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1.
Front Hum Neurosci ; 13: 73, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30936825

ABSTRACT

Liking is one of the most important psychological processes associated with the reward system, being involved in affective processing and pleasure/displeasure encoding. Currently, there is no consensus regarding the combination of physiological indicators which best predict liking, especially when applied to dynamic stimuli such as videos. There is a lack of a standard methodology to assess likeability over time and therefore in assessing narrative and semantic aspects of the stimulus. We developed a time-dependent method to evaluate the physiological correlates of likeability for three different thematic categories, namely: adventure (AV), comedy (CM), and nature landscape (LS). Twenty-eight healthy adults with ages ranging from 18 to 35 years (average: 23.85 years) were enrolled in the study. The participants were asked to provide likeability ratings for videos as they watched them, using a response box. Three 60-s videos were presented, one for each category, in randomized order while the participant's physiological data [electroencephalogram (EEG), electrocardiogram (ECG) and eye tracking (ET)] was recorded. The comedy video (CM) presented the smallest minimum accumulated normalized rating (ANR; p = 0.013) and the LS video presented the highest maximum ANR (p = 0.039). The LS video presented the longest time for first response (p < 0.001) and the AV video presented the shortest time for maximum response (p = 0.016). The LS video had the highest mean likeability rating with 1.43 ± 2.31 points; and the CM video had the lowest with 0.57 ± 1.77. Multiple linear regression models were created to predict the likeability of each video using the following physiological indicators; AV: power in beta band at C4 and P4 (p = 0.004, adj. R 2 = 0.301); CM: alpha power in Fp2 (p = 0.001, adj. R 2 = 0.326) and LS: alpha power in P4, F8, and Fp2; beta power in C4 and P4 and pupil size, (p = 0.002, adj. R 2 = 0.489). Despite its limitations (e.g., using one 1-min video per category) our findings suggest that there is a considerable difference in the psychophysiological correlates of stimuli with different contextual properties and that the use of time-dependent methods to assess videos should be considered as best practices.

2.
Schizophr Res Cogn ; 3: 39-46, 2016 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28740806

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Although cognitive deficits have consistently been characterized as core features of schizophrenia, they have not been incorporated into definitions of remission. Furthermore, just a few studies have examined the relationship between cognitive deficits and symptomatic remission. The main aim of the present study is to evaluate the executive functioning of nonremitted schizophrenia patients. METHODS: 72 remitted and 42 nonremitted schizophrenia patients, and 119 healthy controls were examined. Subjects were tested with a comprehensive battery of cognitive tests, including a measure to assess the general components of executive functioning and individual tasks to tap the three specific executive dimensions assessed in the present study, namely updating, shifting and inhibition. RESULTS: Schizophrenia subjects performed poorly on general executive functioning and shifting tasks in comparison to healthy controls. Remitted subjects performed better than nonremitted on inhibition and updating tasks. Whereas being a male and showing decreases in updating increase the chances of being in the nonremitted schizophrenia subjects group, increases in shifting and updating enhance the odds of being in the healthy control group. CONCLUSION: The present findings suggest that executive function deficits are present in chronic schizophrenic patients. In addition, specific executive processes might be associated to symptom remission. Future studies examining prospectively first-episode, drug naive patients diagnosed with schizophrenia may be especially elucidative.

3.
Arq. ciênc. saúde ; 17(3): 154-160, jul.-set. 2010.
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-619608

ABSTRACT

O presente artigo discute as causas da atual epidemia de obesidade à luz de variáveis evolucionárias e epigênicas. Sob esta perspectiva, a hipótese mais influente do campo denomina-se ‘hipótese da frugalidade’e aponta a importância central de genes que aumentam a conservação energética, por força de sua importânciano passado evolucionário da espécie. Em face desta perspectiva, o artigo destaca também a importância defatores epigênicos e apresenta as principais implicações desta interação genética-epigênica para odesenvolvimento de melhores políticas de saúde pública.


The current article discusses the causes of the current epidemics of obesity in terms of evolutionary andepigenetic variables. Under this perspective, the most influent hypothesis of the field is called ‘thriftygenotype hypothesis’. It suggests a core role for genes that increase energetic conservation, in accordance with their importance in the adaptive environment of the species. In face of that perspective, this article alsohighlights the importance of epigenetic variables, and presents the main consequences of this genetic epigenesisinteraction for the improvement of public health policies.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Epidemiology , Obesity/epidemiology
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