, Mazzarella, E, Ramsey, R, Conson, Massimiliano, and Hamilton, A.
- Subjects
genetic structures ,Social Psychology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,education ,Theory of Mind ,Development ,Brain mapping ,Judgment ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Motor imagery ,Social cognition ,Orientation (mental) ,Perception ,Theory of mind ,medicine ,Humans ,health care economics and organizations ,media_common ,Brain Mapping ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Brain ,social sciences ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Action (philosophy) ,behavior and behavior mechanisms ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Taking another person's viewpoint and making sense of their actions are key processes that guide social behavior. Previous neuroimaging investigations have largely studied these processes separately. The current study used functional magnetic resonance imaging to examine how the brain incorporates another person's viewpoint and actions into visual perspective judgments. Participants made a left-right judgment about the location of a target object from their own (egocentric) or an actor's visual perspective (altercentric). Actor location varied around a table and the actor was either reaching or not reaching for the target object. Analyses examined brain regions engaged in the egocentric and altercentric tasks, brain regions where response magnitude tracked the orientation of the actor in the scene and brain regions sensitive to the action performed by the actor. The blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) response in dorsomedial prefrontal cortex (dmPFC) was sensitive to actor orientation in the altercentric task, whereas the response in right inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) was sensitive to actor orientation in the egocentric task. Thus, dmPFC and right IFG may play distinct but complementary roles in visual perspective taking (VPT). Observation of a reaching actor compared to a non-reaching actor yielded activation in lateral occipitotemporal cortex, regardless of task, showing that these regions are sensitive to body posture independent of social context. By considering how an observed actor's location and action influence the neural bases of visual perspective judgments, the current study supports the view that multiple neurocognitive "routes" operate during VPT.
- Published
- 2013
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26. 'Sotto l'ombra di Cicerone'. Vico oltre la mathesis universalis
- Author
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Giuseppe Moro, M. Adinolfi, A. Bellantone, S. Benso, G. Bensussan, M. Cacciari, G. Cantillo, G. Carillo, J.-F. Courtine, B. de Giovanni, D. Di Cesare, G. Di Tommaso, M. Donà, F. Duque, R. Esposito, A. Fabris, F. Ferrari, E. Forcellino, B. Forte, R. Gasparotti, G. Giorello, G. Goria, E. Lisciani-Petrini, N. Magliulo, E. Mazzarella, E. Mirri, G. Moro, G. Petrarca, G. Rametta, E. Redaelli, V. Rocco Lozano, R. Ronchi, E. Severino, C. Sini, A. Tagliapietra, L. V. Tarca, F. Tessitore, F. Tomatis, A. Trione, F. Valagussa, C. Invernizzi., Massimo Adinolfi Massimo Donà, and Moro, Giuseppe
- Subjects
Vico Cicerone Vitiello eloquenza linguaggio - Published
- 2017
27. Developmental changes of the biomechanical effect in motor imagery
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Luigi Trojano, Elisabetta Mazzarella, Massimiliano Conson, Conson, Massimiliano, Mazzarella, E, and Trojano, Luigi
- Subjects
Male ,Adolescent ,Rotation ,Movement ,Early adolescence ,Motor Activity ,Affect (psychology) ,Mental rotation ,Developmental psychology ,Cognition ,Motor imagery ,Orientation ,Reaction Time ,Cognitive development ,Humans ,Child ,Hand laterality ,General Neuroscience ,Adolescent Development ,Late adolescence ,Biomechanical Phenomena ,Imagination ,Early adolescents ,Female ,Psychology ,Psychomotor Performance ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Motor imagery has been investigated in childhood and early adolescence, but not across adolescence stages; moreover, available evidence did not clarify whether the involvement of motor information in mental rotation of body parts becomes stronger or weaker during development. In the present study, we employed the hand laterality task to assess motor imagery in ninety-seven typically developing adolescents divided into three age groups (i.e., 11-12, 14-15, and 17-18 years); mental rotation of objects and letters were also assessed. As a specific marker of the motor involvement in mental rotation of body parts, we assessed the so-called biomechanical effect, that is, the advantage for judging hand pictures showing physically comfortable positions with respect to hand pictures showing physically impossible or awkward positions. Results demonstrated that the biomechanical effect did not significantly affect early adolescents' performance, whereas it became significant in 14- to 15-year-old participants and even more stronger in 17- to 18-year-old participants; this pattern did not depend on an increase in processing speed to mentally rotate both corporeal and non-corporeal (objects and letters) stimuli. The present findings demonstrated that: (1) motor imagery undergoes a continuous and progressive refinement throughout adolescence, and (2) full exploitation of motor information to mentally transform corporeal stimuli can be attained in late adolescence only.
- Published
- 2013
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28. Observation of another's action but not eye gaze triggers allocentric visual perspective
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Massimiliano Conson, Bianca Mastromauro, Antonia F. de C. Hamilton, Luigi Trojano, Elisabetta Mazzarella, Mazzarella, E, Hamilton, A, Trojano, Luigi, Mastromauro, B, and Conson, Massimiliano
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Physiology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Observation ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Fixation, Ocular ,Intraparietal sulcus ,Young Adult ,Ocular physiology ,Physiology (medical) ,Perception ,Reaction Time ,Humans ,Attention ,General Psychology ,media_common ,Analysis of Variance ,Cognition ,General Medicine ,Hand ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Action (philosophy) ,Action observation ,Fixation (visual) ,Visual Perception ,Eye tracking ,Female ,Cues ,Psychology ,Photic Stimulation ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
In the present paper, we investigated whether observation of bodily cues—that is, hand action and eye gaze—can modulate the onlooker's visual perspective taking. Participants were presented with scenes of an actor gazing at an object (or straight ahead) and grasping an object (or not) in a 2 × 2 factorial design and a control condition with no actor in the scene. In Experiment 1, two groups of subjects were explicitly required to judge the left/right location of the target from their own (egocentric group) or the actor's (allocentric group) point of view, whereas in Experiment 2 participants did not receive any instruction on the point of view to assume. In both experiments, allocentric coding (i.e., the actor's point of view) was triggered when the actor grasped the target, but not when he gazed towards it, or when he adopted a neutral posture. In Experiment 3, we demonstrate that the actor's gaze but not action affected participants' attention orienting. The different effects of others' grasping and eye gaze on observers' behaviour demonstrated that specific bodily cues convey distinctive information about other people's intentions.
- Published
- 2012
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29. Judging hand laterality from my or your point of view: Interactions between motor imagery and visual perspective
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Massimiliano Conson, Luigi Trojano, Elisabetta Mazzarella, Carmela Donnarumma, Conson, Massimiliano, Mazzarella, E, Donnarumma, C, and Trojano, Luigi
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Person present ,Movement ,Mental transformation ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Functional Laterality ,Silhouette ,Judgment ,Discrimination, Psychological ,Motor imagery ,Orientation ,Body Image ,Reaction Time ,Humans ,Communication ,Hand laterality ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,Perspective (graphical) ,Hand ,Pattern Recognition, Visual ,Laterality ,Female ,Psychology ,business ,Photic Stimulation ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Motor imagery tasks (hand laterality judgment) are usually performed with respect to a self-body (egocentric) representation, but manipulations of stimulus features (hand orientation) can induce a shift to other's body (allocentric) reference frame. Visual perspective taking tasks are also performed in self-body perspective but a shift to an allocentric frame can be triggered by manipulations of context features (e.g., another person present in the to-be-judged scene). Combining hand laterality task and visual perspective taking, we demonstrated that both stimulus and context features can modulate motor imagery performance. In Experiment 1, participants judged laterality of a hand embedded in a human or non-human silhouette. Results showed that observing a human silhouette interfered with judgments on “egocentric hand stimuli” (right hand, fingers up). In Experiment 2, participants were explicitly required to judge laterality of a hand embedded in a human silhouette from their own (egocentric group) or from the silhouette's perspective (allocentric group). Consistent with previous results, the egocentric group was significantly faster than the allocentric group in judging fingers-up right hand stimuli. These findings showed that concurrent activation of egocentric and allocentric frames during mental transformation of body parts impairs participants’ performance due to a conflict between motor and visual mechanisms.
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- 2012
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30. Transcranial Electrical Stimulation over Dorsolateral Prefrontal Cortex Modulates Processing of Social Cognitive and Affective Information
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Marianna Giordano, Luigi Trojano, Domenico Errico, Dario Grossi, Elisabetta Mazzarella, Massimiliano Conson, Conson, Massimiliano, Errico, D, Mazzarella, E, Giordano, M, Grossi, Dario, and Trojano, Luigi
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Visual perception ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Decision Making ,Emotions ,Prefrontal Cortex ,lcsh:Medicine ,Audiology ,Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation ,Young Adult ,Cognition ,Social cognition ,Reaction Time ,medicine ,Humans ,Interpersonal Relations ,lcsh:Science ,Prefrontal cortex ,Facial expression ,Cross-Over Studies ,Multidisciplinary ,Transcranial direct-current stimulation ,lcsh:R ,Neuropsychology ,Dorsolateral prefrontal cortex ,Inhibition, Psychological ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Visual Perception ,Female ,lcsh:Q ,Psychology ,Research Article - Abstract
Recent neurofunctional studies suggested that lateral prefrontal cortex is a domain-general cognitive control area modulating computation of social information. Neuropsychological evidence reported dissociations between cognitive and affective components of social cognition. Here, we tested whether performance on social cognitive and affective tasks can be modulated by transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) over dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC). To this aim, we compared the effects of tDCS on explicit recognition of emotional facial expressions (affective task), and on one cognitive task assessing the ability to adopt another person’s visual perspective. In a randomized, cross-over design, male and female healthy participants performed the two experimental tasks after bi-hemispheric tDCS (sham, left anodal/right cathodal, and right anodal/left cathodal) applied over DLPFC. Results showed that only in male participants explicit recognition of fearful facial expressions was significantly faster after anodal right/cathodal left stimulation with respect to anodal left/cathodal right and sham stimulations. In the visual perspective taking task, instead, anodal right/cathodal left stimulation negatively affected both male and female participants’ tendency to adopt another’s point of view. These findings demonstrated that concurrent facilitation of right and inhibition of left lateral prefrontal cortex can speed-up males’ responses to threatening faces whereas it interferes with the ability to adopt another’s viewpoint independently from gender. Thus, stimulation of cognitive control areas can lead to different effects on social cognitive skills depending on the affective vs. cognitive nature of the task, and on the gender-related differences in neural organization of emotion processing.
- Published
- 2015
31. Impact of body posture on laterality judgement and explicit recognition tasks performed on self and others' hands
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Massimiliano Conson, Domenico Errico, Dario Grossi, Francesco De Bellis, Elisabetta Mazzarella, Luigi Trojano, Conson, Massimiliano, Errico, D., Mazzarella, E., De Bellis, F., Grossi, Dario, and Trojano, Luigi
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Adult ,Male ,Posture ,Judgement ,Functional Laterality ,Judgment ,Young Adult ,Orientation (mental) ,Reaction Time ,Humans ,Body Representation ,Analysis of Variance ,Communication ,Proprioception ,Body posture ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,Recognition, Psychology ,Hand ,Self Concept ,Control posture ,Task (computing) ,Touch ,Laterality ,Female ,Psychology ,business ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Judgments on laterality of hand stimuli are faster and more accurate when dealing with one's own than others' hand, i.e. the self-advantage. This advantage seems to be related to activation of a sensorimotor mechanism while implicitly processing one's own hands, but not during explicit one's own hand recognition. Here, we specifically tested the influence of proprioceptive information on the self-hand advantage by manipulating participants' body posture during self and others' hand processing. In Experiment 1, right-handed healthy participants judged laterality of either self or others' hands, whereas in Experiment 2, an explicit recognition of one's own hands was required. In both experiments, the participants performed the task while holding their left or right arm flexed with their hand in direct contact with their chest ("flexed self-touch posture") or with their hand placed on a wooden smooth surface in correspondence with their chest ("flexed proprioceptive-only posture"). In an "extended control posture", both arms were extended and in contact with thighs. In Experiment 1 (hand laterality judgment), we confirmed the self-advantage and demonstrated that it was enhanced when the subjects judged left-hand stimuli at 270° orientation while keeping their left arm in the flexed proprioceptive-only posture. In Experiment 2 (explicit self-hand recognition), instead, we found an advantage for others' hand ("self-disadvantage") independently from posture manipulation. Thus, position-related proprioceptive information from left non-dominant arm can enhance sensorimotor one's own body representation selectively favouring implicit self-hands processing.
- Published
- 2015
32. The endocannabinoid 2-AG controls skeletal muscle cell differentiation via CB1 receptor-dependent inhibition of Kv7 channels
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Tamás Bíró, Daniela Calvigioni, Vincenzo Di Marzo, Gabriella Czifra, Paolo Ambrosino, Fabio Arturo Iannotti, Fabiana Piscitelli, Enrico Mazzarella, Tibor Harkany, Andrea Martella, Cristoforo Silvestri, Maurizio Taglialatela, Stefania Petrosino, Iannotti, Fa, Silvestri, C, Mazzarella, E, Martella, A, Calvigioni, D, Piscitelli, F, Ambrosino, P, Petrosino, S, Czifra, G, Bíró, T, Harkany, T, Taglialatela, Maurizio, and Di Marzo, V.
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Cannabinoid receptor ,Inositol Phosphates ,Myoblasts, Skeletal ,Cellular differentiation ,Muscle Fibers, Skeletal ,Arachidonic Acids ,CHO Cells ,Biology ,Muscle Development ,Transfection ,Glycerides ,Receptor, Cannabinoid, CB2 ,Mice ,Cricetulus ,Skeletal muscle cell differentiation ,Receptor, Cannabinoid, CB1 ,Cricetinae ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Myocyte ,Gene Silencing ,Elméleti orvostudományok ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Cell Proliferation ,Multidisciplinary ,KCNQ Potassium Channels ,Myogenesis ,musculoskeletal, neural, and ocular physiology ,Cell Differentiation ,Orvostudományok ,Endocannabinoid system ,Endocrinology ,PNAS Plus ,nervous system ,Silicone Elastomers ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,Signal transduction ,C2C12 ,psychological phenomena and processes ,Endocannabinoids ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Little is known of the involvement of endocannabinoids and cannabinoid receptors in skeletal muscle cell differentiation. We report that, due to changes in the expression of genes involved in its metabolism, the levels of the endocannabinoid 2-arachidonoylglycerol (2-AG) are decreased both during myotube formation in vitro from murine C2C12 myoblasts and during mouse muscle growth in vivo. The endocannabinoid, as well as the CB1 agonist arachidonoyl-2-chloroethylamide, prevent myotube formation in a manner antagonized by CB1 knockdown and by CB1 antagonists, which, per se, instead stimulate differentiation. Importantly, 2-AG also inhibits differentiation of primary human satellite cells. Muscle fascicles from CB1 knockout embryos contain more muscle fibers, and postnatal mice show muscle fibers of an increased diameter relative to wild-type littermates. Inhibition of Kv7.4 channel activity, which plays a permissive role in myogenesis and depends on phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2), underlies the effects of 2-AG. We find that CB1 stimulation reduces both total and Kv7.4-bound PIP2 levels in C2C12 cells and inhibits Kv7.4 currents in transfected CHO cells. We suggest that 2-AG is an endogenous repressor of myoblast differentiation via CB1-mediated inhibition of Kv7.4 channels.
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- 2014
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33. The role of embodied simulation in mental transformation of whole-body images: Evidence from Parkinson's disease
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Gabriella Santangelo, Massimiliano Conson, Elisabetta Mazzarella, Paolo Barone, Carmine Vitale, Roberto Allocca, Dario Grossi, Luigi Trojano, Conson, Massimiliano, Trojano, Luigi, Vitale, C, Mazzarella, E, Allocca, R, Barone, P, Grossi, Dario, and Santangelo, Gabriella
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Adult ,Male ,Parkinson's disease ,Rotation ,Action simulation ,Embodied cognition ,Mental rotation ,Mental transformation ,Motor imagery ,Aged ,Body Image ,Confusion ,Discrimination (Psychology) ,Female ,Functional Laterality ,Humans ,Imagination ,Middle Aged ,Orientation ,Parkinson Disease ,Pattern Recognition, Visual ,Problem Solving ,Reference Values ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Biophysics ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Pattern Recognition ,Discrimination, Psychological ,Orientation (mental) ,medicine ,Parkinson’s disease ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Action (philosophy) ,Psychology ,Whole body ,Visual ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
It has been repeatedly demonstrated that mentally performing an action and mentally transforming body-parts entail simulation of one's own body movements, consistent with predictions of embodied cognition theories. However, the involvement of embodied simulation in mental transformation of whole-body images is still disputed. Here, we assessed own body transformation in Parkinson's disease (PD) patients with symptoms most affecting the left or the right body side. PD patients were required to perform left-right judgments on front-facing or back-facing human figures, and a letter rotation task. Results demonstrated that PD patients were selectively impaired in judging the side of back-facing human figures corresponding to their own most affected side, but performed as well as healthy subjects on mental transformation of front-facing bodies and on letter rotation. These findings demonstrate a parallel impairment between motor and mental simulation mechanisms in PD patients, thus highlighting the specific contribution of embodied cognition to mental transformation of whole-body images.
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- 2014
34. Analysis of the 'endocannabinoidome' in peripheral tissues of obese Zucker rats
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Fabiana Piscitelli, Fabio Arturo Iannotti, Marco Allarà, Vittoria Palmieri, Andrea Martella, Raffaele Capasso, V. Di Marzo, Cosimo Parrella, Enrico Mazzarella, Iannotti, Fa, Piscitelli, F, Martella, A, Mazzarella, E, Allarà, M, Palmieri, V, Parrella, C, Capasso, Raffaele, and Di Marzo, V.
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cannabinoid receptor ,Polyunsaturated Alkamides ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Blotting, Western ,Endogeny ,Oleic Acids ,Arachidonic Acids ,Palmitic Acids ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Glycerides ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Western blot ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Large intestine ,Obesity ,Receptor ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Cell Biology ,Anandamide ,Endocannabinoid system ,Amides ,Small intestine ,Rats ,Rats, Zucker ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Ethanolamines ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,Chromatography, Liquid ,Endocannabinoids - Abstract
The endocannabinoid system (ECS) represents one of the major determinants of metabolic disorders. We investigated potential changes in the endogenous levels of anandamide (AEA), 2-arachidonoylglycerol (2-AG), N -oleoylethanolamine (OEA) and N -palmitoylethanolamine (PEA) in some peripheral organs and tissues of obese Zucker fa/fa and lean Zucker fa/+ rats by qPCR, liquid chromatography mass spectrometry, western blot and enzymatic activity assays. At 10–12 weeks of age AEA levels were significantly lower in BAT, small intestine and heart and higher in soleus of Zucker fa/fa rats. In this tissue, also the expression of CB1 receptors was higher. By contrast in Zucker fa/fa rats, 2-AG levels were changed (and lower) solely in the small and large intestine. Finally, in Zucker fa/fa , PEA levels were unchanged, whereas OEA was slightly lower in BAT, and higher in the large intestine. Interestingly, these differences were accompanied by differential alterations of the genes regulating ECS tone. In conclusion, the levels of endocannabinoids are altered during obesity in a way partly correlating with changes of the genes related to their metabolism and activity.
- Published
- 2012
35. Self-touch affects motor imagery: a study on posture interference effect
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Massimiliano Conson, Elisabetta Mazzarella, Luigi Trojano, Conson, Massimiliano, Mazzarella, E, and Trojano, Luigi
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Movement ,Posture ,Perceptual Masking ,Sensory system ,Functional Laterality ,Mental rotation ,Young Adult ,Motor imagery ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Feedback, Sensory ,Body Image ,medicine ,Humans ,Communication ,Proprioception ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,Neutral spine ,Touch Perception ,Body schema ,Arm ,Imagination ,Female ,business ,Psychology ,Psychomotor Performance - Abstract
Several studies showed that mental rotation of body parts is interfered with by manipulation of the subjects' posture. However, the experimental manipulations in such studies, e.g., to hold one arm flexed on one's own chest, activated not only proprioceptive but also self-tactile information. Here, we tested the hypothesis that the combination of self-touch and proprioception is more effective than proprioception alone in interfering with motor imagery. In Experiment 1 right- and left-handers were required to perform the hand laterality task, while holding one arm (right or left) flexed with the hand in direct contact with their chest (self-touch condition, STC) or with the hand placed on a wooden smooth surface in correspondence with their chest (no self-touch condition, NoSTC); in a third neutral condition, subjects kept both arms extended (neutral posture condition, NPC). Right-handers were slower when judging hand laterality in STC with respect to NoSTC and NPC, particularly when the sensory manipulation involved their dominant arm. No posture-related effect was observed in left-handers. In Experiment 2, by applying the same sensory manipulations as above to both arms, we verified that previous results were not due to a conflict between perceived position of the two hands. These data highlighted a complex interaction between body schema and motor imagery, and underlined the role of hand dominance in shaping such interaction.
- Published
- 2011
36. Natura e storia nella sintesi culturale dell'europeismo di Ernst Troeltsch
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Battaglia, F, Mazzarella E, Bonito Oliva R, Miano F, Donise A, and Battaglia, F
- Published
- 2010
37. Numbers are represented in egocentric space: effects of numerical cues and spatial reference frames on hand laterality judgements
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Elisabetta Mazzarella, Massimiliano Conson, Luigi Trojano, Conson, Massimiliano, Mazzarella, E, and Trojano, Luigi
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Adult ,Male ,Posture ,Numerical cognition ,Epiphenomenon ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Functional Laterality ,Young Adult ,Mental Processes ,Orientation ,Reaction Time ,Humans ,Association (psychology) ,Ego ,Communication ,Orientation (computer vision) ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,Perspective (graphical) ,Cognition ,Hand ,Space Perception ,Laterality ,Female ,Cues ,Psychology ,business ,Mathematics ,Photic Stimulation ,Psychomotor Performance ,Reference frame ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Convergent findings demonstrate that numbers can be represented according to a spatially oriented mental number line. However, it is not established whether a default organization of the mental number line exists (i.e., a left-to-right orientation) or whether its spatial arrangement is only the epiphenomenon of specific task requirements. To address this issue we performed two experiments in which subjects were required to judge laterality of hand stimuli preceded by small, medium or large numerical cues; hand stimuli were compatible with egocentric or allocentric perspectives. We found evidence of a left-to-right number -- hand association in processing stimuli compatible with an egocentric perspective, whereas the reverse mapping was found with hands compatible with an allocentric perspective. These findings demonstrate that the basic left-to-right arrangement of the mental number line is defined with respect to the body-centred egocentric reference frame.
- Published
- 2009
38. Motor Imagery in Asperger Syndrome: Testing Action Simulation by the Hand Laterality Task
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Nellantonio Aprea, Luigi Trojano, Giovanna Gison, Massimiliano Conson, Elisabetta Mazzarella, Dario Grossi, Nicoletta Marino, Dalila Esposito, Angelo Massagli, Alessandro Frolli, Conson, Massimiliano, Mazzarella, E, Frolli, A, Esposito, D, Marino, N, Trojano, Luigi, Massagli, A, Gison, G, Aprea, N, and Grossi, Dario
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Male ,Adolescent ,Rotation ,media_common.quotation_subject ,lcsh:Medicine ,Motor Activity ,Biology ,Social and Behavioral Sciences ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Functional Laterality ,Mental rotation ,Cognition ,Motor imagery ,Neuropsychology ,Psychophysics ,Human Performance ,medicine ,Humans ,Psychology ,Asperger Syndrome ,lcsh:Science ,media_common ,Behavior ,Multidisciplinary ,lcsh:R ,Cognitive Psychology ,Experimental Psychology ,Hand ,medicine.disease ,Clinical Psychology ,Mental Health ,Action (philosophy) ,Asperger syndrome ,Autism spectrum disorder ,Developmental Psychology ,Imagination ,Medicine ,Autism ,lcsh:Q ,Female ,Sensory Perception ,Imitation ,Photic Stimulation ,Psychomotor Performance ,Research Article ,Neuroscience ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Asperger syndrome (AS) is a neurodevelopmental condition within the Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) characterized by specific difficulties in social interaction, communication and behavioural control. In recent years, it has been suggested that ASD is related to a dysfunction of action simulation processes, but studies employing imitation or action observation tasks provided mixed results. Here, we addressed action simulation processes in adolescents with AS by means of a motor imagery task, the classical hand laterality task (to decide whether a rotated hand image is left or right); mental rotation of letters was also evaluated. As a specific marker of action simulation in hand rotation, we assessed the so-called biomechanical effect, that is the advantage for judging hand pictures showing physically comfortable versus physically awkward positions. We found the biomechanical effect in typically-developing participants but not in participants with AS. Overall performance on both hand laterality and letter rotation tasks, instead, did not differ in the two groups. These findings demonstrated a specific alteration of motor imagery skills in AS. We suggest that impaired mental simulation and imitation of goal-less movements in ASD could be related to shared cognitive mechanisms.
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- 2013
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39. Asn25 Deamidation as an Allosteric Tool to Increase IFNβ-1a Biological Activity.
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Lipari E, Saporiti S, Eberini I, Massimo L, Mazzarella E, Anderloni G, Rossi M, D'Amici F, Pergola C, Palinsky W, D'Acunto CW, and Centola F
- Subjects
- Immunologic Factors, Interferon beta-1a, Interferons, Signal Transduction, Antiviral Agents metabolism, Interferon-beta metabolism
- Abstract
Interferon beta (IFNβ) is a well-known cytokine, belonging to the type I family, that exerts antiviral, immunomodulatory, and antiproliferative activity. It has been reported that the artificially deamidated form of recombinant IFNβ-1a at Asn25 position shows an increased biological activity. As a deepening of the previous study, the molecular mechanism underlying this biological effect was investigated in this work by combining experimental and computational techniques. Specifically, the binding to IFNAR1 and IFNAR2 receptors and the canonical pathway of artificially deamidated IFNβ-1a molecule were analyzed in comparison to the native form. As a result, a change in receptor affinity of deamidated IFNβ-1a with respect to the native form was observed, and to better explore this molecular interaction, molecular dynamics simulations were carried out. Results confirmed, as previously hypothesized, that the N25D mutation can locally change the interaction network of the mutated residue but also that this effect can be propagated throughout the molecule. In fact, many residues not involved in the interaction with IFNAR1 in the native form participate to the recognition in the deamidated molecule, enhancing the binding to IFNAR1 receptor and consequently an increase of signaling cascade activation. In particular, a higher STAT1 phosphorylation and interferon-stimulated gene expression was observed under deamidated IFNβ-1a cell treatment. In conclusion, this study increases the scientific knowledge of deamidated IFNβ-1a, deciphering its molecular mechanism, and opens new perspectives to novel therapeutic strategies.
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- 2022
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40. Sensitivity of occipito-temporal cortex, premotor and Broca's areas to visible speech gestures in a familiar language.
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Maffei V, Indovina I, Mazzarella E, Giusti MA, Macaluso E, Lacquaniti F, and Viviani P
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- Adult, Behavior, Discrimination, Psychological, Female, Humans, Linear Models, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Task Performance and Analysis, Young Adult, Broca Area physiology, Gestures, Language, Motor Cortex physiology, Occipital Lobe physiology, Speech physiology, Temporal Lobe physiology
- Abstract
When looking at a speaking person, the analysis of facial kinematics contributes to language discrimination and to the decoding of the time flow of visual speech. To disentangle these two factors, we investigated behavioural and fMRI responses to familiar and unfamiliar languages when observing speech gestures with natural or reversed kinematics. Twenty Italian volunteers viewed silent video-clips of speech shown as recorded (Forward, biological motion) or reversed in time (Backward, non-biological motion), in Italian (familiar language) or Arabic (non-familiar language). fMRI revealed that language (Italian/Arabic) and time-rendering (Forward/Backward) modulated distinct areas in the ventral occipito-temporal cortex, suggesting that visual speech analysis begins in this region, earlier than previously thought. Left premotor ventral (superior subdivision) and dorsal areas were preferentially activated with the familiar language independently of time-rendering, challenging the view that the role of these regions in speech processing is purely articulatory. The left premotor ventral region in the frontal operculum, thought to include part of the Broca's area, responded to the natural familiar language, consistent with the hypothesis of motor simulation of speech gestures., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
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- 2020
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41. High-dose-rate brachytherapy for high-grade vaginal intraepithelial neoplasia: a dosimetric analysis.
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Barcellini A, Lecchi M, Tenconi C, Macciotta A, Pignoli E, Pappalardi B, Mazzarella E, Carrara M, Giandini T, Fallai C, Verderio P, and Cerrotta A
- Abstract
Purpose: Due to the rarity of vaginal intraepithelial neoplasia (VAIN), it is impossible to define the best treatment approach or to assess vaginal morbidity. However, brachytherapy (BT) could be a valuable choice for VAIN grade 3 (VAIN3). The aim of this paper was to report a single-institution study of the application of high-dose-rate BT and to evaluate clinical outcomes as well as to investigate the dose-effect relationship for vaginal stenosis., Material and Methods: We retrospectively collected hospital records and treatment plans of 14 consecutive women treated in our department from August 2010 to August 2016, with HDR-BT delivered using iridium-192 by a remote after-loading system. Doses in 3D-planned treatment based on computed tomography (CT) were prescribed in high-risk clinical target volume (HR-CTV) at the vaginal wall. Vaginal stenosis was defined as vaginal shortening/narrowing according to CTCAE4.1. The International Commission on Radiation Units & Measurements (ICRU) bladder and rectal points were used for dose report analysis. The posterior-inferior border of the symphysis points was used to derive reference points. The median age of the enrolled women was 60 years, and the median total radiation dose delivered was 35 Gy., Results: During a median period of 15 days, the treatment was well tolerated, and no interruption was necessary. Acute toxicity was minimal, whereas late toxicity appeared in 4 patients as G2 and in 3 patients as G3 vaginal stenosis. Patients with stenosis G ≥ 2 received a higher median dose to the rectal point and were mainly over 60 years old., Conclusions: Patients with VAIN3 seemed to benefit from BT. It is generally assumed that the vagina is radio-resistant, and no constraints have yet been set, but sexual dysfunction after BT is an important cause of long-term distress. Finding applicable dose limits to the vagina could improve patients' quality of life., Competing Interests: Authors report no conflict of interest.
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- 2019
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42. Comparison of different treatment planning optimization methods for vaginal HDR brachytherapy with multichannel applicators: A reduction of the high doses to the vaginal mucosa is possible.
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Carrara M, Cusumano D, Giandini T, Tenconi C, Mazzarella E, Grisotto S, Massari E, Mazzeo D, Cerrotta A, Pappalardi B, Fallai C, and Pignoli E
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- Endometrial Neoplasms radiotherapy, Female, Humans, Radiotherapy Dosage, Retrospective Studies, Brachytherapy, Mucous Membrane radiation effects, Radiation Dosage, Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted methods, Vagina radiation effects
- Abstract
Purpose: A direct planning approach with multi-channel vaginal cylinders (MVCs) used for HDR brachytherapy of vaginal cancers is particularly challenging. Purpose of this study was to compare the dosimetric performances of different forward and inverse methods used for the optimization of MVC-based vaginal treatments for endometrial cancer, with a particular attention to the definition of strategies useful to limit the high doses to the vaginal mucosa., Methods: Twelve postoperative vaginal HDR brachytherapy treatments performed with MVCs were considered. Plans were retrospectively optimized with three different methods: Dose Point Optimization followed by Graphical Optimization (DPO + GrO), Inverse Planning Simulated Annealing with two different class solutions as starting conditions (surflPSA and homogIPSA) and Hybrid Inverse Planning Optimization (HIPO). Several dosimetric parameters related to target coverage, hot spot extensions and sparing of organs at risk were analyzed to evaluate the quality of the achieved treatment plans. Dose homogeneity index (DHI), conformal index (COIN) and a further parameter quantifying the proportion of the central catheter loading with respect to the overall loading (i.e., the central catheter loading index: CCLI) were also quantified., Results: The achieved PTV coverage parameters were highly correlated with each other but uncorrelated with the hot spot quantifiers. HomogIPSA and HIPO achieved higher DHIs and CCLIs and lower volumes of high doses than DPO + GrO and surflPSA., Conclusions: Within the investigated optimization methods, HIPO and homoglPSA showed the highest dose homogeneity to the target. In particular, homogIPSA resulted also the most effective in reducing hot spots to the vaginal mucosa., (Copyright © 2017 Associazione Italiana di Fisica Medica. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
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43. The peer's point of view: Observing a peer performing an action enhances third-person perspective in adolescents.
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Conson M, Salzano S, Frolli A, and Mazzarella E
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- Adolescent, Adult, Age Factors, Female, Humans, Male, Suggestion, Adolescent Behavior psychology, Observation, Peer Group
- Abstract
Adolescents are particularly prone to peer influence. Since group membership modulates the person's tendency to take someone else's viewpoint, here we decided to investigate whether adolescents are influenced by the presence of a peer when taking another person's perspective. A group of adolescents from upper secondary schools in Naples (Italy) had to observe scenes of an actor (an adolescent or an adult) gazing, grasping, gazing/grasping an object or staying still. When required to judge the spatial location of the object, the adolescent participants adopted the actor's viewpoint (third-person perspective) more frequently when the actor was an adolescent rather than when he was an adult and when the adolescent actor grasped the object. Thus, adolescents seem particularly prone to mentally simulate someone else's actions when the other person is a peer. These findings suggest that modulating motor simulation processes via social environmental factors could influence adolescents' perspective taking., (Copyright © 2017 The Foundation for Professionals in Services for Adolescents. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
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44. Path integration in 3D from visual motion cues: A human fMRI study.
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Indovina I, Maffei V, Mazzarella E, Sulpizio V, Galati G, and Lacquaniti F
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- Adult, Female, Hippocampus diagnostic imaging, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Parietal Lobe diagnostic imaging, Temporal Lobe diagnostic imaging, Young Adult, Brain Mapping methods, Depth Perception physiology, Hippocampus physiology, Motion Perception physiology, Parietal Lobe physiology, Temporal Lobe physiology
- Abstract
While neural correlates of path integration on a yaw plane have been studied extensively, much less is known about path integration in three-dimensions (3D). Here we used fMRI during virtual navigation within tunnels in pseudo-3D. We found that the same visual motion stimuli are encoded differently in the brain depending on whether they represent displacements within the yaw plane or within the pitch plane. The yaw plane is more represented in the hippocampus while the pitch plane is more represented in the angular gyrus (AG) and in the posterior inferior temporal gyrus (pITG), known to be involved in 3D space encoding. In addition, a region in pITG, located just above the previous one, showed two different patterns with multi-voxel analysis, separately coding for the pitch and yaw planes. These results suggest that information encoded within pITG about the yaw plane may be exchanged with the hippocampus, while information about the pitch plane may be exchanged with the AG., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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45. Exercise training and high-fat diet elicit endocannabinoid system modifications in the rat hypothalamus and hippocampus.
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Gamelin FX, Aucouturier J, Iannotti FA, Piscitelli F, Mazzarella E, Aveta T, Leriche M, Dupont E, Cieniewski-Bernard C, Leclair E, Bastide B, Di Marzo V, and Heyman E
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- Animals, Energy Intake, Gene Expression, Male, Physical Conditioning, Animal, Rats, Wistar, Receptors, Cannabinoid genetics, Receptors, Cannabinoid metabolism, Diet, High-Fat, Endocannabinoids metabolism, Hippocampus metabolism, Hypothalamus metabolism
- Abstract
The purpose of the present study was to examine the effect of chronic exercise on the hypothalamus and hippocampus levels of the endocannabinoids (eCBs) anandamide (AEA) and 2-arachidonoylglycerol (2-AG) and of two AEA congeners and on the expression of genes coding for CB1, CB2 receptors (Cnr1 and Cnr2, respectively), and the enzymes responsible for eCB biosynthesis and degradation, in rats fed with a standard or high-fat diet. Male Wistar rats (n = 28) were placed on a 12-week high-fat (HFD) or standard diet period, followed by 12 weeks of exercise training for half of each group. Tissue levels of eCBs and related lipids were measured by liquid chromatography mass spectrometry, and expression of genes coding for CB1 and CB2 receptors and eCB metabolic enzymes was measured by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qPCR). HFD induced a significant increase in 2-AG (p < 0.01) in hypothalamus. High-fat diet paired with exercise training had no effect on AEA, 2-AG, and AEA congener levels in the hypothalamus and hippocampus. Cnr1 expression levels were significantly increased in the hippocampus in response to HFD, exercise, and the combination of both (p < 0.05). Our results indicate that eCB signaling in the CNS is sensitive to diet and/or exercise.
- Published
- 2016
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46. Effects of chronic exercise on the endocannabinoid system in Wistar rats with high-fat diet-induced obesity.
- Author
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Gamelin FX, Aucouturier J, Iannotti FA, Piscitelli F, Mazzarella E, Aveta T, Leriche M, Dupont E, Cieniewski-Bernard C, Montel V, Bastide B, Di Marzo V, and Heyman E
- Subjects
- Amides, Animals, Arachidonic Acids metabolism, Body Composition, Diet, High-Fat adverse effects, Ethanolamines metabolism, Glycerides metabolism, Hyperglycemia etiology, Hyperglycemia prevention & control, Intra-Abdominal Fat metabolism, Male, Muscle, Skeletal metabolism, Obesity etiology, Obesity metabolism, Obesity physiopathology, Oleic Acids metabolism, Organ Specificity, Palmitic Acids metabolism, Polyunsaturated Alkamides metabolism, Rats, Wistar, Receptor, Cannabinoid, CB1 agonists, Receptor, Cannabinoid, CB1 genetics, Receptor, Cannabinoid, CB2 agonists, Receptor, Cannabinoid, CB2 genetics, Subcutaneous Fat, Abdominal metabolism, TRPV Cation Channels agonists, TRPV Cation Channels genetics, Weight Gain, Endocannabinoids metabolism, Gene Expression Regulation, Motor Activity, Obesity therapy, Receptor, Cannabinoid, CB1 metabolism, Receptor, Cannabinoid, CB2 metabolism, TRPV Cation Channels metabolism
- Abstract
The endocannabinoid system is dysregulated during obesity in tissues involved in the control of food intake and energy metabolism. We examined the effect of chronic exercise on the tissue levels of endocannabinoids (eCBs) and on the expression of genes coding for cannabinoid receptor 1 (CB1) and cannabinoid receptor 2 (CB2) (Cnr1 and Cnr2, respectively) in the subcutaneous (SAT) and visceral adipose tissues and in the soleus and extensor digitorim longus (EDL) muscles, in rats fed with standard or high-fat diet. Twenty-eight male Wistar rats were placed on high-fat diet or standard diet (HFD and Ctl groups, respectively) during 12 weeks whereafter half of each group was submitted to an exercise training period of 12 weeks (HFD + training and Ctl + training). Tissue levels of eCBs were measured by LC-MS while expressions of genes coding for CB1 and CB2 receptors were investigated by qPCR. High-fat diet induced an increase in anandamide (AEA) levels in soleus and EDL (p < 0.02). In soleus of the HFD group, these changes were accompanied by elevated Cnr1 messenger RNA (mRNA) levels (p < 0.05). In EDL, exercise training allowed to reduce significantly this diet-induced AEA increase (p < 0.005). 2-Arachidonoylglycerol (2-AG) levels were decreased and increased by high-fat diet in SAT and EDL, respectively (p < 0.04), but not affected by exercise training. Unlike the HFD + training group, 2-AG levels in soleus were also decreased in the HFD group compared to Ctl (p < 0.04). The levels of eCBs and Cnr1 expression are altered in a tissue-specific manner following a high-fat diet, and chronic exercise reverses some of these alterations.
- Published
- 2016
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47. Processing of visual gravitational motion in the peri-sylvian cortex: Evidence from brain-damaged patients.
- Author
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Maffei V, Mazzarella E, Piras F, Spalletta G, Caltagirone C, Lacquaniti F, and Daprati E
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Gravitation, Humans, Male, Motion, Orientation, Photic Stimulation methods, Reaction Time physiology, Brain Injuries physiopathology, Brain Mapping, Cerebral Cortex physiopathology, Motion Perception physiology
- Abstract
Rich behavioral evidence indicates that the brain estimates the visual direction and acceleration of gravity quite accurately, and the underlying mechanisms have begun to be unraveled. While the neuroanatomical substrates of gravity direction processing have been studied extensively in brain-damaged patients, to our knowledge no such study exists for the processing of visual gravitational motion. Here we asked 31 stroke patients to intercept a virtual ball moving along the vertical under either natural gravity or artificial reversed gravity. Twenty-seven of them also aligned a luminous bar to the vertical direction (subjective visual vertical, SVV). Using voxel-based lesion-symptom mapping as well as lesion subtraction analysis, we found that lesions mainly centered on the posterior insula are associated with greater deviations of SVV, consistent with several previous studies. Instead, lesions mainly centered on the parietal operculum decrease the ability to discriminate natural from unnatural gravitational acceleration with a timed motor response in the interception task. Both the posterior insula and the parietal operculum belong to the vestibular cortex, and presumably receive multisensory information about the gravity vector. We speculate that an internal model estimating the effects of gravity on visual objects is constructed by transforming the vestibular estimates of mechanical gravity, which are computed in the brainstem and cerebellum, into internalized estimates of virtual gravity, which are stored in the cortical vestibular network. The present lesion data suggest a specific role for the parietal operculum in detecting the mismatch between predictive signals from the internal model and the online visual signals., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Body Constraints on Motor Simulation in Autism Spectrum Disorders.
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Conson M, Hamilton A, De Bellis F, Errico D, Improta I, Mazzarella E, Trojano L, and Frolli A
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- Adolescent, Child, Female, Functional Laterality physiology, Hand physiology, Humans, Male, Posture physiology, Reaction Time physiology, Young Adult, Autism Spectrum Disorder diagnosis, Autism Spectrum Disorder psychology, Motor Activity physiology, Photic Stimulation methods, Psychomotor Performance physiology
- Abstract
Developmental data suggested that mental simulation skills become progressively dissociated from overt motor activity across development. Thus, efficient simulation is rather independent from current sensorimotor information. Here, we tested the impact of bodily (sensorimotor) information on simulation skills of adolescents with Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD). Typically-developing (TD) and ASD participants judged laterality of hand images while keeping one arm flexed on chest or while holding both arms extended. Both groups were able to mentally simulate actions, but this ability was constrained by body posture more in ASD than in TD adolescents. The strong impact of actual body information on motor simulation implies that simulative skills are not fully effective in ASD individuals.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Neuroendocrine Transdifferentiation in Human Prostate Cancer Cells: An Integrated Approach.
- Author
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Cerasuolo M, Paris D, Iannotti FA, Melck D, Verde R, Mazzarella E, Motta A, and Ligresti A
- Subjects
- Algorithms, Androgens metabolism, Cell Transdifferentiation drug effects, Cluster Analysis, Culture Media, Conditioned pharmacology, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Male, Models, Theoretical, Phenotype, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Prostatic Neoplasms genetics, Tumor Cells, Cultured, Prostatic Neoplasms metabolism, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Prostate cancer is highly sensitive to hormone therapy because androgens are essential for prostate cancer cell growth. However, with the nearly invariable progression of this disease to androgen independence, endocrine therapy ultimately fails to control prostate cancer in most patients. Androgen-independent acquisition may involve neuroendocrine transdifferentiation, but there is little knowledge about this process, which is presently controversial. In this study, we investigated this question in a novel model of human androgen-dependent LNCaP cells cultured for long periods in hormone-deprived conditions. Strikingly, characterization of the neuroendocrine phenotype by transcriptomic, metabolomic, and other statistically integrated analyses showed how hormone-deprived LNCaP cells could transdifferentiate to a nonmalignantneuroendocrine phenotype. Notably, conditioned media from neuroendocrine-like cells affected LNCaP cell proliferation. Predictive in silico models illustrated how after an initial period, when LNCaP cell survival was compromised by an arising population of neuroendocrine-like cells, a sudden trend reversal occurred in which the neuroendocrine-like cells functioned to sustain the remaining androgen-dependent LNCaP cells. Our findings provide direct biologic and molecular support for the concept that neuroendocrine transdifferentiation in prostate cancer cell populations influences the progression to androgen independence., (©2015 American Association for Cancer Research.)
- Published
- 2015
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50. "Put Myself Into Your Place": Embodied Simulation and Perspective Taking in Autism Spectrum Disorders.
- Author
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Conson M, Mazzarella E, Esposito D, Grossi D, Marino N, Massagli A, and Frolli A
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- Adolescent, Female, Humans, Male, Reaction Time physiology, Autism Spectrum Disorder physiopathology, Cognition physiology, Imagination physiology, Judgment physiology
- Abstract
Embodied cognition theories hold that cognitive processes are grounded in bodily states. Embodied processes in autism spectrum disorders (ASD) have classically been investigated in studies on imitation. Several observations suggested that unlike typical individuals who are able of copying the model's actions from the model's position, individuals with ASD tend to reenact the model's actions from their own egocentric perspective. Here, we performed two behavioral experiments to directly test the ability of ASD individuals to adopt another person's point of view. In Experiment 1, participants had to explicitly judge the left/right location of a target object in a scene from their own or the actor's point of view (visual perspective taking task). In Experiment 2, participants had to perform left/right judgments on front-facing or back-facing human body images (own body transformation task). Both tasks can be solved by mentally simulating one's own body motion to imagine oneself transforming into the position of another person (embodied simulation strategy), or by resorting to visual/spatial processes, such as mental object rotation (nonembodied strategy). Results of both experiments showed that individual with ASD solved the tasks mainly relying on a nonembodied strategy, whereas typical controls adopted an embodied strategy. Moreover, in the visual perspective taking task ASD participants had more difficulties than controls in inhibiting other-perspective when directed to keep one's own point of view. These findings suggested that, in social cognitive tasks, individuals with ASD do not resort to embodied simulation and have difficulties in cognitive control over self- and other-perspective., (© 2015 International Society for Autism Research, Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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