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1.
Rev Neurol (Paris) ; 176(10): 829-838, 2020 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32312498

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Attention is the process which enables to preferentially select salient or relevant stimuli and to attenuate the response to irrelevant incoming stimuli. Migraine is characterized by both attentional alterations and an abnormal sensory processing to external stimulations. The aim of the study was to investigate potential interactions between self-perceived attentional difficulties and sensory hypersensitivity in migraine patients. METHODS: Forty-six episodic migraineurs without aura and 46 healthy controls filled out questionnaires on self-perceived attention difficulties and self-reported sensitivity to visual, auditory and olfactory stimulations. RESULTS: Compared to controls, migraineurs reported significantly higher levels of attention difficulty and sensory sensitivity. Sensory hypersensitivity correlated significantly with self-perceived attentional difficulties in migraineurs (P=0.002), but not with migraine disability or levels of anxiety or depression. Ictal and interictal sensory sensitivities were significantly correlated in migraineurs within visual (P<0.001), auditory (P<0.001) and olfactory (P=0.001) modalities. CONCLUSION: This study shows for the first time an association between self-reported attentional difficulties and multimodal sensory hypersensitivity. Studies combining behavioral and physiological measures of sensory processing and attention processes are necessary to further understand the peculiar vulnerability of migraineurs to sensory stimuli.


Subject(s)
Migraine Disorders , Anxiety , Attention , Cognition , Humans , Surveys and Questionnaires
2.
Neuropsychologia ; 158: 107911, 2021 07 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34102187

ABSTRACT

In typical listeners, the perceptual salience of a surprising auditory event depends on the uncertainty of its context. For example, in melodies, pitch deviants are more easily detected and generate larger neural responses when the context is highly predictable than when it is less so. However, it is not known whether amusic listeners with abnormal pitch processing are sensitive to the degree of uncertainty of pitch sequences and, if so, whether they are to a different extent than typical non-musician listeners. To answer this question, we manipulated the uncertainty of short melodies while participants with and without congenital amusia underwent EEG recordings in a passive listening task. Uncertainty was manipulated by presenting melodies with different levels of complexity and familiarity, under the assumption that simpler and more familiar patterns would enhance pitch predictability. We recorded mismatch negativity (MMN) responses to pitch, intensity, timbre, location, and rhythm deviants as a measure of auditory surprise. In both participant groups, we observed reduced MMN amplitudes and longer peak latencies for all sound features with increasing levels of complexity, and putative familiarity effects only for intensity deviants. No significant group-by-complexity or group-by-familiarity interactions were detected. However, in contrast to previous studies, pitch MMN responses in amusics were disrupted in high complexity and unfamiliar melodies. The present results thus indicate that amusics are sensitive to the uncertainty of melodic sequences and that preattentive auditory change detection is greatly spared in this population across sound features and levels of predictability. However, our findings also hint at pitch-specific impairments in this population when uncertainty is high, thus suggesting that pitch processing under high uncertainty conditions requires an intact frontotemporal loop.


Subject(s)
Auditory Perceptual Disorders , Music , Acoustic Stimulation , Humans , Pitch Perception , Uncertainty
3.
Neuropsychologia ; 134: 107234, 2019 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31647961

ABSTRACT

Congenital amusia is a lifelong deficit of music processing, in particular of pitch processing. Most research investigating this neurodevelopmental disorder has focused on music perception, but pitch also has a critical role for intentional and emotional prosody in speech. Two previous studies investigating amusics' emotional prosody recognition have shown either some deficit or no deficit (compared to controls). However, these previous studies have used only long sentence stimuli, which allow for limited control over acoustic content. Here, we tested amusic individuals for emotional prosody perception in sentences and vowels. For each type of material, participants performed an emotion categorization task, followed by intensity ratings of the recognized emotion. Compared to controls, amusic individuals had similar recognition of emotion in sentences, but poorer performance in vowels, especially when distinguishing sad and neutral stimuli. These lower performances in amusics were linked with difficulties in processing pitch and spectro-temporal parameters of the vowel stimuli. For emotion intensity, neither sentence nor vowel ratings differed between participant groups, suggesting preserved implicit processing of emotional prosody in amusia. These findings can be integrated into previous data showing preserved implicit processing of pitch and emotion in amusia alongside deficits in explicit recognition tasks. They are thus further supporting the hypothesis of impaired conscious analysis of pitch and timbre in this neurodevelopmental disorder.


Subject(s)
Auditory Perceptual Disorders/genetics , Auditory Perceptual Disorders/psychology , Emotions/physiology , Music/psychology , Social Perception , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Pitch Perception , Reading , Recognition, Psychology , Speech Perception , Young Adult
4.
Minerva Pediatr ; 63(2): 139-48, 2011 Apr.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21487379

ABSTRACT

AIM: The aim of this study was to give a support to the parents of the patients with apparent life threatening event (ALTE), to learn a correct management outside the protective environment of the hospital and a prevention such events. METHODS: This was the 33rd edition of a training course called "Course of first aid and prevention of the accidents in infants", in which the recommendations of the Italian cardiopulmonary resuscitation's guidelines are treated. The course comprehended a short frontal lesson, a practice training and the compilation of a test to express one's satisfaction about the received training, using a points assessment from 1 to 10. RESULTS: The course included 385 participants (including any kind of person who may be in contact with infants) and 361 questionnaires were returned. Critical parameters were the scheme of teaching, the adequacy of contents, the teachers' technical and behavioral abilities, the adequacy of time and the communicative capacity. The learners demonstrated pleasure in variable percentages from 98% to 100%. The 79% of the learners felt the necessity to have some training again later on. CONCLUSION: Our positive experience allowed us to reflect about three concepts that we considered essential: communication, training and prevention. In fact, we think that prevention is infinitely potentiated from training and communication is its inalienable instrument.


Subject(s)
Accidents, Home/prevention & control , Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation/education , First Aid , Parents/education , Emergencies , Humans , Infant , Surveys and Questionnaires
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