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1.
Psychol Sci ; 21(10): 1429-37, 2010 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20817781

RESUMO

It has recently been suggested that low-spatial-frequency information would provide rapid visual cues to the amygdala for basic but ultrarapid behavioral responses to dangerous stimuli. The present behavioral study investigated the role of different spatial-frequency channels in visually detecting dangerous stimuli belonging to living or nonliving categories. Subjects were engaged in a visual detection task involving dangerous stimuli, and subjects' behavioral responses were assessed in association with their fear expectations (induced by an aversive 90-dB white noise). Our results showed that, despite its crudeness, low-spatial-frequency information could constitute a sufficient signal for fast recognition of visual danger in a context of fear expectation. In addition, we found that this effect tended to be specific for living entities. These results were obtained despite a strong perceptual bias toward faster recognition of high-spatial-frequency stimuli under supraliminal perception durations.


Assuntos
Comportamento Perigoso , Medo , Reconhecimento Visual de Modelos , Mascaramento Perceptivo , Tempo de Reação , Adolescente , Nível de Alerta , Aprendizagem por Associação , Percepção de Cores , Discriminação Psicológica , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Desempenho Psicomotor , Adulto Jovem
2.
J Parkinsons Dis ; 4(1): 97-110, 2014.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24496100

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Deep brain stimulation of the subthalamic nuclei (STN-DBS) is an effective treatment for the most severe forms of Parkinson's disease (PD) and is intended to suppress these patients' motor symptoms. However, be it in association with Dopamine Replacement Therapy (DRT) or not, STN-DBS may in some cases induce addictive or emotional disorders. OBJECTIVE: In the current study, we suggest that PD patients suffer from emotional deficits that have not been revealed in previous studies because in those experiments the stimuli were displayed for a time long enough to allow patients to have recourse to perceptual strategies in order to recognize the emotional facial expressions (EFE). METHODS: The aim of the current article is to demonstrate the existence of emotional disorders in PD by using a rapid presentation of the visual stimuli (200-ms display time) which curtails their perceptual analysis, and to determine whether STN-DBS, either associated or not associated with DRT, has an impact on the recognition of emotions. RESULTS: The results show that EFE recognition performance depends on both STN-DBS ('on' vs. 'off') and medication ('on' vs. 'off'), but also that these variables have an interactive influence on EFE recognition performance. Moreover, we also reveal how these EFE impairments depend on different spatial frequencies perceptual channels (related to different cortical vs. subcortical neural structures). CONCLUSIONS: The effect of PD without therapy seems to be particularly acute for LSF emotional faces, possibly due to a subcortical dysfunction. However, our results indicate that the joint action of STN-DBS and DRT could also disrupt recognition of emotional expressions at the level of occipito-temporal cortical areas (processing HSF visual information) inducing broad global impairment of EFE at the level of HSF visual channels.


Assuntos
Antiparkinsonianos/efeitos adversos , Estimulação Encefálica Profunda/efeitos adversos , Emoções/fisiologia , Levodopa/efeitos adversos , Doença de Parkinson/fisiopatologia , Doença de Parkinson/terapia , Afeto/fisiologia , Idoso , Terapia Combinada , Expressão Facial , Humanos , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Doença de Parkinson/tratamento farmacológico , Núcleo Subtalâmico/cirurgia
3.
Front Hum Neurosci ; 7: 149, 2013.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23630481

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: Based on a variety of empirical evidence obtained within the theoretical framework of embodiment theory, we considered it likely that motor disorders in Tourette's syndrome (TS) would have emotional consequences for TS patients. However, previous research using emotional facial categorization tasks suggests that these consequences are limited to TS patients with obsessive-compulsive behaviors (OCB). METHOD: These studies used long stimulus presentations which allowed the participants to categorize the different emotional facial expressions (EFEs) on the basis of a perceptual analysis that might potentially hide a lack of emotional feeling for certain emotions. In order to reduce this perceptual bias, we used a rapid visual presentation procedure. RESULTS: Using this new experimental method, we revealed different and surprising impairments on several EFEs in TS patients compared to matched healthy control participants. Moreover, a spatial frequency analysis of the visual signal processed by the patients suggests that these impairments may be located at a cortical level. CONCLUSION: The current study indicates that the rapid visual presentation paradigm makes it possible to identify various potential emotional disorders that were not revealed by the standard visual presentation procedures previously reported in the literature. Moreover, the spatial frequency analysis performed in our study suggests that emotional deficit in TS might lie at the level of temporal cortical areas dedicated to the processing of HSF visual information.

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