Adaptation Effects in Central Binocular Flicker Discrimination of Brain-Damaged Subjects

1967 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 457-464 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julian M. Burn ◽  
Oscar A. Parsons

The role of local adaptation in flicker discrimination of brain-damaged ( N = 16) and control ( N = 16) Ss was investigated. Male adult patient's central binocular thresholds were measured before and after visual stimulation by a coarsely flickering light (10 cps) over 20 trials. In both groups there were significantly lower thresholds after stimulation and a progressive drop in both pre- and post-stimulation thresholds over trials. However, there were no significant group interactions. The methodological, empirical, and theoretical implications of these results are noted.

This study is pursued to find the role of Aquatic Training Program for children with special needs. Sensory profile questionnaire was used to assess the before and after performance of each students of each groups for Vestibular Processing, of 25Children average of age nine years, randomly selected from Asha AWWA school at Delhi, India. Participants were divided into two groups Experimental (13) and Control groups (12). Result of Two Way ANOVA reflects positive accelerated change only in experimental group, showing moderate to considerable benefits with 27 session aquatic training program. In addition, individualized improvement was also studied, which resulted into minor to major enhancement of vestibular processing among all the experimental group participants. Hence a prolonged Structured Aquatic Training Program (intervention) is off paramount to get the best results. These findings also enhance the preceding research work based on aquatic intervention as vestibular senses develop first and controls other senses since the baby is in womb, so it is important to develop this sense so other sense can process better to acquire a better life


1979 ◽  
Vol 42 (05) ◽  
pp. 1548-1556 ◽  
Author(s):  
S M Rajah ◽  
M E Foley ◽  
J K Clayton ◽  
S R Aparicio ◽  
C C Bird ◽  
...  

SummaryThe haemostatic mechanism of 40 female patients undergoing menstruation, 20 with intra-uterine devices (IUCD) and 20 without (Control), were studied. The patients’ coagulation profiles, fibrinolytic system and platelet functions were studied before and after hysterectomy. Platelet survival times and platelet consumption was determined using 51Cr. labelled autologous platelets. Patients who menstruated during the study had their pads collected and radioactivity measured. Histology, autoradiography and scintillation counting was performed on uteri obtained from a hysterectomy performed towards the end of the platelet survival study period. There were no significant differences in the coagulation, fibrinolytic and platelet function tests in these 2 groups, though in each group there were the expected changes after operation.Platelet survival time, consumption and radioactivity in the tampons showed no significant differences between the IUCD and control groups, although there were 6 patients with low platelet survival times in the IUCD group. Resected uteri showed surprising lack of concentration of platelets which may have been due in part to loss of blood at operation and handling of the uterus. Surprisingly, in the control patients, platelet survival time in response to the severe haemosatic challenge of menstruation were normal. However in the IUCD group, 6 patients showed shortening of platelet survival. Also surprisingly and equally in both control and IUCD groups, was the small amount of platelet related radioactivity in the menstruating fluid.


2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 126
Author(s):  
Dorit Olenik-Shemesh ◽  
Tali Heiman ◽  
Yael Zur

The current article presents an intervention program for coping with cyberbullying, focused on the role of bystanders, as well as evaluation of the program’s effectiveness. While most intervention programs for coping with cyberbullying focus on deterring cyber-perpetrators or assisting cyber-victims, the program presented in this study focuses on the role of bystanders in coping with cyberbullying, providing assistance to victims and strengthening their circle of support. Based on the results of a previous study, a unique intervention program was developed, implemented, and evaluated. The program consisted of six instructional experiential meetings addressing the following topics: noticing the cyberbullying event, interpreting it as an emergency, identifying and emphasizing the abuse, taking responsibility for the event, gaining knowledge and discussing effective ways to intervene and report and more. The homeroom teachers presented the intervention program after receiving training. 418 adolescents participated, divided into experimental (N=215) and control (N=203) groups, 219 boys and 199 girls; average age: 13.2, SD: 0.43. Before and after the program, they completed a cyberbullying questionnaire, a self-efficacy scale, and an empathy scale.The results show a 12.4% decrease in students reporting of cyber- victimization and an increase in the percentage of bystanders who reported cyberbullying instances to teachers, an increase in students who ignored posts, and a decrease in the percentage of students sharing posts. Implications for further development of the intervention program and research are discussed.


2009 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 516-521 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yaniv Yonai ◽  
Neta Boms ◽  
Sandor Molnar ◽  
Bernhard Rosengarten ◽  
Natan M Bornstein ◽  
...  

Different methods are used to assess the vasodilator ability of cerebral blood vessels; however, the exact mechanism of cerebral vasodilation, induced by different stimuli, is not entirely known. Our aim was to investigate whether the potent vasodilator agent, acetazolamide (AZ), inhibits the neurovascular coupling, which also requires vasodilation. Therefore, visually evoked flow parameters were examined by transcranial Doppler in ten healthy subjects before and after AZ administration. Pulsatility index and peak systolic flow velocity changes, evoked by visual stimulus, were recorded in the posterior cerebral arteries before and after intravenous administration of 15 mg/kg AZ. Repeated-measures ANOVA did not show significant group main effect between the visually evoked relative flow velocity time courses before and after AZ provocation ( P=0.43). Visual stimulation induced significant increase of relative flow velocity and decrease of pulsatility index not only before but also at the maximal effect of AZ. These results suggest that maximal cerebral vasodilation cannot be determined by the clinically accepted dose of AZ (15 mg/kg) and prove that neurovascular coupling remains preserved despite AZ-induced vasodilation. Our observation indicates independent regulation of vasodilation during neurovascular coupling, allowing the adaptation of cerebral blood flow according to neuronal activity even if other processes require significant vasodilation.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
G.А. Danilova ◽  
A.A. Klinnikova ◽  
N.P. Aleksandrova

At the present time very little is known about interactions between systemic inflammation and control of respiration. The aim of this study was to compare the respiratory effects of the main inflammatory cytokine TNF - α before and after pretreatment with diclofenac, a nonspecific cyclooxygenase (COX) inhibitor. In experiments on anesthetized, tracheostomized rats, pneumotachometry method was used to measure peak airflow and respiratory rate. The ventilatory response to hypoxia was investigated by the rebreathing method. It is shown that an increase in the systemic level of TNF – α causes a significant increase in the minute volume of respiration, tidal volume, the average speed of the inspiratory flow. In contrast the slope of the hypoxic ventilatory response decreased after administration of TNF-α. Diclofenac pretreatment eliminated these respiratory effects of TNF - α. The data indicate that the ability of TNF - α to enhance basal ventilation and to reduce the ventilatory hypoxic response is mediated by the cyclooxygenase pathway. Key words: tumor necrosis factor – α, hypoxia, prostaglandins, peripheral chemoreception, respiration.


2012 ◽  
Vol 107 (6) ◽  
pp. 1738-1747 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven P. Blurton ◽  
Markus Raabe ◽  
Mark W. Greenlee

The human saccadic system can dynamically adjust its gain if errors occur after saccade execution. Although this ability has long been studied, the underlying neural mechanisms and its functional purpose remain as of yet unclear. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging coupled with gaze-contingent visual stimulation, we compared brain activation before and after subjects adapted to a gaze-contingent shift in the target location (inward step). This comparison suggests the existence of a predictive signal related to the gain adjustment of upcoming saccades to decrease saccadic gain. Contrary to previous studies, we were able to identify activation differences in the supplementary eye fields that vary with the amount of saccadic gain decrease. In addition to signal amplitude differences in saccade-related eye fields, we also found active cortical regions in the temporal lobe and the posterior insula, which have been functionally related to vestibular processing and to the representation of head position and head motion. The results might point to new directions for research on saccadic adaptation pointing to the functional role of this mechanism.


2021 ◽  
pp. 030573562110134
Author(s):  
Michael J Hove ◽  
Steven A Martinez ◽  
Samantha R Shorrock

Music’s ability to influence exercise performance is well known, but the converse, how exercise influences music listening, remains largely unknown. Exercise can elevate arousal, positive affect, and neurotransmitters including dopamine, which are involved in musical pleasure. Here we examine how exercise influences music enjoyment, and test for a modulatory role of arousal, affect, and dopamine. Before and after exercise (12 min of vigorous running) and a rest control session, participants ( N = 20) listened to music clips and rated their enjoyment and subjective arousal; we also collected ratings of affect and eye-blink rates, an established predictor of dopamine activity. Ratings of musical enjoyment increased significantly after exercise, but not after the rest control condition. While changes in subjective arousal ratings did not differ between exercise and control conditions, change in subjective arousal correlated with change in music enjoyment. After exercise, the change in music enjoyment had a positive but non-significant correlation with change in eye-blink rates ( r = .36). Positive affect increased more after exercise than after the control session, but the change in positive affect did not correlate with change in music enjoyment. In sum, exercise leads to increased musical enjoyment, and this effect was related to changes in arousal.


2016 ◽  
Vol 19 ◽  
Author(s):  
Irene Cano-López ◽  
Beatriz Cano-López ◽  
Vanesa Hidalgo ◽  
Esperanza González-Bono

AbstractAcute stress and decision making (DM) interact in life – although little is known about the role of ambiguity and risk in this interaction. The aim of this study is to clarify the effect of acute stress on DM under various conditions. Thirty-one young healthy men were randomly distributed into two groups: experimental and control. DM processes were evaluated before and after an experimental session. For the experimental group, the session consisted of an acute stress battery; and the protocol was similar for the control group but the instructions were designed to minimize acute stress. Cardiovascular variables were continuously recorded 30 minutes before the DM tasks and during the experimental session. Cortisol, glucose, mood responses, and personality factors were also assessed. Acute stress was found to enhance disadvantageous decisions under ambiguous conditions (F(1, 29) = 4.16, p = .05, η2p = .13), and this was mainly explained by the stress induced cortisol response (26.1% of variance, F(1, 30) = 11.59, p = .002). While there were no significant effects under risky conditions, inhibition responses differed between groups (F(1, 29) = 4.21, p = .05, η2p = .13) and these differences were explained by cardiovascular and psychological responses (39.1% of variance, F(3, 30) = 7.42, p < .001). Results suggest that DM tasks could compete with cognitive resources after acute stress and could have implications for intervention in acute stress effects on DM in contexts such as addiction or eating disorders.


1961 ◽  
Vol 201 (1) ◽  
pp. 149-156 ◽  
Author(s):  
William D. Blake

Experiments on dogs were designed to study the role of glomerular filtration rate (creatinine clearance, CCr) in sodium homeostasis. Dogs were studied on a normal Na intake (salted) and after Na had been removed from the diet (unsalted). In both instances CCr was estimated before and after rapid expansion of extracellular fluid volume (ECF) with glucose, mannitol, or NaCl solutions. Before expansion of ECF, CCr showed no consistent change relating to Na-deficiency as such. Following expansion of ECF, CCr increased in dogs with normal intake of Na and decreased (or increased less) in nine out of ten comparisons in dogs with no Na in the diet. The percentage change in CCr elicited by ECF expansion correlated positively with change in plasma Na concentration and inversely with change in plasma potassium concentration, except following NaCl solution infusion or the inclusion of K in glucose infusions. Decreased CCr following ECF expansion in dogs with no Na in the diet was tentatively ascribed to intrarenally evoked vasoconstriction consequent to the loss of intracellular K from some undefined site.


Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 1276-1276
Author(s):  
Greice A. Molfetta ◽  
Dalila L. Zanette ◽  
Rodrigo A. Panepucci ◽  
Wilson A. Silva ◽  
Marco A. Zago

Abstract Efforts to understand the molecular mechanisms underlying the differentiation of hematopoietic progenitor cells into mature blood cells have focused mainly on late events that largely reflect the differentiated state of the cells. In order to evaluate early changes of the gene expression profile of HSPC subjected to differentiation stimuli, transcriptional profiles of immuno-magnetically sorted bone marrow CD34+ HSPC were generated before and after 12 and 40 hours of culture with supplemented media favoring myeloid or erythroid commitment. Four independent samples were pooled and submitted to each treatment, and cells aliquots were subjected to RNA extraction and to methylcellulose cultures. CD34+ HSPC without previous stimulation generated about equal percentages (50% each) of erythroid (BFU-E) and myeloid (CFU-GM) colonies, whereas upon erythroid stimulation the median percentages of BFU-E, CFU-GM and mixed colonies (CFU-Mix) were, respectively, 61%, 38% and 1% for the12 hour treatment and 83%, 17% and 0% for 40 hours treatment. Conversely, upon myeloid stimulation, respectively, 37%, 61% and 2% colonies were observed after 12 hours and 23%, 61% and 14% for 40 hours treatment. These results indicate that after 12 and 40 hours of treatment, the genetic program of those cells were shifted towards the desired phenotype. Serial analysis of gene expression (SAGE) was employed to generate four independent libraries, each with more than 60,000 tags sequenced, representing more than 12,000 annotated transcripts. By analyzing the differentially regulated transcripts between the control CD34+ HSPC and the stimulated cells, we observed a set of genes that were initially up-regulated at 12 hours but were then down-regulated at 40 hours, exclusively after myeloid stimuli. Among those we found transcripts for IL1B, LTB, TNFRSF4 and NFKB2. Additionally, the receptor for LTB and the inhibitor of NF-κB signaling NFKBIA (IKBA) were respectively, up and down modulated at both time points. All those transcripts code for signaling proteins of the nuclear factor kappa B (NF-κB) pathway. More specifically, NFKB2 is a subunit of the NF-κB transcription factor (TF) that together with RELB mediates the non-canonical NF-κB pathway. The up-regulation followed by a down regulation was confirmed for NFKB2 and also demonstrated for RELB and NFKB1, indicating that the NF-κB pathway could be involved in the early commitment of CD34+ HSPC towards the myeloid lineage. To test this hypothesis, interference RNA (RNAi) against NFKB2 and control RNAi were transfected into BM CD34+ HSPC. Cells submitted to transfection with RNAi were stimulated towards the myeloid lineage and subjected to evaluation on methylcellulose cultures. Transcript levels of NFKB2 and RELB (a transcription target of NFKB2) were shown to be down-modulated, confirming the successful inhibition of NFKB2. After inhibition of NFKB2, the percentage of CFU-GM and BFU-E colonies shifted from 53% and 47% on control cells, respectively, to 22% and 78%. Altogether, our results indicate that NFKB2 has a role in the early commitment of CD34+ HSPC towards the myeloid lineage, directly inducing the differentiation program or, alternatively, protecting early myeloid progenitors from apoptosis.


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