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Lupien, S. J.; Maheu, F.; Tu, M.; Fiocco, A.; Schramek, T. E. – Brain and Cognition, 2007
In this review, we report on studies that have assessed the effects of exogenous and endogenous increases in stress hormones on human cognitive performance. We first describe the history of the studies on the effects of using exogenous stress hormones such as glucocorticoids as anti-inflammatory medications on human cognition and mental health.…
Descriptors: Psychosis, Mental Health, Older Adults, Memory
Herpertz, Sabine C.; Huebner, Thomas; Marx, Ivo; Vloet, Timo D.; Fink, Gereon R.; Stoecker, Tony; Shah, N. Jon; Konrad, Kerstin; Herpertz-Dahlmann, Beate – Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2008
Background: Boys with early onset of conduct disorder (CD), most of whom also meet diagnostic criteria of a comorbid attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), tend to exhibit high levels of aggression throughout development. While a number of functional neuroimaging studies on emotional processing have been performed in antisocial adults,…
Descriptors: Cues, Antisocial Behavior, Hyperactivity, Attention Deficit Disorders
Beech, John R.; Beauvois, Michael W. – Brain and Language, 2006
Previous research has indicated possible reciprocal connections between phonology and reading, and also connections between aspects of auditory perception and reading. The present study investigates these associations further by examining the potential influence of prenatal androgens using measures of digit ratio (the ratio of the lengths of the…
Descriptors: Early Experience, Phonology, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Auditory Perception
Shah, Amee P.; Baum, Shari R.; Dwivedi, Veena D. – Brain and Language, 2006
The present investigation focussed on the neural substrates underlying linguistic distinctions that are signalled by prosodic cues. A production experiment was conducted to examine the ability of left- (LHD) and right- (RHD) hemisphere-damaged patients and normal controls to use temporal and fundamental frequency cues to disambiguate sentences…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Cues, Sentence Structure, Suprasegmentals
Bedny, Marina; Thompson-Schill, Sharon L. – Brain and Language, 2006
The present study characterizes the neural correlates of noun and verb imageability and addresses the question of whether components of the neural network supporting word recognition can be separately modified by variations in grammatical class and imageability. We examined the effect of imageability on BOLD signal during single-word comprehension…
Descriptors: Comprehension, Nouns, Verbs, Semantics
Watkins, Richard; Shepherd, Karen – Primary Science Review, 2006
According to the Royal National Institute for the Deaf, between eight and nine million people suffer from some form of deafness or loss of hearing. Modern technology, however, together with the work of audiologists such as Karen Shepherd, enables many adults and children to recover near-normal levels of hearing, even when they have suffered some…
Descriptors: Deafness, Partial Hearing, Audiology, Auditory Evaluation
Cao, Fan; Bitan, Tali; Chou, Tai-Li; Burman, Douglas D.; Booth, James R. – Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2006
Background: The current study examined the neuro-cognitive network of visual word rhyming judgment in 14 children with dyslexia and 14 age-matched control children (8- to 14-year-olds) using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Methods: In order to manipulate the difficulty of mapping orthography to phonology, we used conflicting and…
Descriptors: Phonology, Dyslexia, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Rhyme
Parsons, Michael W.; Haut, Marc W.; Lemieux, Susan K.; Moran, Maria T.; Leach, Sharon G. – Brain and Cognition, 2006
The existence of a rostrocaudal gradient of medial temporal lobe (MTL) activation during memory encoding has historically received support from positron emission tomography studies, but less so from functional MRI (FMRI) studies. More recently, FMRI studies have demonstrated that characteristics of the stimuli can affect the location of activation…
Descriptors: Hypothesis Testing, Auditory Stimuli, Visual Stimuli, Memory
Plante, Elena; Holland, Scott K.; Schmithorst, Vince J. – Brain and Language, 2006
Prosodic information in the speech signal carries information about linguistic structure as well as emotional content. Although children are known to use prosodic information from infancy onward to assist linguistic decoding, the brain correlates of this skill in childhood have not yet been the subject of study. Brain activation associated with…
Descriptors: Intonation, Children, Correlation, Brain Hemisphere Functions
Van Petten, Cyma; Luka, Barbara J. – Brain and Language, 2006
Measures of electrical brain activity (event-related potentials, ERPs) have been useful in understanding language processing for several decades. Extant data suggest that the amplitude of the N400 component of the ERP is a general index of the ease or difficulty of retrieving stored conceptual knowledge associated with a word, which is dependent…
Descriptors: Semantics, Metabolism, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Language Processing
Leconte, Pascale; Fagard, Jacqueline – Brain and Cognition, 2006
Sixty-five right- and left-handed preschool and school children were tested on three reach-to-grasp tasks of different levels of complexity, performed in three space locations. Our goal was to evaluate how the effect of attentional information related to object location interacts with task complexity and degree of handedness on children's hand…
Descriptors: Lateral Dominance, Cognitive Development, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Attention
Arambel, Stella R.; Chiarello, Christine – Brain and Language, 2006
The current experiment investigated how sentential form-class expectancies influenced lexical-semantic priming within each hemisphere. Sentences were presented that led readers to expect a noun or a verb and the sentence-final target word was presented to one visual field/hemisphere for a lexical decision response. Noun and verb targets in the…
Descriptors: Verbs, Semantics, Grammar, Word Order
Westerhausen, Rene; Kreuder, Frank; Sequeira, Sarah Dos Santos; Walter, Christof; Woerner, Wolfgang; Wittling, Ralf Arne; Schweiger, Elisabeth; Wittling, Werner – Brain and Language, 2006
The present study aimed to examine how differences in functional lateralisation of language are related to interindividual variations in interhemispheric connectivity. Utilising an fMRI silent word-generation paradigm, 89 left- and right-handed subjects were subdivided into four lateralisation subgroups. Applying morphological and diffusion-tensor…
Descriptors: Neuropsychology, Lateral Dominance, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Models
Knierim, James J. – Learning & Memory, 2006
Place cells of the rat hippocampus are a dominant model system for understanding the role of the hippocampus in learning and memory at the level of single-unit and neural ensemble responses. A complete understanding of the information processing and computations performed by the hippocampus requires detailed knowledge about the properties of the…
Descriptors: Knowledge Representation, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Cytology, Molecular Biology
Rossato, Janine I.; Medina, Jorge H.; Izquierdo, Ivan; Cammarota, Martin; Bevilaqua, Lia R. M. – Learning & Memory, 2006
Nonreinforced retrieval can cause extinction and/or reconsolidation, two processes that affect subsequent retrieval in opposite ways. Using the Morris water maze task we show that, in the rat, repeated nonreinforced expression of spatial memory causes extinction, which is unaffected by inhibition of protein synthesis within the CA1 region of the…
Descriptors: Memory, Genetics, Inhibition, Spatial Ability