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1.
Cogn Process ; 24(1): 83-94, 2023 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36527528

ABSTRACT

The present study aimed to address the following question: does the discrepancy between an expected word and its readability enhances or impair its memorability? We used an adaptation of the sentence stem paradigm (Whittlesea in J Exp Psycol 19:1235-1253, 1993) and manipulated the perceptual clarity of the words by introducing some Gaussian noise (Reber in Psycol Sci 9:45-48, 1998). The target words were semantically predictable or otherwise (conceptual fluency) or were easy or difficult to read (perceptual fluency). The first experiment was conducted to ensure that the two manipulated factors had an impact on the readability of the words. In particular, results showed that when the words were written against a noisy background their predictability enhanced the judgement of readability. The second experiment aimed to test the hypothesis that recognition would be influenced by the discrepancy between conceptual and perceptual fluency. The results showed that with a noisy background, the predictability of the target words had an impact on recognition judgement; with a clear background, the effect on the recognition judgement was caused by the non-predictability of the target words. Conversely, confidence in judgement increased when the two factors went in the same direction, that is, predictability with clarity and non-predictability with low clarity. The results showed that (a) depending on the task, the effects of conceptual and perceptual fluency did not go in the same direction; (b) the kinds of fluency (conceptual and perceptual) were not independent; and (c) recognition judgements were affected by the gap between conceptual and perceptual fluency.


Subject(s)
Metacognition , Recognition, Psychology , Humans , Language , Judgment , Emotions
2.
Psychol Res ; 87(6): 1753-1760, 2023 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36574018

ABSTRACT

In the field of memory, it is now admitted that an experience of memory is not only the consequence of the activation of a precise content, but also results from an inference associated with the transfer of the manner in which the process was carried out (i.e., fluency) in addition to the transfer of the process itself. The aim of this work was to show that experience of memory is also associated with the fluency that is due to the transfer of a processing carried out in our past interactions with our environment, independently the fluency associated with the stimulus in progress. First, participants performed a perceptual discrimination task (geometric shapes: circle or square) that involves a fluent or a non-fluent gesture to respond. Motor fluency vs. non-fluency was implicitly associated with the colour of the geometric shapes. Second, participants had to perform a classical memory recognition task. During the recognition phase, items appeared either with the colour associated with motor fluency or with the colour associated with motor non-fluency. We used a Go-NoGo task to avoid having a confused factor (response space). Results show that items were better recognised with a colour associated with motor fluency than with a colour associated with non-motor fluency. These findings support the idea that an experience of memory is also associated with the transfer of the motor feeling of fluency linked to our past interactions with the environment.


Subject(s)
Memory , Recognition, Psychology , Humans
4.
Encephale ; 36(4): 277-84, 2010 Sep.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20850598

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: In schizophrenia, alteration in the prefrontal cortex can induce some deficiencies of the executive functions, and among them errors in inhibition of prepotent responses. This type of inhibitory processes was called "restraint function" by Hasher et al. It implies a conscious and voluntary inhibition which demands attentional resources. Among the tasks exploring this function, the Hayling completion sentence task (Burgess and Shallice) appears to be the most specific. Moreover, healthy subjects performing this task in functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) show activation of the prefrontal cortex. In this study, we investigated inhibitory processes in schizophrenic patients using two versions of the Hayling completion sentence task, a behavioural version and an fMRI version in order to assess both performance levels and brain correlates of inhibitory processes. METHODS: Forty-eight schizophrenic participants according to DSM-IV, (mean age: 32.8, S.D. 7.7), stabilized for at least one month, receiving antipsychotic medication and with IQ higher than 70 (mean: 96.86, S.D. 20.67) and education level (mean: 11.15, S.D. 3.26) participated in the behavioural study. They were matched on age (mean: 33.8, S.D. 7.6) and education level (mean: 12.28, S.D. 2.87) with thirty-two healthy controls. Nineteen of schizophrenic participants (mean age: 33, S.D. 6.9 and IQ: 99, S.D. 10.74) were assessed by an fMRI adaptation of the Hayling task, matched with 12 controls (mean: 33.9, S.D. 7.3). All the participants had to perform the Hayling task and a speed accuracy task. The Hayling task consists in sentences for which the last word is missing. In the initiation condition, the participants had to complete the sentence with the appropriate word, whereas in inhibition condition the participants had to complete the sentence with inappropriate and unrelated words. RESULTS: Compared to controls, schizophrenics showed an increased number of errors in the inhibition of prepotent responses associated with increased reaction times, even when considering information processing speed. fMRI results showed fairly similar frontal activations in both groups. Nevertheless, schizophrenic patients presented principally large activations in dorsolateral and ventrolateral frontal cortex, the superior frontal sulcus, the frontal pole and the premotor cortex, and stronger activations (bilateral) in the posterior parietal cortex. Control subjects demonstrated a network of deactivated brain regions whereas the schizophrenics did not. DISCUSSION: Our results are in favour of poorer efficacy of restraint function, sometimes comprising impairment of inhibitory processes inducing errors in schizophrenics. This deficiency might be considered as insufficiency in attentional resources and/or in working memory. Hence patients cannot simultaneously restrain prepotent response and find appropriate controlled strategy for correct completion of the task. Moreover, bilateral patterns of parietal hyperactivation and absence of patterns of deactivation seem also in favour of an attentional hypothesis. The Hayling task might be interesting for assessment of inhibitory processes in schizophrenia.


Subject(s)
Attention/physiology , Executive Function/physiology , Frontal Lobe/pathology , Frontal Lobe/physiopathology , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Neuropsychological Tests/statistics & numerical data , Parietal Lobe/pathology , Parietal Lobe/physiopathology , Prefrontal Cortex/pathology , Prefrontal Cortex/physiopathology , Schizophrenia/pathology , Schizophrenia/physiopathology , Adult , Brain Mapping , Dominance, Cerebral/physiology , Female , Humans , Inhibition, Psychological , Male , Memory, Short-Term/physiology , Nerve Net/pathology , Nerve Net/physiopathology , Psychometrics , Reaction Time/physiology , Schizophrenia/diagnosis , Semantics , Verbal Learning/physiology , Young Adult
5.
Encephale ; 32(2 Pt 1): 253-62, 2006.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16910627

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Over the past decades, cognitive psychology contribution to our understanding of aging relies on two major perspectives, focusing on the selective impact of age on either cognitive multiple-systems or global factors of cognition: slowing, working memory and inhibition. In the latter, reduction in inhibitory control during aging (in its access, deletion or restraint functions) is associated with poorer performance on a variety of tasks referring to memory, comprehension or language [Hasher, Zacks and May (16)]. The attractiveness of inhibition as an explanatory factor results in part in the absence of negative priming during aging. Negative priming refers to the slow down of latencies when individuals have to respond to recently ignored informations, compared to unrelated informations. The dissociation, between a preserved location negative priming and an absence of identity negative priming during aging, supports the dorsal-ventral model of inhibition which suggests that spatial and identity inhibition are supported by different and independent visual pathways. An alternative model, directly at odds, is that inhibitory mechanisms are supported by the frontal lobe. In this perspective, inhibition is not a central process responsible for the control of working memory contents, but an automatic and local mechanism whose triggering depends on controlled attention. Therefore, working memory drives efficient inhibition by sustaining task instructions and appropriate responses throughout task execution. This hypothesis is consistent with Houghton and Tipper's (17) architecture of selective attention. According to the authors, the presence or absence of automatic inhibition is very closely linked to a Match/Mismatch field whose function is to compare the present stimulus to an internal self-generated internal template. When an information fails to match the subject's current goals, the match/mismatch field causes an automatic inhibitory imbalance which reduces the to-be-ignored properties' responsiveness. In contrast, information matching subjects' goal is enhanced through an automatic excitatory imbalance. The accurate functioning of the Match/Mismatch field requires efficient executive functioning responsible for the uphold of goals and correct responses. In the case of negative priming, manipulating the efficiency of working memory is of interest as it should affect the triggering of slowing, ie, an indirect inhibitory deficit, when the task is resource demanding [Conwayet al. (6)]. Moreover, if inhibition, as reflected by negative priming, is mediated by individual resource capacity, then NP should disappear during aging only when individuals are engaged in a resource-demanding task. OBJECTIVES: To address this issue, we examine whether cognitive control load in a gender decision task contributed to the presence or absence of NP during aging. According to the dorsal-ventral model, task complexity should not have any impact on performance, since gender decision task relies on a conceptual analysis of information. In turn, the frontal model predicts that age differences in performance profile will only differ when individual resource capacity is overloaded. DESIGN OF THE STUDY: Sixty-four participants (32 young and 32 older adults) performed a gender categorisation task through two experiments. Trials involved two stimuli presented successively at the same location. A word served as a prime and a word as a target. Both prime and target could be male or female. When prime and target matched on gender, we talked about VALID pairs (or compatible). When prime and target mismatched on the manipulated features, we talked about INVALID pairs (or incompatible). Participants' task was to identify the gender of the target. They were explicitly instructed not to respond to primes but to read them silently. Our interest was in response latencies for valid versus invalid pairs. We manipulated task complexity by the absence (experiment 1) or presence (experiment 2) of a distractor during probe trials. RESULTS: For younger adults, primes presented before targets gave rise to behavioural costs when pairs were mapped to the same response compared to pairs that were mapped to opposite ones. This slowing, called Negative Compatibility Effect (NCE), was independent of the presence or absence of a distractor. NCE was reliable for the elderly patients only under condition of no interfering information during the probe trial: pattern of performance of older participants was identical to that of young adults (experiment 1). This effect disappeared as task complexity increased (experiment 2). DISCUSSION: This result suggests that NCE triggering is dependant on the amount of cognitive control engaged by the task, and therefore that the ability to inhibit irrelevant information is secondary to a general capacity of the working memory. CONCLUSION: The implications of our data are consistent with the level of processing account, as well as the recent neuroimaging contributions which suggest, for example, the involvement of the dorso-lateral prefrontal cortex (sensitive to aging) when task demands are high, and a ventro-lateral prefrontal implication when demands are low [see Eenshuistra et al. for a review (10)].


Subject(s)
Aging/physiology , Cognition/physiology , Inhibition, Psychological , Reaction Time , Adult , Aged , Decision Making/physiology , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Neuropsychological Tests , Sex Factors
6.
Encephale ; 31(5 Pt 1): 589-99, 2005.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16598963

ABSTRACT

This work took place within tipper's negative priming paradigm. In a study with two age groups (young and older adults), Connelly and Hasher have measured the identity negative priming, the location negative priming and the "identity and location" negative priming. They used a simple material (letters). For these authors, the young people showed the negative priming effect in all the conditions, but the older people showed this effect only in location and in "identity and location" conditions, but there was no effect in identity condition. Hence, there is a dissociation between identity and location in the older adults group. Our work replicated the procedure of Connelly and Hasher using material presenting semantic (words) and perceptive selection difficulties. Our results were not consistent with the results of the authors. For the two age groups, the "location" and "identity and location" conditions were computed statistically faster than the "identity" condition, and there was no difference in the reaction times between the "location" and "identity and location" conditions. In the young adults group, even if an identity negative priming was obtained, there was no effect in the "location" and "identity and location" conditions (in comparison with a control condition). This led us to conclude is the existence of a dissociation between identity and location for the young adults. In the older adults group, we obtained positive priming in the "identity and location" condition, and no effect in the other conditions. Moreover, the reaction times in the "location" and "identity and location" conditions were faster than in the identity condition. We think about a dissociation between identity and location in the older group. Our data led us to conclude in the existence of a dissociation between identity and location, not only for the older adults, but also for the young adults. Our conclusion agrees with the explanations given by the authors regarding the neurological system; with the existence of two neuronal pathways, one for the identity and the other for the location. We explain the negative priming effect obtained in the young adults group through controlled inhibition processes, and we explain the positive priming obtained in the older adults group through automatic recuperation processes.


Subject(s)
Aging/physiology , Choice Behavior , Cognition Disorders/diagnosis , Cognition Disorders/epidemiology , Semantics , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Neuropsychological Tests , Severity of Illness Index , Vocabulary
7.
Equine Vet J ; 34(5): 528-31, 2002 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12358059

ABSTRACT

Our objectives were to 1) establish ionised calcium (ICa), C-terminal PTH and biologically active PTH (intact molecule) concentrations in blood from normal horses, 2) examine the stability of ionised calcium and acid-base values in stored equine heparinised blood and serum and 3) check the applicability of the formulas based on these parameters in certain disease states. Mean +/- s.d. % ionised calcium in heparinised blood of normal Warmbloods was 51 +/- 2.7 (n = 20) of total calcium, range 1.45-1.75 mmol/l (n = 15) at Michigan State University and 1.43-1.69 mmol/l (n = 20) at Utrecht University. Mean +/- s.d. EDTA plasma concentration for intact +/PTH in normal horses measured 0.6 +/- 0.3 pmol/l (n = 11). Both mean serum and the heparinised blood ionised calcium concentrations changed (not significantly) after 102 h storage at room temperature. Six cycles of freezing and thawing did not affect serum ionised calcium concentration significantly. Ionised calcium concentration and pH in heparinised blood of 20 normal Warmbloods were used to calculate the regression equation for the prediction of the adjusted ionised calcium concentration to a pH of 7.4. The linear regression equation found was: adjusted plasma ICa at pH 7.4 mmol/l = -6.4570 + 0.8739 x (measured pH) + 0.9944 x (measured ICa mmol/l). By means of this formula, mean adjusted ionised calcium concentration in heparinised blood calculated was 100% of the actual value given by the analyser in the normal horses. When using this formula in horses with colic or diarrhoea, mean adjusted ionised calcium concentration was underestimated by 0.2 and 0.3%, respectively. Furthermore, to adjust the measured ionised calcium concentration in heparinised blood to a pH of 7.4 in healthy as well as in 2 groups of diseased horses 2 formulas with a good prediction are now available.


Subject(s)
Calcium/blood , Colic/veterinary , Diarrhea/veterinary , Horse Diseases/blood , Parathyroid Hormone/blood , Algorithms , Animals , Blood Specimen Collection/veterinary , Case-Control Studies , Colic/blood , Diarrhea/blood , Female , Homeostasis , Horses , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Linear Models , Male , Peptide Fragments/blood , Reference Values
8.
Rev Neurol (Paris) ; 157(3): 318-20, 2001 Mar.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11319496

ABSTRACT

Recent hypotheses have renewed discussion on the mechanisms linking executive functions and working memory in patients with traumatic brain injury. In this context, we studied the control and suppression functions of inhibition processes. Results obtained with a suppression paradigm showed that the traumatic brain injury patient makes a number of suppression errors and that suppression responses imply an important temporal loss in this population.


Subject(s)
Brain Damage, Chronic/physiopathology , Brain Injuries/physiopathology , Neural Inhibition/physiology , Adult , Aphasia, Wernicke/diagnosis , Aphasia, Wernicke/physiopathology , Brain Damage, Chronic/diagnosis , Brain Injuries/diagnosis , Female , Humans , Male , Mental Recall/physiology , Neuropsychological Tests , Paired-Associate Learning/physiology
9.
Brain Lang ; 72(2): 150-7, 2000 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10722785

ABSTRACT

Information provided by a word activates various potential meanings. Comprehension involves the suppression of inappropriate meanings of ambiguous words in order to finetune the intended meaning of sentences. If older adults become less efficient at inhibiting contextually irrelevant information, then multiple meanings of ambiguous words would be activated regardless of contextual bias. An alternative to multiple access was that older adults activate only the most dominant meaning of ambiguous words. According to this reservation, support for an inhibition deficit would require evidence that older adults activated the multiple meanings of ambiguous words. The effects of aging on both activation and inhibition of different meanings of ambiguous words were studied using Faust et al. (1997) paradigms. Results showed that both activation and inhibition response latency differed for the dominant and subordinate target and that the dominant meaning for one subject was not the same for another one. The implication of these results is that studies of inhibition should take dominance meaning of ambiguous word for each subject into account.


Subject(s)
Aging/physiology , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Dementia/diagnosis , Female , Humans , Male , Reaction Time , Reading , Severity of Illness Index , Vocabulary
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