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1.
Q J Exp Psychol A ; 58(1): 22-33, 2005 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15881289

ABSTRACT

A group of older adults with good hearing and a group with mild-to-moderate hearing loss were tested for recall of the final three words heard in a running memory task. Near perfect recall of the final words of the three-word sets by both good- and poor-hearing participants allowed the inference that all three words had been correctly identified. Nevertheless, the poor-hearing group recalled significantly fewer of the nonfinal words than did the better hearing group. This was true even though both groups were matched for age, education, and verbal ability. Results were taken as support for an effortfulness hypothesis: the notion that the extra effort that a hearing-impaired listener must expend to achieve perceptual success comes at the cost of processing resources that might otherwise be available for encoding the speech content in memory.


Subject(s)
Hearing Loss, Conductive/epidemiology , Hearing Loss, Sensorineural/epidemiology , Memory Disorders/epidemiology , Speech Perception , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Cochlea/physiopathology , Cochlear Nerve/physiopathology , Cognition Disorders/epidemiology , Female , Hearing Loss, Conductive/diagnosis , Hearing Loss, Sensorineural/diagnosis , Hearing Loss, Sensorineural/physiopathology , Humans , Male , Mental Recall , Otoacoustic Emissions, Spontaneous/physiology , Recognition, Psychology , Severity of Illness Index
2.
J Neurophysiol ; 90(6): 3608-16, 2003 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12944539

ABSTRACT

Neuromodulators can modify the magnitude and kinetics of the response of a sensory neuron to a stimulus. Six neuroactive substances modified the activity of the gastropyloric receptor 2 (GPR2) neuron of the stomatogastric nervous system (STNS) of the crab Cancer borealis during muscle stretch. Stretches were applied to the gastric mill 9 (gm9) and the cardio-pyloric valve 3a (cpv3a) muscles. SDRNFLRFamide and dopamine had excitatory effects on GPR2. Serotonin, GABA, and the peptide allatostatin-3 (AST) decreased GPR2 firing during stretch. Moreover, SDRNFLRFamide and TNRNFLRFamide increased the unstimulated spontaneous firing rate, whereas AST and GABA decreased it. The actions of AST and GABA were amplitude- and history-dependent. In fully recovered preparations, AST and GABA decreased the response to small-amplitude stretches proportionally more than to those evoked by large-amplitude stretches. For large-amplitude stretches, the effects of AST and GABA were more pronounced as the number of recent stretches increased. The modulators that affected the stretch-induced GPR2 firing rate were also tested when the neuron was operating in a bursting mode of activity. Application of SDRNFLRFamide increased the bursting frequency transiently, whereas high concentrations of serotonin, AST, and GABA abolished bursting altogether. Together these data demonstrate that the effects of neuromodulators depend on the previous activity and current state of the sensory neuron.


Subject(s)
Brachyura/physiology , Gastrointestinal Tract/physiology , Mechanoreceptors/physiology , Action Potentials/drug effects , Animals , Dopamine/pharmacology , Gastrointestinal Tract/drug effects , Hormone Antagonists/pharmacology , Mechanoreceptors/drug effects , Muscles/physiology , Neurons/physiology , Neuropeptides/pharmacology , Serotonin/pharmacology , gamma-Aminobutyric Acid/pharmacology
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