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My research interests remain at the intersection of neuropsychiatry and experimental psychology: I am interested in space, time and the body, in the relationships between knowing and believing, the debate about genius and madness, and a recurrent leitmotif is the functional specialization of the cerebral hemispheres.<br /><div class="js-profile-less-about u-linkUnstyled u-tcGrayDarker u-textDecorationUnderline u-displayNone">less</div></div></div><div class="ri-section"><div class="ri-section-header"><span>Interests</span></div><div class="ri-tags-container"><a data-click-track="profile-user-info-expand-research-interests" data-has-card-for-ri-list="124242273" href="https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Laterality"><div id="js-react-on-rails-context" style="display:none" data-rails-context="{"inMailer":false,"i18nLocale":"en","i18nDefaultLocale":"en","href":"https://independent.academia.edu/bruggerp","location":"/bruggerp","scheme":"https","host":"independent.academia.edu","port":null,"pathname":"/bruggerp","search":null,"httpAcceptLanguage":null,"serverSide":false}"></div> <div class="js-react-on-rails-component" style="display:none" data-component-name="Pill" data-props="{"color":"gray","children":["Laterality"]}" data-trace="false" data-dom-id="Pill-react-component-28e5a7f7-4457-46c2-80a0-7b335d8bce20"></div> <div id="Pill-react-component-28e5a7f7-4457-46c2-80a0-7b335d8bce20"></div> </a><a data-click-track="profile-user-info-expand-research-interests" data-has-card-for-ri-list="124242273" href="https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Driving"><div class="js-react-on-rails-component" style="display:none" data-component-name="Pill" data-props="{"color":"gray","children":["Driving"]}" data-trace="false" data-dom-id="Pill-react-component-ac13adb4-b60b-40ac-a6e0-d58091b2ae84"></div> <div id="Pill-react-component-ac13adb4-b60b-40ac-a6e0-d58091b2ae84"></div> </a><a data-click-track="profile-user-info-expand-research-interests" data-has-card-for-ri-list="124242273" href="https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Central_Nervous_System"><div class="js-react-on-rails-component" style="display:none" data-component-name="Pill" data-props="{"color":"gray","children":["Central Nervous System"]}" data-trace="false" data-dom-id="Pill-react-component-e23749a0-7de5-4624-967e-39b7592785f0"></div> <div id="Pill-react-component-e23749a0-7de5-4624-967e-39b7592785f0"></div> </a><a data-click-track="profile-user-info-expand-research-interests" data-has-card-for-ri-list="124242273" href="https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Paraplegia"><div class="js-react-on-rails-component" style="display:none" data-component-name="Pill" data-props="{"color":"gray","children":["Paraplegia"]}" data-trace="false" data-dom-id="Pill-react-component-4674e81f-b787-4fd2-91c6-696989cd938d"></div> <div id="Pill-react-component-4674e81f-b787-4fd2-91c6-696989cd938d"></div> </a><a data-click-track="profile-user-info-expand-research-interests" data-has-card-for-ri-list="124242273" href="https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Politics_of_Education_and_Social_Policy"><div class="js-react-on-rails-component" style="display:none" data-component-name="Pill" data-props="{"color":"gray","children":["Politics of Education and Social Policy"]}" data-trace="false" data-dom-id="Pill-react-component-634825f3-9504-4c8e-ba22-f1065c4640c4"></div> <div id="Pill-react-component-634825f3-9504-4c8e-ba22-f1065c4640c4"></div> </a></div></div></div></div><div class="right-panel-container"><div class="user-content-wrapper"><div class="uploads-container" id="social-redesign-work-container"><div class="upload-header"><h2 class="ds2-5-heading-sans-serif-xs">Uploads</h2></div><div class="documents-container backbone-social-profile-documents" style="width: 100%;"><div class="u-taCenter"></div><div class="profile--tab_content_container js-tab-pane tab-pane active" id="all"><div class="profile--tab_heading_container js-section-heading" data-section="Papers" id="Papers"><h3 class="profile--tab_heading_container">Papers by peter brugger</h3></div><div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="79661793"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/79661793/Der_Wunsch_nach_Amputation_Bizarre_Macke_oder_neurologische_St%C3%B6rung"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Der Wunsch nach Amputation. Bizarre Macke oder neurologische Störung" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/86300172/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/79661793/Der_Wunsch_nach_Amputation_Bizarre_Macke_oder_neurologische_St%C3%B6rung">Der Wunsch nach Amputation. Bizarre Macke oder neurologische Störung</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="c24cdddcd9e88fa2db2ffe1c22025464" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{"attachment_id":86300172,"asset_id":79661793,"asset_type":"Work","button_location":"profile"}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/86300172/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5Myw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="79661793"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="79661793"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 79661793; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=79661793]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=79661793]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 79661793; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='79661793']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 79661793, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "c24cdddcd9e88fa2db2ffe1c22025464" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=79661793]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":79661793,"title":"Der Wunsch nach Amputation. 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$(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="79661792"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/79661792/L_dopa_modulates_striatal_functional_connectivity_in_adults_with_psychotic_like_experiences_A_randomized_double_blind_placebo_controlled_study"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of L-dopa modulates striatal functional connectivity in adults with psychotic-like experiences: A randomized double-blind placebo-controlled study" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/86300174/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/79661792/L_dopa_modulates_striatal_functional_connectivity_in_adults_with_psychotic_like_experiences_A_randomized_double_blind_placebo_controlled_study">L-dopa modulates striatal functional connectivity in adults with psychotic-like experiences: A randomized double-blind placebo-controlled study</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>European Psychiatry</span><span>, 2017</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">IntroductionAccording to the dopamine hypothesis functional brain abnormalities and neurochemical...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">IntroductionAccording to the dopamine hypothesis functional brain abnormalities and neurochemical alterations may converge to cause psychosis through aberrant salience attribution. Indeed, resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI) has revealed widespread brain disconnectivity across the psychotic spectrum.ObjectivesTo advance the understanding of the dopaminergic involvement in intrinsic functional connectivity (iFC) and its putative relationship to the development of psychotic disorders we aimed to investigate the link between L-Dopa, a dopamine precursor, and its modulation of striatal iFC in subthreshold psychosis, i.e. non-clinical psychosis.MethodsWe used a randomized, double-blind placebo controlled study design including in our sample 56 healthy, male, right-handed, subjects with no familiar risk factors for psychosis who were assessed with the Schizotypal Personality Questionnaire (SPQ) and underwent 10 minutes of rs-fMRI scanning. 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The oscillations, referred to as slow-wave activity (SWA), reflect sleep need and sleep intensity. The amount of SWA is homeostatically regulated. It is enhanced after sleep loss and declines during sleep. Animal studies suggested that sleep need is genetically controlled, yet the physiological mechanisms remain unknown. Here we show in humans that a genetic variant of adenosine deaminase, which is associated with the reduced metabolism of adenosine to inosine, specifically enhances deep sleep and SWA during sleep. In contrast, a distinct polymorphism of the adenosine A 2A receptor gene, which was associated with interindividual differences in anxiety symptoms after caffeine intake in healthy volunteers, affects the electroencephalogram during sleep and wakefulness in a non-state-specific manner. Our findings indicate a direct role of adenosine in hum...</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="edb1ccffa49195cc655f98f6f3206f9f" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{"attachment_id":86300209,"asset_id":79661791,"asset_type":"Work","button_location":"profile"}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/86300209/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5Myw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="79661791"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="79661791"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 79661791; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=79661791]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=79661791]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 79661791; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='79661791']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 79661791, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "edb1ccffa49195cc655f98f6f3206f9f" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=79661791]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":79661791,"title":"A functional genetic variation of adenosine deaminase affects the duration and intensity of deep sleep in humans","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Slow, rhythmic oscillations (\u0026lt;5 Hz) in the sleep electroencephalogram may be a sign of synaptic plasticity occurring during sleep. 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To achieve successful body-space interactions, the body representation is strictly connected with that of the space immediately surrounding it through efficient visuo-tactile crossmodal integration. Such a body-space integrated representation is not fixed, but can be dynamically modulated by the use of external tools. Our study aims to explore the effect of using a complex tool, namely a functional prosthesis, on crossmodal visuo-tactile spatial interactions in healthy participants. By using the crossmodal visuo-tactile congruency paradigm, we found that prolonged training with a mechanical hand capable of distal hand movements and providing sensory feedback induces a pattern of interference, which is not observed after a brief training, between visual stimuli close to the prosthesis and touches on the body. These results suggest that after extensive, but not short, training the functional prosthesis acquires a visuo-tactile crossmodal representation akin to real limbs. This finding adds to previous evidence for the embodiment of functional prostheses in amputees, and shows that their use may also improve the crossmodal combination of somatosensory feedback delivered by the prosthesis with visual stimuli in the space around it, thus effectively augmenting the patients' visuomotor abilities.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="7d525ea9e2e4b75247ee2c42936a0027" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{"attachment_id":86300173,"asset_id":79661790,"asset_type":"Work","button_location":"profile"}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/86300173/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5Myw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="79661790"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="79661790"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 79661790; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=79661790]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=79661790]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 79661790; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='79661790']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 79661790, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "7d525ea9e2e4b75247ee2c42936a0027" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=79661790]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":79661790,"title":"Crossmodal representation of a functional robotic hand arises after extensive training in healthy participants","translated_title":"","metadata":{"publisher":"Elsevier BV","grobid_abstract":"The way in which humans represent their own bodies is critical in guiding their interactions with the environment. 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The tight functional coupling between hand and bra...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Congressi Stefano Franscini conference series! The tight functional coupling between hand and brain has greatly shaped the evolution of language, culture and technology. Any reduction or loss of hand function, whether of central or peripheral origin, has devastating effects on the independence and social integration of the affected person. And any treatment, be it through human or technological intervention, must account for this unique coupling. As a result, hand and brain have drawn strong interest from the social, medical and engineering sciences alike. This conference brings together leading researchers from the multiple disciplines studying the unique dexterity and sensory abilities of the hand, its neuromechanical and physiological control, as well as its functional recovery and neuroprosthetic restoration following injury. This is the third CSF conference on these topics, following two successful events organized by Mario Wiesendanger in 1994 (Sensorimotor Function of the Han...</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="8886f8af05cca79f2ac661c64b01ab42" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{"attachment_id":86297347,"asset_id":79657336,"asset_type":"Work","button_location":"profile"}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/86297347/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5Myw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="79657336"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="79657336"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 79657336; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=79657336]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=79657336]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 79657336; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='79657336']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 79657336, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "8886f8af05cca79f2ac661c64b01ab42" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=79657336]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":79657336,"title":"Marie-Claude Hepp-Reymond","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Congressi Stefano Franscini conference series! The tight functional coupling between hand and brain has greatly shaped the evolution of language, culture and technology. Any reduction or loss of hand function, whether of central or peripheral origin, has devastating effects on the independence and social integration of the affected person. And any treatment, be it through human or technological intervention, must account for this unique coupling. As a result, hand and brain have drawn strong interest from the social, medical and engineering sciences alike. This conference brings together leading researchers from the multiple disciplines studying the unique dexterity and sensory abilities of the hand, its neuromechanical and physiological control, as well as its functional recovery and neuroprosthetic restoration following injury. This is the third CSF conference on these topics, following two successful events organized by Mario Wiesendanger in 1994 (Sensorimotor Function of the Han...","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2016,"errors":{}}},"translated_abstract":"Congressi Stefano Franscini conference series! The tight functional coupling between hand and brain has greatly shaped the evolution of language, culture and technology. Any reduction or loss of hand function, whether of central or peripheral origin, has devastating effects on the independence and social integration of the affected person. And any treatment, be it through human or technological intervention, must account for this unique coupling. As a result, hand and brain have drawn strong interest from the social, medical and engineering sciences alike. This conference brings together leading researchers from the multiple disciplines studying the unique dexterity and sensory abilities of the hand, its neuromechanical and physiological control, as well as its functional recovery and neuroprosthetic restoration following injury. This is the third CSF conference on these topics, following two successful events organized by Mario Wiesendanger in 1994 (Sensorimotor Function of the Han...","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/79657336/Marie_Claude_Hepp_Reymond","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2022-05-22T08:22:11.257-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":124242273,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":86297347,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/86297347/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"hbt2014_booklet.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/86297347/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5Myw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Marie_Claude_Hepp_Reymond.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/86297347/hbt2014_booklet-libre.pdf?1653234004=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DMarie_Claude_Hepp_Reymond.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913593\u0026Signature=SghTwS9jdFHEAn80I3VxVpXF-hdgOYgy-JsI6NY5ZhnYxH2mGUY3xCV4bb~9BV3GbNI5~3~-w6xpAoGE8rnKiqRXLqmg02x9mai3o9KyS4tI~OvabbfwJi3sy9dFoITySA0d0k62Ss64el6qlWHVdTPYYDJuVJZR2UJ8tx7r-7NNoSIdPxRJvbVcW~fPRKczCTPHNyVSZ0~p7FQSsqINj1iMWoeO52Jr8XCEpjSCnO6ZwmXRa7kPgW~6ffiUrRkeDtoxofbRFk-2A9acWm77UkEwy0duqLI7BX8xQ4kzASXebFTTnzxWxeh0MGAs1wWjAcxDMSvsJPNmGuMKuwqLBw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Marie_Claude_Hepp_Reymond","translated_slug":"","page_count":114,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"Congressi Stefano Franscini conference series! The tight functional coupling between hand and brain has greatly shaped the evolution of language, culture and technology. Any reduction or loss of hand function, whether of central or peripheral origin, has devastating effects on the independence and social integration of the affected person. And any treatment, be it through human or technological intervention, must account for this unique coupling. As a result, hand and brain have drawn strong interest from the social, medical and engineering sciences alike. This conference brings together leading researchers from the multiple disciplines studying the unique dexterity and sensory abilities of the hand, its neuromechanical and physiological control, as well as its functional recovery and neuroprosthetic restoration following injury. This is the third CSF conference on these topics, following two successful events organized by Mario Wiesendanger in 1994 (Sensorimotor Function of the Han...","owner":{"id":124242273,"first_name":"peter","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"brugger","page_name":"bruggerp","domain_name":"independent","created_at":"2019-08-29T06:54:36.677-07:00","display_name":"peter brugger","url":"https://independent.academia.edu/bruggerp"},"attachments":[{"id":86297347,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/86297347/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"hbt2014_booklet.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/86297347/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5Myw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Marie_Claude_Hepp_Reymond.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/86297347/hbt2014_booklet-libre.pdf?1653234004=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DMarie_Claude_Hepp_Reymond.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913593\u0026Signature=SghTwS9jdFHEAn80I3VxVpXF-hdgOYgy-JsI6NY5ZhnYxH2mGUY3xCV4bb~9BV3GbNI5~3~-w6xpAoGE8rnKiqRXLqmg02x9mai3o9KyS4tI~OvabbfwJi3sy9dFoITySA0d0k62Ss64el6qlWHVdTPYYDJuVJZR2UJ8tx7r-7NNoSIdPxRJvbVcW~fPRKczCTPHNyVSZ0~p7FQSsqINj1iMWoeO52Jr8XCEpjSCnO6ZwmXRa7kPgW~6ffiUrRkeDtoxofbRFk-2A9acWm77UkEwy0duqLI7BX8xQ4kzASXebFTTnzxWxeh0MGAs1wWjAcxDMSvsJPNmGuMKuwqLBw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[],"urls":[{"id":20671108,"url":"http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.711.4857\u0026rep=rep1\u0026type=pdf"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="72664665"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664665/Superstitiousness_in_obsessive_compulsive"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Superstitiousness in obsessive-compulsive" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503161/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664665/Superstitiousness_in_obsessive_compulsive">Superstitiousness in obsessive-compulsive</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">ccording to the Merriam-Webster online dictionary (http://www.merriam-webster.com), a superstitio...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">ccording to the Merriam-Webster online dictionary (<a href="http://www.merriam-webster.com" rel="nofollow">http://www.merriam-webster.com</a>), a superstition is "a belief or practice resulting from ignorance, fear of the unknown, trust in magic or chance, or a false conception of causation." Focusing on one or several aspects of this broad definition, some authors have suggested that superstitions are a fundamental feature of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). 1-5 We first elaborate on the dichotomy between behavior and belief, mentioned in the above definition, and differentiate superstitious behavior from superstitious belief, or magical ideation. We then propose that different brain circuits may be responsible for these two forms of superstitiousness, and that the type of superstition observed in an individual patient may thus inform investigators about the prominently affected neurocognitive systems.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="2dfb8ed93fee9cee95c37099eeaab038" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{"attachment_id":81503161,"asset_id":72664665,"asset_type":"Work","button_location":"profile"}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503161/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5Myw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="72664665"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="72664665"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664665; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664665]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664665]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664665; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='72664665']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 72664665, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "2dfb8ed93fee9cee95c37099eeaab038" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=72664665]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":72664665,"title":"Superstitiousness in obsessive-compulsive","translated_title":"","metadata":{"grobid_abstract":"ccording to the Merriam-Webster online dictionary (http://www.merriam-webster.com), a superstition is \"a belief or practice resulting from ignorance, fear of the unknown, trust in magic or chance, or a false conception of causation.\" Focusing on one or several aspects of this broad definition, some authors have suggested that superstitions are a fundamental feature of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). 1-5 We first elaborate on the dichotomy between behavior and belief, mentioned in the above definition, and differentiate superstitious behavior from superstitious belief, or magical ideation. We then propose that different brain circuits may be responsible for these two forms of superstitiousness, and that the type of superstition observed in an individual patient may thus inform investigators about the prominently affected neurocognitive systems.","grobid_abstract_attachment_id":81503161},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/72664665/Superstitiousness_in_obsessive_compulsive","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2022-03-01T02:26:50.165-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":124242273,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":81503161,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503161/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"DialoguesClinNeurosci-12-250.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503161/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5Myw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Superstitiousness_in_obsessive_compulsiv.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/81503161/DialoguesClinNeurosci-12-250-libre.pdf?1646134448=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DSuperstitiousness_in_obsessive_compulsiv.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913593\u0026Signature=VG2VVVE1mlc5AquQhLs4NkMyNU9nJt3ohQD9C1mxLPSXH4Ig1p3MnbsJw1tfr1NYrqcIqaFsaSMQVLg2oU5JVxlRCw2KoUB-FCC9Gmrx90WOAkiBOqQlwLJlNxGojz7KUf8UnLC6IHFSVv4aO-inS99FWIuZhojZW8GFB4g9fxLROJSg~RF4qv66EfxZhl6jPDDLfsuDQswBWN1k71-VKm1TFv0PXfdYIECvRQ7Sn50JUYkthGMZYVOevYGO71g9j6VPLuegOF3nO5msfeDtmmXx3k0cczA4v94694H2FXoDQse6uIX06foSNz7bVV6G0IzLqIe-fEtYLnCsJohQtw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Superstitiousness_in_obsessive_compulsive","translated_slug":"","page_count":5,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"ccording to the Merriam-Webster online dictionary (http://www.merriam-webster.com), a superstition is \"a belief or practice resulting from ignorance, fear of the unknown, trust in magic or chance, or a false conception of causation.\" Focusing on one or several aspects of this broad definition, some authors have suggested that superstitions are a fundamental feature of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). 1-5 We first elaborate on the dichotomy between behavior and belief, mentioned in the above definition, and differentiate superstitious behavior from superstitious belief, or magical ideation. We then propose that different brain circuits may be responsible for these two forms of superstitiousness, and that the type of superstition observed in an individual patient may thus inform investigators about the prominently affected neurocognitive systems.","owner":{"id":124242273,"first_name":"peter","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"brugger","page_name":"bruggerp","domain_name":"independent","created_at":"2019-08-29T06:54:36.677-07:00","display_name":"peter brugger","url":"https://independent.academia.edu/bruggerp"},"attachments":[{"id":81503161,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503161/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"DialoguesClinNeurosci-12-250.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503161/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5Myw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Superstitiousness_in_obsessive_compulsiv.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/81503161/DialoguesClinNeurosci-12-250-libre.pdf?1646134448=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DSuperstitiousness_in_obsessive_compulsiv.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913593\u0026Signature=VG2VVVE1mlc5AquQhLs4NkMyNU9nJt3ohQD9C1mxLPSXH4Ig1p3MnbsJw1tfr1NYrqcIqaFsaSMQVLg2oU5JVxlRCw2KoUB-FCC9Gmrx90WOAkiBOqQlwLJlNxGojz7KUf8UnLC6IHFSVv4aO-inS99FWIuZhojZW8GFB4g9fxLROJSg~RF4qv66EfxZhl6jPDDLfsuDQswBWN1k71-VKm1TFv0PXfdYIECvRQ7Sn50JUYkthGMZYVOevYGO71g9j6VPLuegOF3nO5msfeDtmmXx3k0cczA4v94694H2FXoDQse6uIX06foSNz7bVV6G0IzLqIe-fEtYLnCsJohQtw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"},{"id":81503162,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503162/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"DialoguesClinNeurosci-12-250.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503162/download_file","bulk_download_file_name":"Superstitiousness_in_obsessive_compulsiv.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/81503162/DialoguesClinNeurosci-12-250-libre.pdf?1646134447=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DSuperstitiousness_in_obsessive_compulsiv.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913593\u0026Signature=KAUcR29hy0XJGNchfAGHnretInEP5MUTJGWBMt6CKGILBtL2RFvpq34FxAi1-T8-lPPDSyxCglbcPh0PZRwpH~nP--K8ceGVzSp18IV5XlLsQHaGG3-TGYUtQKl5~bBnkVkUslytK~2gBPiE1KdcVwuB6lmbS-BMrw34wSM3xnjgQEGzvC7sBph2WYYus58Buyz2id~tnQge3AH5q57Rg2-i5H30ACT68DrD2dFXOUbQV16uURjXrOZRByG0RajFs5kAZu-xnU7LrhMXI3S42iDq0Jn6r04AVbGSWyvJzueKJZ13xyMbudKG9UYtYMrRYCCJ6g1W78yQKh6gO6yUew__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[],"urls":[{"id":18102284,"url":"https://web.archive.org/web/20180425021731/https://www.dialogues-cns.org/wp-content/uploads/issues/12/DialoguesClinNeurosci-12-250.pdf"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="72664661"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664661/Repetitive_behavior_and_repetition_avoidance_the_role_of_the_right_hemisphere"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Repetitive behavior and repetition avoidance: the role of the right hemisphere" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664661/Repetitive_behavior_and_repetition_avoidance_the_role_of_the_right_hemisphere">Repetitive behavior and repetition avoidance: the role of the right hemisphere</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Journal of Psychiatry & Neuroscience</span><span>, 1996</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Based on clinical observations of patients suffering from brain damage, a recent model assumes a ...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Based on clinical observations of patients suffering from brain damage, a recent model assumes a right hemisphere dominance for the suppression of repetitive behavior. This study set out to test whether or not the well-known effect of repetition avoidance in sequential response production is likewise mediated by the right hemisphere. It was found that, in 40 healthy subjects, avoidance of repetitions in a random number-generation task correlated positively with a relative superiority for design as compared to letter fluency. Since design fluency is predominantly mediated by the right frontal lobe and letter fluency by the left, this finding supports the notion of a right hemisphere dominance for the avoidance of repetitive responses. This study illustrates the usefulness of a neurobehavioral approach to repetition behavior in the randomization of response. In particular, it demonstrates that the phenomenon of repetition avoidance may be better accounted for in terms of a control mec...</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="72664661"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="72664661"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664661; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664661]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664661]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664661; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='72664661']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 72664661, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=72664661]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":72664661,"title":"Repetitive behavior and repetition avoidance: the role of the right hemisphere","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Based on clinical observations of patients suffering from brain damage, a recent model assumes a right hemisphere dominance for the suppression of repetitive behavior. 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Since design fluency is predominantly mediated by the right frontal lobe and letter fluency by the left, this finding supports the notion of a right hemisphere dominance for the avoidance of repetitive responses. This study illustrates the usefulness of a neurobehavioral approach to repetition behavior in the randomization of response. In particular, it demonstrates that the phenomenon of repetition avoidance may be better accounted for in terms of a control mec...","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/72664661/Repetitive_behavior_and_repetition_avoidance_the_role_of_the_right_hemisphere","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2022-03-01T02:26:47.079-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":124242273,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Repetitive_behavior_and_repetition_avoidance_the_role_of_the_right_hemisphere","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"Based on clinical observations of patients suffering from brain damage, a recent model assumes a right hemisphere dominance for the suppression of repetitive behavior. This study set out to test whether or not the well-known effect of repetition avoidance in sequential response production is likewise mediated by the right hemisphere. It was found that, in 40 healthy subjects, avoidance of repetitions in a random number-generation task correlated positively with a relative superiority for design as compared to letter fluency. Since design fluency is predominantly mediated by the right frontal lobe and letter fluency by the left, this finding supports the notion of a right hemisphere dominance for the avoidance of repetitive responses. This study illustrates the usefulness of a neurobehavioral approach to repetition behavior in the randomization of response. 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Prospective study. University psychology department. Forty healthy, right-handed students. Students were administered the Magical Ideation (MI) Scale and a 2-minute letter fluency task in which they named as many nouns as possible beginning with &quot;A&quot; or &quot;F,&quot; in any order. Total number of words produced and percentage of unique, rare and common words (as determined by the responses of the whole group); scores on MI scale. Participants with high scores (above the median) on the MI scale generated as many words as those who had low scores. People in both groups also generated a comparable number of unique words (named by only 1 person) and common words (named by 6 or more people). As hypothesized, people with high scores on the MI scale generated more rare words (named by fewer than 6 people) than those with low scor...</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="972e194695e494570da190eecd62c5f7" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{"attachment_id":81503158,"asset_id":72664657,"asset_type":"Work","button_location":"profile"}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503158/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5Myw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="72664657"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="72664657"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664657; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664657]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664657]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664657; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='72664657']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 72664657, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "972e194695e494570da190eecd62c5f7" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=72664657]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":72664657,"title":"Schizotypal thinking and associative processing: a response commonality analysis of verbal fluency","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"To determine whether people with high scores for schizotypal thinking generate more uncommon words in a letter fluency task than people with low scores. Prospective study. University psychology department. Forty healthy, right-handed students. Students were administered the Magical Ideation (MI) Scale and a 2-minute letter fluency task in which they named as many nouns as possible beginning with \u0026quot;A\u0026quot; or \u0026quot;F,\u0026quot; in any order. Total number of words produced and percentage of unique, rare and common words (as determined by the responses of the whole group); scores on MI scale. Participants with high scores (above the median) on the MI scale generated as many words as those who had low scores. People in both groups also generated a comparable number of unique words (named by only 1 person) and common words (named by 6 or more people). 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Participants with high scores (above the median) on the MI scale generated as many words as those who had low scores. People in both groups also generated a comparable number of unique words (named by only 1 person) and common words (named by 6 or more people). As hypothesized, people with high scores on the MI scale generated more rare words (named by fewer than 6 people) than those with low scor...","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/72664657/Schizotypal_thinking_and_associative_processing_a_response_commonality_analysis_of_verbal_fluency","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2022-03-01T02:26:44.013-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":124242273,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":81503158,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503158/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"ptpmcrender.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503158/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5Myw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Schizotypal_thinking_and_associative_pro.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/81503158/ptpmcrender-libre.pdf?1646134446=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DSchizotypal_thinking_and_associative_pro.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913593\u0026Signature=aqzllztdCLemX8IO67XTV8BCi9qtJQwazmtEjjyBX8w78tcxHTf0Rl0BFwwk-9jFSPIAnfwb649WBWt6sobMTvAV3e7bAnhn5L1d7WNOMdmdFXV2QswXcDYtHfizBSi8H-8T~StEvULvhCW9eXdkBdtfzoE640iP8o5uMBPsWcb5bGbMBZ4snfi2OzFkImtu4rYs~AZ3KeV9-DoWne0BmVs5NLNyvH5YHctq6k7vBaHScowcEcTcF9yNwTmi~4GZOPM7x7rJYdiLeAu1K79N5HHmWwCXLK1tqBG4y1~pJZbRAfm0Ae8oiQ9bJViQaImUVoQmoDlnrY4hk~evGbUYNw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Schizotypal_thinking_and_associative_processing_a_response_commonality_analysis_of_verbal_fluency","translated_slug":"","page_count":5,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"To determine whether people with high scores for schizotypal thinking generate more uncommon words in a letter fluency task than people with low scores. Prospective study. University psychology department. Forty healthy, right-handed students. Students were administered the Magical Ideation (MI) Scale and a 2-minute letter fluency task in which they named as many nouns as possible beginning with \u0026quot;A\u0026quot; or \u0026quot;F,\u0026quot; in any order. Total number of words produced and percentage of unique, rare and common words (as determined by the responses of the whole group); scores on MI scale. Participants with high scores (above the median) on the MI scale generated as many words as those who had low scores. People in both groups also generated a comparable number of unique words (named by only 1 person) and common words (named by 6 or more people). As hypothesized, people with high scores on the MI scale generated more rare words (named by fewer than 6 people) than those with low scor...","owner":{"id":124242273,"first_name":"peter","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"brugger","page_name":"bruggerp","domain_name":"independent","created_at":"2019-08-29T06:54:36.677-07:00","display_name":"peter brugger","url":"https://independent.academia.edu/bruggerp"},"attachments":[{"id":81503158,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503158/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"ptpmcrender.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503158/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5Myw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Schizotypal_thinking_and_associative_pro.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/81503158/ptpmcrender-libre.pdf?1646134446=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DSchizotypal_thinking_and_associative_pro.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913593\u0026Signature=aqzllztdCLemX8IO67XTV8BCi9qtJQwazmtEjjyBX8w78tcxHTf0Rl0BFwwk-9jFSPIAnfwb649WBWt6sobMTvAV3e7bAnhn5L1d7WNOMdmdFXV2QswXcDYtHfizBSi8H-8T~StEvULvhCW9eXdkBdtfzoE640iP8o5uMBPsWcb5bGbMBZ4snfi2OzFkImtu4rYs~AZ3KeV9-DoWne0BmVs5NLNyvH5YHctq6k7vBaHScowcEcTcF9yNwTmi~4GZOPM7x7rJYdiLeAu1K79N5HHmWwCXLK1tqBG4y1~pJZbRAfm0Ae8oiQ9bJViQaImUVoQmoDlnrY4hk~evGbUYNw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"},{"id":81503159,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503159/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"ptpmcrender.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503159/download_file","bulk_download_file_name":"Schizotypal_thinking_and_associative_pro.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/81503159/ptpmcrender-libre.pdf?1646134446=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DSchizotypal_thinking_and_associative_pro.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913593\u0026Signature=CaBnE-iJeZKAS6UNWFVKAk-3-e1JpM49doaYLztgpY8jq9zRgKDVS~VYRLxk6VwVCgdJWrm83Y6WYXKWmM7C0soaslki6o7n9H2ncdBx9zwX8j6JsOwDY1pEVNQxPBdrMZNhZGvNgBy2PtxRkbYaYaj3-dcdtAKtxIOm9v9qqgj77hsxDby5ujxnc14v3LDL9YnnzA82gVOV6A1uaKAEJC52JpcRH1yGTouOGr~ah10ONYPRye~obi7gUANgxe~rSBjN6R5LA6mTK0YtNbChojftj~T8B1HY0toC14fyg-lxc6wcBK1gwyOJ1GMRQXDVy-kwHDFz1ivBlzmqVVrjdA__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":221,"name":"Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychology"},{"id":237,"name":"Cognitive Science","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Cognitive_Science"},{"id":635,"name":"Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychiatry"},{"id":26327,"name":"Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Medicine"},{"id":123404,"name":"Verbal behavior","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Verbal_behavior"},{"id":142889,"name":"Mental processes","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Mental_processes"},{"id":244814,"name":"Clinical Sciences","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Clinical_Sciences"},{"id":279546,"name":"Association","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Association"},{"id":282100,"name":"Schizotypal Personality Disorder","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Schizotypal_Personality_Disorder"},{"id":1239755,"name":"Neurosciences","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Neurosciences"},{"id":1805946,"name":"Neuroscience and Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Neuroscience_and_Psychiatry"}],"urls":[{"id":18102281,"url":"http://europepmc.org/backend/ptpmcrender.fcgi?accid=PMC1188896\u0026blobtype=pdf"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="72664654"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664654/Body_mass_index_and_flanker_size_Does_over_weight_modulate_the_Baldwin_illusion"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Body mass index and flanker size: Does (over)weight modulate the Baldwin illusion?" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503206/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664654/Body_mass_index_and_flanker_size_Does_over_weight_modulate_the_Baldwin_illusion">Body mass index and flanker size: Does (over)weight modulate the Baldwin illusion?</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Cogent Psychology</span><span>, 2020</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Visuospatial processing is a complex process that is vulnerable to bias. Line bisection paradigms...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Visuospatial processing is a complex process that is vulnerable to bias. Line bisection paradigms are used to help detect the factors that balance left and right hemispatial attention that go beyond the domains of perception and action. For example, studies have indicated the “pseudoneglect” phenomenon in the bisection of horizontally presented lines in healthy subjects. Among the modified versions of the traditional line bisection task is the “Baldwin illusion”. In the Baldwin illusion, the subjective midpoint of a line flanked by squares of different sizes is displaced towards the small square. The goal of the study was two-fold. First, we wanted to investigate whether there is an asymmetry in the Baldwin effect depending on leftward or rightward arrangement of the small square and second whether obesity (as measured by body mass index—BMI) would affect bisection of Baldwin-like flanked lines. Thirty-one healthy, right-handed female subjects (20 normal-weight and 11 overweight) ha...</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="c6202a9c426fb2982291307275e52ffc" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{"attachment_id":81503206,"asset_id":72664654,"asset_type":"Work","button_location":"profile"}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503206/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5Myw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="72664654"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="72664654"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664654; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664654]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664654]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664654; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='72664654']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 72664654, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "c6202a9c426fb2982291307275e52ffc" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=72664654]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":72664654,"title":"Body mass index and flanker size: Does (over)weight modulate the Baldwin illusion?","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Visuospatial processing is a complex process that is vulnerable to bias. Line bisection paradigms are used to help detect the factors that balance left and right hemispatial attention that go beyond the domains of perception and action. For example, studies have indicated the “pseudoneglect” phenomenon in the bisection of horizontally presented lines in healthy subjects. Among the modified versions of the traditional line bisection task is the “Baldwin illusion”. In the Baldwin illusion, the subjective midpoint of a line flanked by squares of different sizes is displaced towards the small square. The goal of the study was two-fold. First, we wanted to investigate whether there is an asymmetry in the Baldwin effect depending on leftward or rightward arrangement of the small square and second whether obesity (as measured by body mass index—BMI) would affect bisection of Baldwin-like flanked lines. Thirty-one healthy, right-handed female subjects (20 normal-weight and 11 overweight) ha...","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2020,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Cogent Psychology"},"translated_abstract":"Visuospatial processing is a complex process that is vulnerable to bias. Line bisection paradigms are used to help detect the factors that balance left and right hemispatial attention that go beyond the domains of perception and action. For example, studies have indicated the “pseudoneglect” phenomenon in the bisection of horizontally presented lines in healthy subjects. Among the modified versions of the traditional line bisection task is the “Baldwin illusion”. In the Baldwin illusion, the subjective midpoint of a line flanked by squares of different sizes is displaced towards the small square. The goal of the study was two-fold. First, we wanted to investigate whether there is an asymmetry in the Baldwin effect depending on leftward or rightward arrangement of the small square and second whether obesity (as measured by body mass index—BMI) would affect bisection of Baldwin-like flanked lines. Thirty-one healthy, right-handed female subjects (20 normal-weight and 11 overweight) ha...","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/72664654/Body_mass_index_and_flanker_size_Does_over_weight_modulate_the_Baldwin_illusion","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2022-03-01T02:26:41.971-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":124242273,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":81503206,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503206/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"23311908.2020.1823634.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503206/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5Myw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Body_mass_index_and_flanker_size_Does_ov.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/81503206/23311908.2020.1823634-libre.pdf?1646134444=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DBody_mass_index_and_flanker_size_Does_ov.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913593\u0026Signature=QOTfpOO5kFmkypQEHYGfZm4b6m0xXI9AvXoETdur0TaSz0zK~Vhl0ukIcS4iwOR96bbrLho40Le7S2yP5OM9lgbZs~IBn6vrisqPcltls90jmfdvNPYBDicE7N4ztxsKuBEMDgjM5ftCgmuhhI4SgLl~su~KGZhw~DqzqghD73Uo50QZIz2Hvyazh6Qucp1z~vnRQZOvwDsWyZjb~CKkVNb3gvWI2NUFcn8uzJQ8WrOX2Xk1vse-~qzr-njboamFLjsIieaQ2b9RBfNG~~Jt1p4kR1EB5s1UV7j5xFLNhuTekOpEb4nldxc~u349JxlKyUbpLBUkbh34ahR3EhT34Q__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Body_mass_index_and_flanker_size_Does_over_weight_modulate_the_Baldwin_illusion","translated_slug":"","page_count":16,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"Visuospatial processing is a complex process that is vulnerable to bias. Line bisection paradigms are used to help detect the factors that balance left and right hemispatial attention that go beyond the domains of perception and action. For example, studies have indicated the “pseudoneglect” phenomenon in the bisection of horizontally presented lines in healthy subjects. Among the modified versions of the traditional line bisection task is the “Baldwin illusion”. In the Baldwin illusion, the subjective midpoint of a line flanked by squares of different sizes is displaced towards the small square. The goal of the study was two-fold. First, we wanted to investigate whether there is an asymmetry in the Baldwin effect depending on leftward or rightward arrangement of the small square and second whether obesity (as measured by body mass index—BMI) would affect bisection of Baldwin-like flanked lines. Thirty-one healthy, right-handed female subjects (20 normal-weight and 11 overweight) ha...","owner":{"id":124242273,"first_name":"peter","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"brugger","page_name":"bruggerp","domain_name":"independent","created_at":"2019-08-29T06:54:36.677-07:00","display_name":"peter brugger","url":"https://independent.academia.edu/bruggerp"},"attachments":[{"id":81503206,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503206/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"23311908.2020.1823634.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503206/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5Myw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Body_mass_index_and_flanker_size_Does_ov.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/81503206/23311908.2020.1823634-libre.pdf?1646134444=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DBody_mass_index_and_flanker_size_Does_ov.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913593\u0026Signature=QOTfpOO5kFmkypQEHYGfZm4b6m0xXI9AvXoETdur0TaSz0zK~Vhl0ukIcS4iwOR96bbrLho40Le7S2yP5OM9lgbZs~IBn6vrisqPcltls90jmfdvNPYBDicE7N4ztxsKuBEMDgjM5ftCgmuhhI4SgLl~su~KGZhw~DqzqghD73Uo50QZIz2Hvyazh6Qucp1z~vnRQZOvwDsWyZjb~CKkVNb3gvWI2NUFcn8uzJQ8WrOX2Xk1vse-~qzr-njboamFLjsIieaQ2b9RBfNG~~Jt1p4kR1EB5s1UV7j5xFLNhuTekOpEb4nldxc~u349JxlKyUbpLBUkbh34ahR3EhT34Q__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":221,"name":"Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychology"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="72664650"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664650/The_phantom_limb_in_dreams_q"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of The phantom limb in dreams q" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503152/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664650/The_phantom_limb_in_dreams_q">The phantom limb in dreams q</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Mulder and colleagues [Mulder, T., Hochstenbach, J., Dijkstra, P. U., Geertzen, J. H. B. (in pres...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Mulder and colleagues [Mulder, T., Hochstenbach, J., Dijkstra, P. U., Geertzen, J. H. B. (in press). Born to adapt, but not in your dreams. Consciousness and Cognition.] report that a majority of amputees continue to experience a normallylimbed body during their night dreams. They interprete this observation as a failure of the body schema to adapt to the new body shape. The present note does not question this interpretation, but points to the already existing literature on the phenomenology of the phantom limb in dreams. A summary of published investigations is complemented by a note on phantom phenomena in the dreams of paraplegic patients and persons born without a limb. Integration of the available data allows the recommendation for prospective studies to consider dream content in more detail. For instance, ‘‘adaptation” to the loss of a limb can also manifest itself by seeing oneself surrounded by amputees. Such projective types of anosognosia (‘‘transitivism”) in nocturnal dre...</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="37dd7aeb665118af6db2e99e30e66f75" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{"attachment_id":81503152,"asset_id":72664650,"asset_type":"Work","button_location":"profile"}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503152/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5Myw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="72664650"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="72664650"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664650; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664650]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664650]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664650; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='72664650']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 72664650, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "37dd7aeb665118af6db2e99e30e66f75" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=72664650]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":72664650,"title":"The phantom limb in dreams q","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Mulder and colleagues [Mulder, T., Hochstenbach, J., Dijkstra, P. 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$(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="72664645"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664645/Individual_differences_and_impact_of_gender_on_curvature_redirection_thresholds"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Individual differences and impact of gender on curvature redirection thresholds" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503196/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664645/Individual_differences_and_impact_of_gender_on_curvature_redirection_thresholds">Individual differences and impact of gender on curvature redirection thresholds</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Proceedings of the 15th ACM Symposium on Applied Perception</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">To enable real walking in a virtual environment (VE) that is larger than the available physical s...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">To enable real walking in a virtual environment (VE) that is larger than the available physical space, redirection techniques that introduce multisensory conflicts between visual and nonvisual cues to manipulate different aspects of a user's trajectory could be applied. When applied within certain thresholds, these manipulations could go unnoticed and immersion remains intact. Research effort has been spent on identifying these thresholds and a wide range of thresholds was reported in different studies. These differences in thresholds could be explained by many factors such as individual differences, walking speed, or context settings such as environment design, cognitive load, distractors, etc. In this paper, we present a study to investigate the role of gender on curvature redirection thresholds (RDTs) using the maximum likelihood procedure with the classical two-alternative force choice task. Results show high variability in individuals' RDTs, and that on average women have higher curvature RDTs than men. Furthermore, results also confirm existing findings about the negative correlation between walking speed and curvature RDTs.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="af192623b3df7830aa16b800aae0bb4a" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{"attachment_id":81503196,"asset_id":72664645,"asset_type":"Work","button_location":"profile"}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503196/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5Myw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="72664645"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="72664645"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664645; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664645]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664645]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664645; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='72664645']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 72664645, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "af192623b3df7830aa16b800aae0bb4a" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=72664645]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":72664645,"title":"Individual differences and impact of gender on curvature redirection thresholds","translated_title":"","metadata":{"publisher":"ACM","ai_title_tag":"Gender Differences in Curvature Redirection Thresholds","grobid_abstract":"To enable real walking in a virtual environment (VE) that is larger than the available physical space, redirection techniques that introduce multisensory conflicts between visual and nonvisual cues to manipulate different aspects of a user's trajectory could be applied. 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Furthermore, results also confirm existing findings about the negative correlation between walking speed and curvature RDTs.","publication_name":"Proceedings of the 15th ACM Symposium on Applied Perception","grobid_abstract_attachment_id":81503196},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/72664645/Individual_differences_and_impact_of_gender_on_curvature_redirection_thresholds","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2022-03-01T02:26:35.222-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":124242273,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":81503196,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503196/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"applied_perception_final.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503196/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5Myw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Individual_differences_and_impact_of_gen.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/81503196/applied_perception_final-libre.pdf?1646134441=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DIndividual_differences_and_impact_of_gen.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913593\u0026Signature=crcVOhokiCVCgBC9csY7VYCgvugCbXTBRt4GMwwtS26BUsLljufZ6Vl4O23RXIzBT6NyzLGW7znpJ9ovDuZvOXuK-~s90ShX4sFtJLo-xEVHUqYNKAxw0gdbhNbjKliru5Y2~bRsEd-i0t6bz9QHcARPEL0kZfvwpekJa2hLZDCwddQ07C~s8eQNyJKrs8RhvFyQaBcnpn1W0UKrGveGbuRu75KFKtb4srDjPiu4sMg8DQaSeUJepuG2GkEvTd3350nDtiico22siUs3D1lARFekVeQ~CkC45c0boGDE~RXsZLFt87tviM~~yUjvUpH0dxKaGyEV5yCoR3eyQDWWFQ__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Individual_differences_and_impact_of_gender_on_curvature_redirection_thresholds","translated_slug":"","page_count":4,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"To enable real walking in a virtual environment (VE) that is larger than the available physical space, redirection techniques that introduce multisensory conflicts between visual and nonvisual cues to manipulate different aspects of a user's trajectory could be applied. When applied within certain thresholds, these manipulations could go unnoticed and immersion remains intact. Research effort has been spent on identifying these thresholds and a wide range of thresholds was reported in different studies. These differences in thresholds could be explained by many factors such as individual differences, walking speed, or context settings such as environment design, cognitive load, distractors, etc. In this paper, we present a study to investigate the role of gender on curvature redirection thresholds (RDTs) using the maximum likelihood procedure with the classical two-alternative force choice task. Results show high variability in individuals' RDTs, and that on average women have higher curvature RDTs than men. Furthermore, results also confirm existing findings about the negative correlation between walking speed and curvature RDTs.","owner":{"id":124242273,"first_name":"peter","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"brugger","page_name":"bruggerp","domain_name":"independent","created_at":"2019-08-29T06:54:36.677-07:00","display_name":"peter brugger","url":"https://independent.academia.edu/bruggerp"},"attachments":[{"id":81503196,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503196/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"applied_perception_final.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503196/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5Myw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Individual_differences_and_impact_of_gen.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/81503196/applied_perception_final-libre.pdf?1646134441=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DIndividual_differences_and_impact_of_gen.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913593\u0026Signature=crcVOhokiCVCgBC9csY7VYCgvugCbXTBRt4GMwwtS26BUsLljufZ6Vl4O23RXIzBT6NyzLGW7znpJ9ovDuZvOXuK-~s90ShX4sFtJLo-xEVHUqYNKAxw0gdbhNbjKliru5Y2~bRsEd-i0t6bz9QHcARPEL0kZfvwpekJa2hLZDCwddQ07C~s8eQNyJKrs8RhvFyQaBcnpn1W0UKrGveGbuRu75KFKtb4srDjPiu4sMg8DQaSeUJepuG2GkEvTd3350nDtiico22siUs3D1lARFekVeQ~CkC45c0boGDE~RXsZLFt87tviM~~yUjvUpH0dxKaGyEV5yCoR3eyQDWWFQ__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[],"urls":[{"id":18102276,"url":"https://dl.acm.org/doi/pdf/10.1145/3225153.3225155"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="72664642"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664642/Gaze_behavioral_and_clinical_data_for_phantom_limbs_after_hand_amputation_from_15_amputees_and_29_controls"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Gaze, behavioral, and clinical data for phantom limbs after hand amputation from 15 amputees and 29 controls" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503148/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664642/Gaze_behavioral_and_clinical_data_for_phantom_limbs_after_hand_amputation_from_15_amputees_and_29_controls">Gaze, behavioral, and clinical data for phantom limbs after hand amputation from 15 amputees and 29 controls</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Scientific Data</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Despite recent advances in prosthetics, many upper limb amputees still use prostheses with some r...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Despite recent advances in prosthetics, many upper limb amputees still use prostheses with some reluctance. They often do not feel able to incorporate the artificial hand into their bodily self. Furthermore, prosthesis fitting is not usually tailored to accommodate the characteristics of an individual’s phantom limb sensations. These are experienced by almost all persons with an acquired amputation and comprise the motor and postural properties of the lost limb. This article presents and validates a multimodal dataset including an extensive qualitative and quantitative assessment of phantom limb sensations in 15 transradial amputees, surface electromyography and accelerometry data of the forearm, and measurements of gaze behavior during exercises requiring pointing or repositioning of the forearm and the phantom hand. The data also include acquisitions from 29 able-bodied participants, matched for gender and age. Special emphasis was given to tracking the visuo-motor coupling betwee...</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="7ed563dde213cd7b05948b346b11be83" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{"attachment_id":81503148,"asset_id":72664642,"asset_type":"Work","button_location":"profile"}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503148/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="72664642"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="72664642"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664642; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664642]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664642]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664642; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='72664642']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 72664642, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "7ed563dde213cd7b05948b346b11be83" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=72664642]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":72664642,"title":"Gaze, behavioral, and clinical data for phantom limbs after hand amputation from 15 amputees and 29 controls","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Despite recent advances in prosthetics, many upper limb amputees still use prostheses with some reluctance. They often do not feel able to incorporate the artificial hand into their bodily self. Furthermore, prosthesis fitting is not usually tailored to accommodate the characteristics of an individual’s phantom limb sensations. These are experienced by almost all persons with an acquired amputation and comprise the motor and postural properties of the lost limb. This article presents and validates a multimodal dataset including an extensive qualitative and quantitative assessment of phantom limb sensations in 15 transradial amputees, surface electromyography and accelerometry data of the forearm, and measurements of gaze behavior during exercises requiring pointing or repositioning of the forearm and the phantom hand. The data also include acquisitions from 29 able-bodied participants, matched for gender and age. Special emphasis was given to tracking the visuo-motor coupling betwee...","publisher":"Springer Science and Business Media LLC","publication_name":"Scientific Data"},"translated_abstract":"Despite recent advances in prosthetics, many upper limb amputees still use prostheses with some reluctance. They often do not feel able to incorporate the artificial hand into their bodily self. Furthermore, prosthesis fitting is not usually tailored to accommodate the characteristics of an individual’s phantom limb sensations. These are experienced by almost all persons with an acquired amputation and comprise the motor and postural properties of the lost limb. This article presents and validates a multimodal dataset including an extensive qualitative and quantitative assessment of phantom limb sensations in 15 transradial amputees, surface electromyography and accelerometry data of the forearm, and measurements of gaze behavior during exercises requiring pointing or repositioning of the forearm and the phantom hand. The data also include acquisitions from 29 able-bodied participants, matched for gender and age. Special emphasis was given to tracking the visuo-motor coupling betwee...","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/72664642/Gaze_behavioral_and_clinical_data_for_phantom_limbs_after_hand_amputation_from_15_amputees_and_29_controls","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2022-03-01T02:26:32.677-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":124242273,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":81503148,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503148/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"s41597-020-0402-1.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503148/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Gaze_behavioral_and_clinical_data_for_ph.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/81503148/s41597-020-0402-1-libre.pdf?1646134453=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DGaze_behavioral_and_clinical_data_for_ph.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913594\u0026Signature=WZKROAX6~2KJk-ieJV6SGK8H5eeJM3jDS5NwTcCBDMvyc7RyP1DIxiMeKXLCp0VbzBjHMKWdM0-fd5Io51T6vQg9n7nXEO1oWYtv5dW6BMtsSwMfHPo7HEys3YOcanzIB56YKynhXxWqQoQ5cwqP69kMFcrxhumdvvgFq7pFQ0l-cIwztv6qJvyrMnwh~zkuw~Y7koJ1h6D~4moDiKNVkLo2~9PykKrtgNVjFVnv9W-40Cz63hbZS-TcDnmtqdqKpE7drfnorlcpENuwlwwx7buwi4M0n0gAHvbRz0EYPXSP1LDpN~3ZiU~XUkI55yl6vCojOZ9dzeUc9ZyN2LmeYQ__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Gaze_behavioral_and_clinical_data_for_phantom_limbs_after_hand_amputation_from_15_amputees_and_29_controls","translated_slug":"","page_count":14,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"Despite recent advances in prosthetics, many upper limb amputees still use prostheses with some reluctance. They often do not feel able to incorporate the artificial hand into their bodily self. Furthermore, prosthesis fitting is not usually tailored to accommodate the characteristics of an individual’s phantom limb sensations. These are experienced by almost all persons with an acquired amputation and comprise the motor and postural properties of the lost limb. This article presents and validates a multimodal dataset including an extensive qualitative and quantitative assessment of phantom limb sensations in 15 transradial amputees, surface electromyography and accelerometry data of the forearm, and measurements of gaze behavior during exercises requiring pointing or repositioning of the forearm and the phantom hand. The data also include acquisitions from 29 able-bodied participants, matched for gender and age. Special emphasis was given to tracking the visuo-motor coupling betwee...","owner":{"id":124242273,"first_name":"peter","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"brugger","page_name":"bruggerp","domain_name":"independent","created_at":"2019-08-29T06:54:36.677-07:00","display_name":"peter brugger","url":"https://independent.academia.edu/bruggerp"},"attachments":[{"id":81503148,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503148/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"s41597-020-0402-1.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503148/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Gaze_behavioral_and_clinical_data_for_ph.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/81503148/s41597-020-0402-1-libre.pdf?1646134453=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DGaze_behavioral_and_clinical_data_for_ph.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913594\u0026Signature=WZKROAX6~2KJk-ieJV6SGK8H5eeJM3jDS5NwTcCBDMvyc7RyP1DIxiMeKXLCp0VbzBjHMKWdM0-fd5Io51T6vQg9n7nXEO1oWYtv5dW6BMtsSwMfHPo7HEys3YOcanzIB56YKynhXxWqQoQ5cwqP69kMFcrxhumdvvgFq7pFQ0l-cIwztv6qJvyrMnwh~zkuw~Y7koJ1h6D~4moDiKNVkLo2~9PykKrtgNVjFVnv9W-40Cz63hbZS-TcDnmtqdqKpE7drfnorlcpENuwlwwx7buwi4M0n0gAHvbRz0EYPXSP1LDpN~3ZiU~XUkI55yl6vCojOZ9dzeUc9ZyN2LmeYQ__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":615540,"name":"Scientific Data","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Scientific_Data"}],"urls":[{"id":18102275,"url":"http://www.nature.com/articles/s41597-020-0402-1.pdf"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="72664635"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664635/Influence_of_the_Intensive_Care_Unit_Environment_on_the_Reliability_of_the_Montreal_Cognitive_Assessment"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Influence of the Intensive Care Unit Environment on the Reliability of the Montreal Cognitive Assessment" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503195/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664635/Influence_of_the_Intensive_Care_Unit_Environment_on_the_Reliability_of_the_Montreal_Cognitive_Assessment">Influence of the Intensive Care Unit Environment on the Reliability of the Montreal Cognitive Assessment</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Frontiers in Neurology</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Background: Neuropsychological screening becomes increasingly important for the evaluation of sub...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Background: Neuropsychological screening becomes increasingly important for the evaluation of subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) and stroke patients. It is often performed during the surveillance period on the intensive (ICU), while it remains unknown, whether the distraction in this environment influences the results. We aimed to study the reliability of the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) in the ICU environment. Methods: Consecutive stable patients with recent brain injury (tumor, trauma, stroke, etc.) were evaluated twice within 36 h using official parallel versions of the MoCA (MoCA). The sequence of assessment was randomized into (a) busy ICU first or (b) quiet office first with subsequent crossover. For repeated MoCA, we determined sequence, period, location effects, and the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC). Results: N = 50 patients were studied [n = 30 (60%) male], with a mean age of 57 years. The assessment's sequence ["ICU first" mean MoCA −1.14 (SD 2.34) vs. "Office first" −0.73 (SD 1.52)] did not influence the MoCA (p = 0.47). On the 2nd period, participants scored 0.96 points worse (SD 2.01; p = 0.001), indicating no MoCA learning effect but a possible difference in parallel versions. There was no location effect (p = 0.31) with MoCA between locations (Office minus ICU) of −0.32 (SD 2.21). The ICC for repeated MoCA was 0.87 (95% CI 0.79-0.92). Conclusions: The reliability of the MoCA was excellent, independent from the testing environment being ICU or office. This finding is helpful for patient care and studies investigating the effect of a therapeutic intervention on the neuropsychological outcome after SAH, stroke or traumatic brain injury.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="fad86940b54a1b9d8b49b5cdc56a9a61" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{"attachment_id":81503195,"asset_id":72664635,"asset_type":"Work","button_location":"profile"}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503195/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="72664635"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="72664635"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664635; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664635]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664635]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664635; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='72664635']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 72664635, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "fad86940b54a1b9d8b49b5cdc56a9a61" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=72664635]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":72664635,"title":"Influence of the Intensive Care Unit Environment on the Reliability of the Montreal Cognitive Assessment","translated_title":"","metadata":{"publisher":"Frontiers Media SA","grobid_abstract":"Background: Neuropsychological screening becomes increasingly important for the evaluation of subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) and stroke patients. It is often performed during the surveillance period on the intensive (ICU), while it remains unknown, whether the distraction in this environment influences the results. We aimed to study the reliability of the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) in the ICU environment. Methods: Consecutive stable patients with recent brain injury (tumor, trauma, stroke, etc.) were evaluated twice within 36 h using official parallel versions of the MoCA (MoCA). The sequence of assessment was randomized into (a) busy ICU first or (b) quiet office first with subsequent crossover. For repeated MoCA, we determined sequence, period, location effects, and the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC). Results: N = 50 patients were studied [n = 30 (60%) male], with a mean age of 57 years. The assessment's sequence [\"ICU first\" mean MoCA −1.14 (SD 2.34) vs. \"Office first\" −0.73 (SD 1.52)] did not influence the MoCA (p = 0.47). On the 2nd period, participants scored 0.96 points worse (SD 2.01; p = 0.001), indicating no MoCA learning effect but a possible difference in parallel versions. There was no location effect (p = 0.31) with MoCA between locations (Office minus ICU) of −0.32 (SD 2.21). The ICC for repeated MoCA was 0.87 (95% CI 0.79-0.92). Conclusions: The reliability of the MoCA was excellent, independent from the testing environment being ICU or office. This finding is helpful for patient care and studies investigating the effect of a therapeutic intervention on the neuropsychological outcome after SAH, stroke or traumatic brain injury.","publication_name":"Frontiers in Neurology","grobid_abstract_attachment_id":81503195},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/72664635/Influence_of_the_Intensive_Care_Unit_Environment_on_the_Reliability_of_the_Montreal_Cognitive_Assessment","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2022-03-01T02:26:30.121-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":124242273,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":81503195,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503195/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"ed67ee0f16a940592047a0def48eb539ac4f.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503195/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Influence_of_the_Intensive_Care_Unit_Env.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/81503195/ed67ee0f16a940592047a0def48eb539ac4f-libre.pdf?1646134441=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DInfluence_of_the_Intensive_Care_Unit_Env.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913594\u0026Signature=XYnKPOSC44o8~FHkK2IpaZ35TtaPEWVXc~CgdNlaA6aOX36tMOqsVDL0KHLiFBLfAsSBOcOUTtAi8G3EXH2S2rGzUn4MaQ6O5JwLU2s5IQChKLCVcuB8pw7iOJFxZ1LDwFpFNABMg9a51lkPT~A4TncwowtQYewq1edto0q8OFj3zNQZGBXYoQQIFJNO9Iq7BnkMU8oA-J7EZ6HWKfkYMjU2IDusQLC~ggO~mDWuUsz1RIwH2KKupSuS-ew3z8Cj5BHeq5L~NDmhbRjh4B8I8kYj8h2Ug2cUBp1rC9j7VkO1EmCXd1v6SPiKqrmY1tIDM5JljZxuc0b4TF6Irett6g__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Influence_of_the_Intensive_Care_Unit_Environment_on_the_Reliability_of_the_Montreal_Cognitive_Assessment","translated_slug":"","page_count":5,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"Background: Neuropsychological screening becomes increasingly important for the evaluation of subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) and stroke patients. It is often performed during the surveillance period on the intensive (ICU), while it remains unknown, whether the distraction in this environment influences the results. We aimed to study the reliability of the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) in the ICU environment. Methods: Consecutive stable patients with recent brain injury (tumor, trauma, stroke, etc.) were evaluated twice within 36 h using official parallel versions of the MoCA (MoCA). The sequence of assessment was randomized into (a) busy ICU first or (b) quiet office first with subsequent crossover. For repeated MoCA, we determined sequence, period, location effects, and the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC). Results: N = 50 patients were studied [n = 30 (60%) male], with a mean age of 57 years. The assessment's sequence [\"ICU first\" mean MoCA −1.14 (SD 2.34) vs. \"Office first\" −0.73 (SD 1.52)] did not influence the MoCA (p = 0.47). On the 2nd period, participants scored 0.96 points worse (SD 2.01; p = 0.001), indicating no MoCA learning effect but a possible difference in parallel versions. There was no location effect (p = 0.31) with MoCA between locations (Office minus ICU) of −0.32 (SD 2.21). The ICC for repeated MoCA was 0.87 (95% CI 0.79-0.92). Conclusions: The reliability of the MoCA was excellent, independent from the testing environment being ICU or office. This finding is helpful for patient care and studies investigating the effect of a therapeutic intervention on the neuropsychological outcome after SAH, stroke or traumatic brain injury.","owner":{"id":124242273,"first_name":"peter","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"brugger","page_name":"bruggerp","domain_name":"independent","created_at":"2019-08-29T06:54:36.677-07:00","display_name":"peter brugger","url":"https://independent.academia.edu/bruggerp"},"attachments":[{"id":81503195,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503195/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"ed67ee0f16a940592047a0def48eb539ac4f.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503195/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Influence_of_the_Intensive_Care_Unit_Env.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/81503195/ed67ee0f16a940592047a0def48eb539ac4f-libre.pdf?1646134441=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DInfluence_of_the_Intensive_Care_Unit_Env.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913594\u0026Signature=XYnKPOSC44o8~FHkK2IpaZ35TtaPEWVXc~CgdNlaA6aOX36tMOqsVDL0KHLiFBLfAsSBOcOUTtAi8G3EXH2S2rGzUn4MaQ6O5JwLU2s5IQChKLCVcuB8pw7iOJFxZ1LDwFpFNABMg9a51lkPT~A4TncwowtQYewq1edto0q8OFj3zNQZGBXYoQQIFJNO9Iq7BnkMU8oA-J7EZ6HWKfkYMjU2IDusQLC~ggO~mDWuUsz1RIwH2KKupSuS-ew3z8Cj5BHeq5L~NDmhbRjh4B8I8kYj8h2Ug2cUBp1rC9j7VkO1EmCXd1v6SPiKqrmY1tIDM5JljZxuc0b4TF6Irett6g__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":221,"name":"Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychology"},{"id":244814,"name":"Clinical Sciences","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Clinical_Sciences"},{"id":1239755,"name":"Neurosciences","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Neurosciences"}],"urls":[{"id":18102271,"url":"https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fneur.2019.00734/full"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="72664633"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664633/Grey_matter_or_social_matters_Causal_attributions_in_the_era_of_biological_psychiatry"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Grey matter or social matters? Causal attributions in the era of biological psychiatry" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503192/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664633/Grey_matter_or_social_matters_Causal_attributions_in_the_era_of_biological_psychiatry">Grey matter or social matters? Causal attributions in the era of biological psychiatry</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>European psychiatry : the journal of the Association of European Psychiatrists</span><span>, Aug 31, 2018</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Fig. 1. Correlation between the strength of an individual's amputation desire and the surface are...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Fig. 1. Correlation between the strength of an individual's amputation desire and the surface area of a circumscribed region in the inferior parietal lobe (depicted in B). C: Boxand-whisker plots show distributions of plausibility ratings for two types of causality arguably implied by this correlation, i.e. neural primacy (dark bars) or behavioural primacy (light bars). A and B reprinted, (with permission), from ref. [6].</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="b43fe27400fd2858489f56f7d62f5b52" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{"attachment_id":81503192,"asset_id":72664633,"asset_type":"Work","button_location":"profile"}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503192/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="72664633"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="72664633"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664633; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664633]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664633]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664633; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='72664633']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 72664633, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "b43fe27400fd2858489f56f7d62f5b52" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=72664633]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":72664633,"title":"Grey matter or social matters? Causal attributions in the era of biological psychiatry","translated_title":"","metadata":{"ai_title_tag":"Causal Attributions in Biological Psychiatry and Grey Matter","grobid_abstract":"Fig. 1. Correlation between the strength of an individual's amputation desire and the surface area of a circumscribed region in the inferior parietal lobe (depicted in B). C: Boxand-whisker plots show distributions of plausibility ratings for two types of causality arguably implied by this correlation, i.e. neural primacy (dark bars) or behavioural primacy (light bars). A and B reprinted, (with permission), from ref. [6].","publication_date":{"day":31,"month":8,"year":2018,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"European psychiatry : the journal of the Association of European Psychiatrists","grobid_abstract_attachment_id":81503192},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/72664633/Grey_matter_or_social_matters_Causal_attributions_in_the_era_of_biological_psychiatry","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2022-03-01T02:26:28.027-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":124242273,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":81503192,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503192/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Brugger_20et_20al_202018a.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503192/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Grey_matter_or_social_matters_Causal_att.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/81503192/Brugger_20et_20al_202018a-libre.pdf?1646134443=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DGrey_matter_or_social_matters_Causal_att.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913594\u0026Signature=UJjdvB1M0nruoc2sXZLkp93WGdQxsM7E91TkPXfyQ5uL2QgA1gFPDbNb9yvMOwKF52Fta1eUZXrklmmGfOUUXqMTF4YmQKJrRV1LxaTY3W-wsKalJ9pnILZADWHiNQIcPrr9LqC2ap~EldSbi2s4XkxUOvprJ4mMivkHuxhWPfSrBPFfYQiwmvecfN-vKzaHwHjfSmnxG02jy6~G33s9ZVC6Gcyp-7PHx348yp3S8PD9DkBnnQPEGB6HhJNf2t7wqXQhMbXBoH6A8DQvNiiTRBBsiweMFWQbMMXTeuMN1xdr-AJqEniQsHUoSoTCyAQ5ebCUtDfVguPfk1T2jGGxDA__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Grey_matter_or_social_matters_Causal_attributions_in_the_era_of_biological_psychiatry","translated_slug":"","page_count":2,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"Fig. 1. Correlation between the strength of an individual's amputation desire and the surface area of a circumscribed region in the inferior parietal lobe (depicted in B). C: Boxand-whisker plots show distributions of plausibility ratings for two types of causality arguably implied by this correlation, i.e. neural primacy (dark bars) or behavioural primacy (light bars). A and B reprinted, (with permission), from ref. [6].","owner":{"id":124242273,"first_name":"peter","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"brugger","page_name":"bruggerp","domain_name":"independent","created_at":"2019-08-29T06:54:36.677-07:00","display_name":"peter brugger","url":"https://independent.academia.edu/bruggerp"},"attachments":[{"id":81503192,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503192/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Brugger_20et_20al_202018a.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503192/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Grey_matter_or_social_matters_Causal_att.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/81503192/Brugger_20et_20al_202018a-libre.pdf?1646134443=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DGrey_matter_or_social_matters_Causal_att.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913594\u0026Signature=UJjdvB1M0nruoc2sXZLkp93WGdQxsM7E91TkPXfyQ5uL2QgA1gFPDbNb9yvMOwKF52Fta1eUZXrklmmGfOUUXqMTF4YmQKJrRV1LxaTY3W-wsKalJ9pnILZADWHiNQIcPrr9LqC2ap~EldSbi2s4XkxUOvprJ4mMivkHuxhWPfSrBPFfYQiwmvecfN-vKzaHwHjfSmnxG02jy6~G33s9ZVC6Gcyp-7PHx348yp3S8PD9DkBnnQPEGB6HhJNf2t7wqXQhMbXBoH6A8DQvNiiTRBBsiweMFWQbMMXTeuMN1xdr-AJqEniQsHUoSoTCyAQ5ebCUtDfVguPfk1T2jGGxDA__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":221,"name":"Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychology"},{"id":26327,"name":"Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Medicine"},{"id":2922956,"name":"Psychology and Cognitive Sciences","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychology_and_Cognitive_Sciences"},{"id":3454899,"name":"european psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/european_psychiatry"},{"id":3763225,"name":"Medical and Health Sciences","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Medical_and_Health_Sciences"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="72664630"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664630/Persistent_effects_of_playing_football_and_associated_subconcussive_head_trauma_on_brain_structure_and_function_a_systematic_review_of_the_literature"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Persistent effects of playing football and associated (subconcussive) head trauma on brain structure and function: a systematic review of the literature" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503186/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664630/Persistent_effects_of_playing_football_and_associated_subconcussive_head_trauma_on_brain_structure_and_function_a_systematic_review_of_the_literature">Persistent effects of playing football and associated (subconcussive) head trauma on brain structure and function: a systematic review of the literature</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>British Journal of Sports Medicine</span><span>, 2016</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Aim/objectiveThere is ongoing controversy about persistent neurological deficits in active and fo...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Aim/objectiveThere is ongoing controversy about persistent neurological deficits in active and former football (soccer) players. We reviewed the literature for associations between football activities (including heading/head injuries) and decline in brain structure/function.DesignSystematic literature review.Data sourcesMEDLINE, Embase, PsycINFO, CINAHL, Cochrane-CRCT, SportDiscus, Cochrane-DSR=4 (accessed 2 August 2016).Eligibility criteria for selecting studiesOriginal studies reporting on football-related persistent effects on brain structure/function. Results from neurocognitive testing, neuroimaging and EEG were compared with controls and/or correlated with heading frequency and/or head injuries. Methodological quality was rated for risk-of-bias, including appropriateness of controls, correction for multiple statistical testing and assessment of heading frequency and head injuries.Results30 studies with 1691 players were included. Those 57% (8/14) of case–control studies report...</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="edaa2a8ca3ea57b6c2ed611ab31512a8" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{"attachment_id":81503186,"asset_id":72664630,"asset_type":"Work","button_location":"profile"}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503186/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="72664630"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="72664630"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664630; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664630]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664630]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664630; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='72664630']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 72664630, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "edaa2a8ca3ea57b6c2ed611ab31512a8" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=72664630]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":72664630,"title":"Persistent effects of playing football and associated (subconcussive) head trauma on brain structure and function: a systematic review of the literature","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Aim/objectiveThere is ongoing controversy about persistent neurological deficits in active and former football (soccer) players. We reviewed the literature for associations between football activities (including heading/head injuries) and decline in brain structure/function.DesignSystematic literature review.Data sourcesMEDLINE, Embase, PsycINFO, CINAHL, Cochrane-CRCT, SportDiscus, Cochrane-DSR=4 (accessed 2 August 2016).Eligibility criteria for selecting studiesOriginal studies reporting on football-related persistent effects on brain structure/function. Results from neurocognitive testing, neuroimaging and EEG were compared with controls and/or correlated with heading frequency and/or head injuries. Methodological quality was rated for risk-of-bias, including appropriateness of controls, correction for multiple statistical testing and assessment of heading frequency and head injuries.Results30 studies with 1691 players were included. Those 57% (8/14) of case–control studies report...","publisher":"BMJ","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2016,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"British Journal of Sports Medicine"},"translated_abstract":"Aim/objectiveThere is ongoing controversy about persistent neurological deficits in active and former football (soccer) players. We reviewed the literature for associations between football activities (including heading/head injuries) and decline in brain structure/function.DesignSystematic literature review.Data sourcesMEDLINE, Embase, PsycINFO, CINAHL, Cochrane-CRCT, SportDiscus, Cochrane-DSR=4 (accessed 2 August 2016).Eligibility criteria for selecting studiesOriginal studies reporting on football-related persistent effects on brain structure/function. Results from neurocognitive testing, neuroimaging and EEG were compared with controls and/or correlated with heading frequency and/or head injuries. Methodological quality was rated for risk-of-bias, including appropriateness of controls, correction for multiple statistical testing and assessment of heading frequency and head injuries.Results30 studies with 1691 players were included. Those 57% (8/14) of case–control studies report...","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/72664630/Persistent_effects_of_playing_football_and_associated_subconcussive_head_trauma_on_brain_structure_and_function_a_systematic_review_of_the_literature","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2022-03-01T02:26:26.401-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":124242273,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":81503186,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503186/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Tarnutzer-BJSM-Effects-football-2016.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503186/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Persistent_effects_of_playing_football_a.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/81503186/Tarnutzer-BJSM-Effects-football-2016-libre.pdf?1646134446=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DPersistent_effects_of_playing_football_a.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913594\u0026Signature=VvTN8FkZ3beAU0LlJ1h95VSAwVuQRzmfZP3XE~1drv103C2Nw7e3PsIdm7nWjEUyodiEGGCY7d2kOK9WlGjJMdcEIZ6FgTxQbJOmDfnL5AAYLFDvTkrxAlh46CiVUeu6O8BHx2ntL~HtVgOfGpLW5iU6xFY~E5dXhSTNgghXQtH2kBacLeB8MZMw8Qhskn1DqBknUgXtCtoUw9K3OKZgC~dqn6MZk9vm1zSf96cnJ--zWS40Q0DughBH18lJU~tDogVRCX7ekViO4YEv9fNmPgFX08JVWPM2oR-tPTgDl-3ecXhZQ-fYCsQdEn7PAUyqhz8DXo0662hU7oMiwuHGJw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Persistent_effects_of_playing_football_and_associated_subconcussive_head_trauma_on_brain_structure_and_function_a_systematic_review_of_the_literature","translated_slug":"","page_count":16,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"Aim/objectiveThere is ongoing controversy about persistent neurological deficits in active and former football (soccer) players. We reviewed the literature for associations between football activities (including heading/head injuries) and decline in brain structure/function.DesignSystematic literature review.Data sourcesMEDLINE, Embase, PsycINFO, CINAHL, Cochrane-CRCT, SportDiscus, Cochrane-DSR=4 (accessed 2 August 2016).Eligibility criteria for selecting studiesOriginal studies reporting on football-related persistent effects on brain structure/function. Results from neurocognitive testing, neuroimaging and EEG were compared with controls and/or correlated with heading frequency and/or head injuries. Methodological quality was rated for risk-of-bias, including appropriateness of controls, correction for multiple statistical testing and assessment of heading frequency and head injuries.Results30 studies with 1691 players were included. Those 57% (8/14) of case–control studies report...","owner":{"id":124242273,"first_name":"peter","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"brugger","page_name":"bruggerp","domain_name":"independent","created_at":"2019-08-29T06:54:36.677-07:00","display_name":"peter brugger","url":"https://independent.academia.edu/bruggerp"},"attachments":[{"id":81503186,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503186/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Tarnutzer-BJSM-Effects-football-2016.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503186/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Persistent_effects_of_playing_football_a.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/81503186/Tarnutzer-BJSM-Effects-football-2016-libre.pdf?1646134446=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DPersistent_effects_of_playing_football_a.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913594\u0026Signature=VvTN8FkZ3beAU0LlJ1h95VSAwVuQRzmfZP3XE~1drv103C2Nw7e3PsIdm7nWjEUyodiEGGCY7d2kOK9WlGjJMdcEIZ6FgTxQbJOmDfnL5AAYLFDvTkrxAlh46CiVUeu6O8BHx2ntL~HtVgOfGpLW5iU6xFY~E5dXhSTNgghXQtH2kBacLeB8MZMw8Qhskn1DqBknUgXtCtoUw9K3OKZgC~dqn6MZk9vm1zSf96cnJ--zWS40Q0DughBH18lJU~tDogVRCX7ekViO4YEv9fNmPgFX08JVWPM2oR-tPTgDl-3ecXhZQ-fYCsQdEn7PAUyqhz8DXo0662hU7oMiwuHGJw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":48,"name":"Engineering","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Engineering"},{"id":922,"name":"Education","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Education"},{"id":3763225,"name":"Medical and Health Sciences","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Medical_and_Health_Sciences"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="72664628"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664628/The_Z%C3%BCrich_Maxi_Mental_Status_Inventory_Z%C3%BCMAX_Test_Retest_Reliability_and_Discriminant_Validity_in_Stroke_Survivors"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of The Zürich Maxi Mental Status Inventory (ZüMAX): Test-Retest Reliability and Discriminant Validity in Stroke Survivors" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503190/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664628/The_Z%C3%BCrich_Maxi_Mental_Status_Inventory_Z%C3%BCMAX_Test_Retest_Reliability_and_Discriminant_Validity_in_Stroke_Survivors">The Zürich Maxi Mental Status Inventory (ZüMAX): Test-Retest Reliability and Discriminant Validity in Stroke Survivors</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Cognitive and behavioral neurology : official journal of the Society for Behavioral and Cognitive Neurology</span><span>, 2016</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">To examine discriminant validity and test-retest reliability of the Zürich maxi mental status inv...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">To examine discriminant validity and test-retest reliability of the Zürich maxi mental status inventory (ZüMAX) in patients with stroke. The ZüMAX is a novel domain-specific cognitive assessment tool to screen for disturbances in neuropsychological function. The test can be used in stroke rehabilitation to estimate severity of cognitive impairment. Because evidence for validity and reliability is lacking, the tool&#39;s clinical use is limited. We administered the ZüMAX in a test-retest design to 33 community-dwelling stroke survivors, and once to 35 healthy controls matched for age and sex. We found significant group differences in subscores for the cognitive domains of executive functions and language as well as total score (P=0.001 to 0.004); we did not find group differences for the domains of praxia (defined as the ability to perform purposeful actions), visual perception and construction, or learning and memory. Test-retest reliability of the total score was good (intraclass c...</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="db3034bc2caaf946755c3eef721e5eeb" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{"attachment_id":81503190,"asset_id":72664628,"asset_type":"Work","button_location":"profile"}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503190/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="72664628"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="72664628"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664628; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664628]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664628]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664628; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='72664628']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 72664628, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "db3034bc2caaf946755c3eef721e5eeb" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=72664628]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":72664628,"title":"The Zürich Maxi Mental Status Inventory (ZüMAX): Test-Retest Reliability and Discriminant Validity in Stroke Survivors","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"To examine discriminant validity and test-retest reliability of the Zürich maxi mental status inventory (ZüMAX) in patients with stroke. The ZüMAX is a novel domain-specific cognitive assessment tool to screen for disturbances in neuropsychological function. The test can be used in stroke rehabilitation to estimate severity of cognitive impairment. Because evidence for validity and reliability is lacking, the tool\u0026#39;s clinical use is limited. We administered the ZüMAX in a test-retest design to 33 community-dwelling stroke survivors, and once to 35 healthy controls matched for age and sex. We found significant group differences in subscores for the cognitive domains of executive functions and language as well as total score (P=0.001 to 0.004); we did not find group differences for the domains of praxia (defined as the ability to perform purposeful actions), visual perception and construction, or learning and memory. Test-retest reliability of the total score was good (intraclass c...","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2016,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Cognitive and behavioral neurology : official journal of the Society for Behavioral and Cognitive Neurology"},"translated_abstract":"To examine discriminant validity and test-retest reliability of the Zürich maxi mental status inventory (ZüMAX) in patients with stroke. The ZüMAX is a novel domain-specific cognitive assessment tool to screen for disturbances in neuropsychological function. The test can be used in stroke rehabilitation to estimate severity of cognitive impairment. Because evidence for validity and reliability is lacking, the tool\u0026#39;s clinical use is limited. We administered the ZüMAX in a test-retest design to 33 community-dwelling stroke survivors, and once to 35 healthy controls matched for age and sex. We found significant group differences in subscores for the cognitive domains of executive functions and language as well as total score (P=0.001 to 0.004); we did not find group differences for the domains of praxia (defined as the ability to perform purposeful actions), visual perception and construction, or learning and memory. 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The ZüMAX is a novel domain-specific cognitive assessment tool to screen for disturbances in neuropsychological function. The test can be used in stroke rehabilitation to estimate severity of cognitive impairment. Because evidence for validity and reliability is lacking, the tool\u0026#39;s clinical use is limited. We administered the ZüMAX in a test-retest design to 33 community-dwelling stroke survivors, and once to 35 healthy controls matched for age and sex. We found significant group differences in subscores for the cognitive domains of executive functions and language as well as total score (P=0.001 to 0.004); we did not find group differences for the domains of praxia (defined as the ability to perform purposeful actions), visual perception and construction, or learning and memory. 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Associations with morphological alterations such as reduced cortical thickness and surface area. Nothing is known, however, about the potential involvement of subcortical structures. The thalamus and basal ganglia process, relay, and integrate sensorimotor information and are involved in the preparation and execution of movements. Moreover, both of these structures house somatotopic representations of all body parts. We therefore investigated subcortical correlates of xenomelia by assessing basal ganglia and thalamus by means of vertex-wise shape analyses. For that purpose, we compared the shape of the thalamus, putamen, caudate nucleus, and the pallidum in 13 men suffering from xenomelia, all desiring a leg amputation, compared to 13 healthy control men. We hypothesised that the target leg is misrepresented in subcortical structures of individuals with xenomelia, especially in locations with a somatotopic representation. Shape analyses showed thinning of bilateral dorsomedial putamina, left ventromedial caudate nucleus and left medial pallidum associated with xenomelia. This was accompanied by thickening of bilateral lateral pallida and the left frontolateral thalamus. These shape differences were mainly located in sensorimotor areas of somatotopic leg representations. The present study provides strong evidence for shape differences in striatal, pallidal, and thalamic subregions housing subcortical body part representations. It adds to previously described neural correlates of a condition one can barely empathize with and invites future connectivity analyses in cortico-subcortical networks.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="77b9bd09453a031adae58975b1771376" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{"attachment_id":81503188,"asset_id":72664625,"asset_type":"Work","button_location":"profile"}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503188/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="72664625"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="72664625"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664625; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664625]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664625]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664625; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='72664625']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 72664625, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "77b9bd09453a031adae58975b1771376" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=72664625]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":72664625,"title":"Shape alterations of basal ganglia and thalamus in xenomelia","translated_title":"","metadata":{"publisher":"Elsevier BV","grobid_abstract":"Xenomelia is a rare condition characterized by the persistent desire for the amputation of physically healthy limbs. Associations with morphological alterations such as reduced cortical thickness and surface area. Nothing is known, however, about the potential involvement of subcortical structures. The thalamus and basal ganglia process, relay, and integrate sensorimotor information and are involved in the preparation and execution of movements. Moreover, both of these structures house somatotopic representations of all body parts. We therefore investigated subcortical correlates of xenomelia by assessing basal ganglia and thalamus by means of vertex-wise shape analyses. For that purpose, we compared the shape of the thalamus, putamen, caudate nucleus, and the pallidum in 13 men suffering from xenomelia, all desiring a leg amputation, compared to 13 healthy control men. We hypothesised that the target leg is misrepresented in subcortical structures of individuals with xenomelia, especially in locations with a somatotopic representation. Shape analyses showed thinning of bilateral dorsomedial putamina, left ventromedial caudate nucleus and left medial pallidum associated with xenomelia. This was accompanied by thickening of bilateral lateral pallida and the left frontolateral thalamus. These shape differences were mainly located in sensorimotor areas of somatotopic leg representations. The present study provides strong evidence for shape differences in striatal, pallidal, and thalamic subregions housing subcortical body part representations. It adds to previously described neural correlates of a condition one can barely empathize with and invites future connectivity analyses in cortico-subcortical networks.","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2016,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"NeuroImage: Clinical","grobid_abstract_attachment_id":81503188},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/72664625/Shape_alterations_of_basal_ganglia_and_thalamus_in_xenomelia","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2022-03-01T02:26:22.981-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":124242273,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":81503188,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503188/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"0912-main.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503188/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Shape_alterations_of_basal_ganglia_and_t.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/81503188/0912-main-libre.pdf?1646134444=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DShape_alterations_of_basal_ganglia_and_t.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913594\u0026Signature=DDORfLCoDu6Vi-krEXKS0~p94GvrwuUrbUXJeg-btxP2a~d8BoekacBc5f7~oMw7sL8arQREmjpWjA4qk4mH9HBaBqxLbStqgk~FXJiIKIBSlwM3Ib9awhMnPySX9zHLr~BkRjN38ydGxGyf7Z5HAZdzIOb4nCJjZz5IKlvFOT8F5aK00WQ9Nmaw6XJr-kIDIuc8iGeUecVILK66N5GEktFgFsZo7qezMUvy1~0RDJ4FNuh7lh5V5CzPOvPKNmR~D3IdyjvsquzYUxN88rMjBEv4CoUN8nbxopjyk1oEv7pCd924jUlP3BPipAi~PA8ULtq3O1RTURnn9~km~az4Lg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Shape_alterations_of_basal_ganglia_and_thalamus_in_xenomelia","translated_slug":"","page_count":11,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"Xenomelia is a rare condition characterized by the persistent desire for the amputation of physically healthy limbs. Associations with morphological alterations such as reduced cortical thickness and surface area. Nothing is known, however, about the potential involvement of subcortical structures. The thalamus and basal ganglia process, relay, and integrate sensorimotor information and are involved in the preparation and execution of movements. Moreover, both of these structures house somatotopic representations of all body parts. We therefore investigated subcortical correlates of xenomelia by assessing basal ganglia and thalamus by means of vertex-wise shape analyses. For that purpose, we compared the shape of the thalamus, putamen, caudate nucleus, and the pallidum in 13 men suffering from xenomelia, all desiring a leg amputation, compared to 13 healthy control men. We hypothesised that the target leg is misrepresented in subcortical structures of individuals with xenomelia, especially in locations with a somatotopic representation. Shape analyses showed thinning of bilateral dorsomedial putamina, left ventromedial caudate nucleus and left medial pallidum associated with xenomelia. This was accompanied by thickening of bilateral lateral pallida and the left frontolateral thalamus. These shape differences were mainly located in sensorimotor areas of somatotopic leg representations. The present study provides strong evidence for shape differences in striatal, pallidal, and thalamic subregions housing subcortical body part representations. It adds to previously described neural correlates of a condition one can barely empathize with and invites future connectivity analyses in cortico-subcortical networks.","owner":{"id":124242273,"first_name":"peter","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"brugger","page_name":"bruggerp","domain_name":"independent","created_at":"2019-08-29T06:54:36.677-07:00","display_name":"peter brugger","url":"https://independent.academia.edu/bruggerp"},"attachments":[{"id":81503188,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503188/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"0912-main.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503188/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Shape_alterations_of_basal_ganglia_and_t.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/81503188/0912-main-libre.pdf?1646134444=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DShape_alterations_of_basal_ganglia_and_t.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913594\u0026Signature=DDORfLCoDu6Vi-krEXKS0~p94GvrwuUrbUXJeg-btxP2a~d8BoekacBc5f7~oMw7sL8arQREmjpWjA4qk4mH9HBaBqxLbStqgk~FXJiIKIBSlwM3Ib9awhMnPySX9zHLr~BkRjN38ydGxGyf7Z5HAZdzIOb4nCJjZz5IKlvFOT8F5aK00WQ9Nmaw6XJr-kIDIuc8iGeUecVILK66N5GEktFgFsZo7qezMUvy1~0RDJ4FNuh7lh5V5CzPOvPKNmR~D3IdyjvsquzYUxN88rMjBEv4CoUN8nbxopjyk1oEv7pCd924jUlP3BPipAi~PA8ULtq3O1RTURnn9~km~az4Lg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":6200,"name":"Magnetic Resonance Imaging","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Magnetic_Resonance_Imaging"},{"id":52176,"name":"Brain Mapping","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Brain_Mapping"},{"id":66228,"name":"Thalamus","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Thalamus"},{"id":123287,"name":"Three Dimensional Imaging","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Three_Dimensional_Imaging"},{"id":149489,"name":"Amputation","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Amputation"},{"id":289271,"name":"Aged","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Aged"},{"id":484219,"name":"Basal ganglia","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Basal_ganglia"},{"id":2234200,"name":"Functional Laterality","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Functional_Laterality"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="72664314"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664314/Limb_amputation_and_other_disability_desires_as_a_medical_condition"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Limb amputation and other disability desires as a medical condition" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81502999/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664314/Limb_amputation_and_other_disability_desires_as_a_medical_condition">Limb amputation and other disability desires as a medical condition</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>The lancet. Psychiatry</span><span>, 2016</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Some people have a profound dissatisfaction with what is considered an able-bodied state by most ...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Some people have a profound dissatisfaction with what is considered an able-bodied state by most others. These individuals desire to be disabled, by conventional standards. In this Review, we integrate research findings about the desire for a major limb amputation or paralysis (xenomelia). Neuropsychological and neuroimaging explorations of xenomelia show functional and structural abnormalities in predominantly right hemisphere cortical circuits of higher-order bodily representation, including affective and sexual aspects of corporeal awareness. These neural underpinnings of xenomelia do not necessarily imply a neurological cause, and a full understanding of the condition requires consideration of the interface between neural and social contributions to the bodily self and the concept of disability. Irrespective of cause, disability desires are accompanied by a disabling bodily dysphoria, in many respects similar to gender dysphoria, and we suggest that they should be considered a m...</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="34157c2c62612d3f0c2106a4e2fffca5" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{"attachment_id":81502999,"asset_id":72664314,"asset_type":"Work","button_location":"profile"}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81502999/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="72664314"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="72664314"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664314; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664314]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664314]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664314; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='72664314']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 72664314, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "34157c2c62612d3f0c2106a4e2fffca5" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=72664314]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":72664314,"title":"Limb amputation and other disability desires as a medical condition","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Some people have a profound dissatisfaction with what is considered an able-bodied state by most others. These individuals desire to be disabled, by conventional standards. In this Review, we integrate research findings about the desire for a major limb amputation or paralysis (xenomelia). Neuropsychological and neuroimaging explorations of xenomelia show functional and structural abnormalities in predominantly right hemisphere cortical circuits of higher-order bodily representation, including affective and sexual aspects of corporeal awareness. These neural underpinnings of xenomelia do not necessarily imply a neurological cause, and a full understanding of the condition requires consideration of the interface between neural and social contributions to the bodily self and the concept of disability. Irrespective of cause, disability desires are accompanied by a disabling bodily dysphoria, in many respects similar to gender dysphoria, and we suggest that they should be considered a m...","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2016,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"The lancet. Psychiatry"},"translated_abstract":"Some people have a profound dissatisfaction with what is considered an able-bodied state by most others. These individuals desire to be disabled, by conventional standards. In this Review, we integrate research findings about the desire for a major limb amputation or paralysis (xenomelia). Neuropsychological and neuroimaging explorations of xenomelia show functional and structural abnormalities in predominantly right hemisphere cortical circuits of higher-order bodily representation, including affective and sexual aspects of corporeal awareness. These neural underpinnings of xenomelia do not necessarily imply a neurological cause, and a full understanding of the condition requires consideration of the interface between neural and social contributions to the bodily self and the concept of disability. Irrespective of cause, disability desires are accompanied by a disabling bodily dysphoria, in many respects similar to gender dysphoria, and we suggest that they should be considered a m...","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/72664314/Limb_amputation_and_other_disability_desires_as_a_medical_condition","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2022-03-01T02:21:12.642-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":124242273,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":81502999,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81502999/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"ZORA.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81502999/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Limb_amputation_and_other_disability_des.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/81502999/ZORA-libre.pdf?1646134593=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DLimb_amputation_and_other_disability_des.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913594\u0026Signature=X5Tkf9GwcK3~tft0YG4o7JWaNxsVqf2AP380Gzj7l5-QnHAdrXAYEMBQSE4gvdAX3uzyY0eDjTufRfBW2JEHNdQGjmPM1ueGswi-6KQHA8fRNUS4m22BuMwZ0kHyjbTfIz9Ds9oPkyHJrAtuXOyxTfIwohesc8~otTQhcxyFIg3gTBdObSRx5bmi2ddGi9yOPl88~cD9zhkvsdVYktx7OKCWLeIdeffxSP7umJvTSRcKzlf7ZF-au9Bsigi-xN-H~nt89g2MWoCn9zhQi5hEMS~X2ZxUc1Ll~jy55viwv75kmnrnzUN80zloYUn1So~v2RyMJ-mt4eHcFCzzm4fKVA__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Limb_amputation_and_other_disability_desires_as_a_medical_condition","translated_slug":"","page_count":29,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"Some people have a profound dissatisfaction with what is considered an able-bodied state by most others. These individuals desire to be disabled, by conventional standards. In this Review, we integrate research findings about the desire for a major limb amputation or paralysis (xenomelia). Neuropsychological and neuroimaging explorations of xenomelia show functional and structural abnormalities in predominantly right hemisphere cortical circuits of higher-order bodily representation, including affective and sexual aspects of corporeal awareness. These neural underpinnings of xenomelia do not necessarily imply a neurological cause, and a full understanding of the condition requires consideration of the interface between neural and social contributions to the bodily self and the concept of disability. Irrespective of cause, disability desires are accompanied by a disabling bodily dysphoria, in many respects similar to gender dysphoria, and we suggest that they should be considered a m...","owner":{"id":124242273,"first_name":"peter","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"brugger","page_name":"bruggerp","domain_name":"independent","created_at":"2019-08-29T06:54:36.677-07:00","display_name":"peter brugger","url":"https://independent.academia.edu/bruggerp"},"attachments":[{"id":81502999,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81502999/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"ZORA.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81502999/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Limb_amputation_and_other_disability_des.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/81502999/ZORA-libre.pdf?1646134593=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DLimb_amputation_and_other_disability_des.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913594\u0026Signature=X5Tkf9GwcK3~tft0YG4o7JWaNxsVqf2AP380Gzj7l5-QnHAdrXAYEMBQSE4gvdAX3uzyY0eDjTufRfBW2JEHNdQGjmPM1ueGswi-6KQHA8fRNUS4m22BuMwZ0kHyjbTfIz9Ds9oPkyHJrAtuXOyxTfIwohesc8~otTQhcxyFIg3gTBdObSRx5bmi2ddGi9yOPl88~cD9zhkvsdVYktx7OKCWLeIdeffxSP7umJvTSRcKzlf7ZF-au9Bsigi-xN-H~nt89g2MWoCn9zhQi5hEMS~X2ZxUc1Ll~jy55viwv75kmnrnzUN80zloYUn1So~v2RyMJ-mt4eHcFCzzm4fKVA__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":221,"name":"Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychology"},{"id":26327,"name":"Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Medicine"},{"id":149489,"name":"Amputation","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Amputation"},{"id":1971458,"name":"Disabled Persons","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Disabled_Persons"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="57430080"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/57430080/Asomatognosia_Structured_Interview_and_Assessment_of_Visuomotor_Imagery"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Asomatognosia: Structured Interview and Assessment of Visuomotor Imagery" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/57430080/Asomatognosia_Structured_Interview_and_Assessment_of_Visuomotor_Imagery">Asomatognosia: Structured Interview and Assessment of Visuomotor Imagery</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Frontiers in Psychology</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Asomatognosia designates the experience that one’s body has faded from awareness. It is typically...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Asomatognosia designates the experience that one’s body has faded from awareness. It is typically a somaesthetic experience but may target the visual modality (“asomatoscopy”). Frequently associated symptoms are the loss of ownership or agency over a limb. Here, we elaborate on the rigorous nosographic classification of asomatognosia and introduce a structured interview to capture both its core symptoms and associated signs of bodily estrangement. We additionally report the case of a pure left-sided hemiasomatognosia occurring after surgical removal of a meningioma in the right atrium. Despite the wide lesions of the right angular gyrus and of the temporo-parietal junction, the patient did not present visuospatial deficits or bodily awareness disorders other than hemiasomatognosia. The patient and 10 matched controls’ motor imagery was formally assessed with a limb laterality task in which they had to decide whether hands and feet presented under different angles of rotation depicte...</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="57430080"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="57430080"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 57430080; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=57430080]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=57430080]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 57430080; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='57430080']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 57430080, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=57430080]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":57430080,"title":"Asomatognosia: Structured Interview and Assessment of Visuomotor Imagery","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Asomatognosia designates the experience that one’s body has faded from awareness. 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Despite the wide lesions of the right angular gyrus and of the temporo-parietal junction, the patient did not present visuospatial deficits or bodily awareness disorders other than hemiasomatognosia. 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Frequently associated symptoms are the loss of ownership or agency over a limb. Here, we elaborate on the rigorous nosographic classification of asomatognosia and introduce a structured interview to capture both its core symptoms and associated signs of bodily estrangement. We additionally report the case of a pure left-sided hemiasomatognosia occurring after surgical removal of a meningioma in the right atrium. Despite the wide lesions of the right angular gyrus and of the temporo-parietal junction, the patient did not present visuospatial deficits or bodily awareness disorders other than hemiasomatognosia. 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Bizarre Macke oder neurologische Störung</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="c24cdddcd9e88fa2db2ffe1c22025464" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{"attachment_id":86300172,"asset_id":79661793,"asset_type":"Work","button_location":"profile"}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/86300172/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzkwOTk5Myw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="79661793"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="79661793"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 79661793; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=79661793]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=79661793]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 79661793; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='79661793']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 79661793, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "c24cdddcd9e88fa2db2ffe1c22025464" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=79661793]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":79661793,"title":"Der Wunsch nach Amputation. 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$(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="79661792"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/79661792/L_dopa_modulates_striatal_functional_connectivity_in_adults_with_psychotic_like_experiences_A_randomized_double_blind_placebo_controlled_study"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of L-dopa modulates striatal functional connectivity in adults with psychotic-like experiences: A randomized double-blind placebo-controlled study" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/86300174/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/79661792/L_dopa_modulates_striatal_functional_connectivity_in_adults_with_psychotic_like_experiences_A_randomized_double_blind_placebo_controlled_study">L-dopa modulates striatal functional connectivity in adults with psychotic-like experiences: A randomized double-blind placebo-controlled study</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>European Psychiatry</span><span>, 2017</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">IntroductionAccording to the dopamine hypothesis functional brain abnormalities and neurochemical...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">IntroductionAccording to the dopamine hypothesis functional brain abnormalities and neurochemical alterations may converge to cause psychosis through aberrant salience attribution. Indeed, resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI) has revealed widespread brain disconnectivity across the psychotic spectrum.ObjectivesTo advance the understanding of the dopaminergic involvement in intrinsic functional connectivity (iFC) and its putative relationship to the development of psychotic disorders we aimed to investigate the link between L-Dopa, a dopamine precursor, and its modulation of striatal iFC in subthreshold psychosis, i.e. non-clinical psychosis.MethodsWe used a randomized, double-blind placebo controlled study design including in our sample 56 healthy, male, right-handed, subjects with no familiar risk factors for psychosis who were assessed with the Schizotypal Personality Questionnaire (SPQ) and underwent 10 minutes of rs-fMRI scanning. All subjects received e...</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="53574cc9325a39b94f041687ef1a9032" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{"attachment_id":86300174,"asset_id":79661792,"asset_type":"Work","button_location":"profile"}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/86300174/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzkwOTk5Myw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="79661792"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="79661792"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 79661792; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=79661792]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=79661792]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 79661792; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='79661792']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 79661792, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "53574cc9325a39b94f041687ef1a9032" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=79661792]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":79661792,"title":"L-dopa modulates striatal functional connectivity in adults with psychotic-like experiences: A randomized double-blind placebo-controlled study","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"IntroductionAccording to the dopamine hypothesis functional brain abnormalities and neurochemical alterations may converge to cause psychosis through aberrant salience attribution. Indeed, resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI) has revealed widespread brain disconnectivity across the psychotic spectrum.ObjectivesTo advance the understanding of the dopaminergic involvement in intrinsic functional connectivity (iFC) and its putative relationship to the development of psychotic disorders we aimed to investigate the link between L-Dopa, a dopamine precursor, and its modulation of striatal iFC in subthreshold psychosis, i.e. non-clinical psychosis.MethodsWe used a randomized, double-blind placebo controlled study design including in our sample 56 healthy, male, right-handed, subjects with no familiar risk factors for psychosis who were assessed with the Schizotypal Personality Questionnaire (SPQ) and underwent 10 minutes of rs-fMRI scanning. All subjects received e...","publisher":"Elsevier BV","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2017,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"European Psychiatry"},"translated_abstract":"IntroductionAccording to the dopamine hypothesis functional brain abnormalities and neurochemical alterations may converge to cause psychosis through aberrant salience attribution. Indeed, resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI) has revealed widespread brain disconnectivity across the psychotic spectrum.ObjectivesTo advance the understanding of the dopaminergic involvement in intrinsic functional connectivity (iFC) and its putative relationship to the development of psychotic disorders we aimed to investigate the link between L-Dopa, a dopamine precursor, and its modulation of striatal iFC in subthreshold psychosis, i.e. non-clinical psychosis.MethodsWe used a randomized, double-blind placebo controlled study design including in our sample 56 healthy, male, right-handed, subjects with no familiar risk factors for psychosis who were assessed with the Schizotypal Personality Questionnaire (SPQ) and underwent 10 minutes of rs-fMRI scanning. All subjects received e...","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/79661792/L_dopa_modulates_striatal_functional_connectivity_in_adults_with_psychotic_like_experiences_A_randomized_double_blind_placebo_controlled_study","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2022-05-22T09:27:15.709-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":124242273,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":86300174,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/86300174/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"j.eurpsy.2017.01.30620220522-1-23jtc.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/86300174/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzkwOTk5Myw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"L_dopa_modulates_striatal_functional_con.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/86300174/j.eurpsy.2017.01.30620220522-1-23jtc-libre.pdf?1653237485=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DL_dopa_modulates_striatal_functional_con.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913593\u0026Signature=YsUxF1Jr6SS88F8DTjjxORYl-0ljFkKxlRTMriRblYBxAb5lNqfoFGKWdtxsPCh4Gk4FXF1CMKTFfZ7ruwhCKSlYMtlkjh4NdVMUzXyeFBTi-SAKBbsecb1rpJEnT5PXqIPSj8NJUvAIvOcSUpweDJofyXhJhvhT~Wc8bo1lRZNYaYZ7pAIQKHnk2NxN~gGEWymoi2sIY5DQhrfdfkODOUy64BLIGtFAK8q2m~~X8dajlbejR5iEgZxyu-3U1wXzzKofwtFwlHoFcEpnkr8JT582gPOwWA3lYTWE6~fYjBPLKyvjBvbSg0AU0P5h6lsX-qiA1qtJcubJ4e8jaC1m0Q__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"L_dopa_modulates_striatal_functional_connectivity_in_adults_with_psychotic_like_experiences_A_randomized_double_blind_placebo_controlled_study","translated_slug":"","page_count":1,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"IntroductionAccording to the dopamine hypothesis functional brain abnormalities and neurochemical alterations may converge to cause psychosis through aberrant salience attribution. Indeed, resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI) has revealed widespread brain disconnectivity across the psychotic spectrum.ObjectivesTo advance the understanding of the dopaminergic involvement in intrinsic functional connectivity (iFC) and its putative relationship to the development of psychotic disorders we aimed to investigate the link between L-Dopa, a dopamine precursor, and its modulation of striatal iFC in subthreshold psychosis, i.e. non-clinical psychosis.MethodsWe used a randomized, double-blind placebo controlled study design including in our sample 56 healthy, male, right-handed, subjects with no familiar risk factors for psychosis who were assessed with the Schizotypal Personality Questionnaire (SPQ) and underwent 10 minutes of rs-fMRI scanning. All subjects received e...","owner":{"id":124242273,"first_name":"peter","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"brugger","page_name":"bruggerp","domain_name":"independent","created_at":"2019-08-29T06:54:36.677-07:00","display_name":"peter brugger","url":"https://independent.academia.edu/bruggerp"},"attachments":[{"id":86300174,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/86300174/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"j.eurpsy.2017.01.30620220522-1-23jtc.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/86300174/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzkwOTk5Myw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"L_dopa_modulates_striatal_functional_con.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/86300174/j.eurpsy.2017.01.30620220522-1-23jtc-libre.pdf?1653237485=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DL_dopa_modulates_striatal_functional_con.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913593\u0026Signature=YsUxF1Jr6SS88F8DTjjxORYl-0ljFkKxlRTMriRblYBxAb5lNqfoFGKWdtxsPCh4Gk4FXF1CMKTFfZ7ruwhCKSlYMtlkjh4NdVMUzXyeFBTi-SAKBbsecb1rpJEnT5PXqIPSj8NJUvAIvOcSUpweDJofyXhJhvhT~Wc8bo1lRZNYaYZ7pAIQKHnk2NxN~gGEWymoi2sIY5DQhrfdfkODOUy64BLIGtFAK8q2m~~X8dajlbejR5iEgZxyu-3U1wXzzKofwtFwlHoFcEpnkr8JT582gPOwWA3lYTWE6~fYjBPLKyvjBvbSg0AU0P5h6lsX-qiA1qtJcubJ4e8jaC1m0Q__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":221,"name":"Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychology"},{"id":29917,"name":"FMRI","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/FMRI"},{"id":51566,"name":"Dopamine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Dopamine"},{"id":52763,"name":"Functional Connectivity","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Functional_Connectivity"},{"id":159952,"name":"L-DOPA","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/L-DOPA"},{"id":1000447,"name":"resting state fMRI","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/resting_state_fMRI"},{"id":2922956,"name":"Psychology and Cognitive Sciences","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychology_and_Cognitive_Sciences"},{"id":3454899,"name":"european psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/european_psychiatry"},{"id":3763225,"name":"Medical and Health Sciences","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Medical_and_Health_Sciences"}],"urls":[{"id":20672895,"url":"http://api.elsevier.com/content/article/PII:S0924933817303115?httpAccept=text/xml"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="79661791"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/79661791/A_functional_genetic_variation_of_adenosine_deaminase_affects_the_duration_and_intensity_of_deep_sleep_in_humans"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of A functional genetic variation of adenosine deaminase affects the duration and intensity of deep sleep in humans" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/86300209/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/79661791/A_functional_genetic_variation_of_adenosine_deaminase_affects_the_duration_and_intensity_of_deep_sleep_in_humans">A functional genetic variation of adenosine deaminase affects the duration and intensity of deep sleep in humans</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences</span><span>, 2005</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Slow, rhythmic oscillations (&lt;5 Hz) in the sleep electroencephalogram may be a sign of synapti...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Slow, rhythmic oscillations (&lt;5 Hz) in the sleep electroencephalogram may be a sign of synaptic plasticity occurring during sleep. The oscillations, referred to as slow-wave activity (SWA), reflect sleep need and sleep intensity. The amount of SWA is homeostatically regulated. It is enhanced after sleep loss and declines during sleep. Animal studies suggested that sleep need is genetically controlled, yet the physiological mechanisms remain unknown. Here we show in humans that a genetic variant of adenosine deaminase, which is associated with the reduced metabolism of adenosine to inosine, specifically enhances deep sleep and SWA during sleep. In contrast, a distinct polymorphism of the adenosine A 2A receptor gene, which was associated with interindividual differences in anxiety symptoms after caffeine intake in healthy volunteers, affects the electroencephalogram during sleep and wakefulness in a non-state-specific manner. Our findings indicate a direct role of adenosine in hum...</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="edb1ccffa49195cc655f98f6f3206f9f" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{"attachment_id":86300209,"asset_id":79661791,"asset_type":"Work","button_location":"profile"}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/86300209/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzkwOTk5Myw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="79661791"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="79661791"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 79661791; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=79661791]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=79661791]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 79661791; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='79661791']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 79661791, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "edb1ccffa49195cc655f98f6f3206f9f" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=79661791]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":79661791,"title":"A functional genetic variation of adenosine deaminase affects the duration and intensity of deep sleep in humans","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Slow, rhythmic oscillations (\u0026lt;5 Hz) in the sleep electroencephalogram may be a sign of synaptic plasticity occurring during sleep. The oscillations, referred to as slow-wave activity (SWA), reflect sleep need and sleep intensity. The amount of SWA is homeostatically regulated. It is enhanced after sleep loss and declines during sleep. Animal studies suggested that sleep need is genetically controlled, yet the physiological mechanisms remain unknown. Here we show in humans that a genetic variant of adenosine deaminase, which is associated with the reduced metabolism of adenosine to inosine, specifically enhances deep sleep and SWA during sleep. In contrast, a distinct polymorphism of the adenosine A 2A receptor gene, which was associated with interindividual differences in anxiety symptoms after caffeine intake in healthy volunteers, affects the electroencephalogram during sleep and wakefulness in a non-state-specific manner. Our findings indicate a direct role of adenosine in hum...","publisher":"Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2005,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences"},"translated_abstract":"Slow, rhythmic oscillations (\u0026lt;5 Hz) in the sleep electroencephalogram may be a sign of synaptic plasticity occurring during sleep. The oscillations, referred to as slow-wave activity (SWA), reflect sleep need and sleep intensity. The amount of SWA is homeostatically regulated. It is enhanced after sleep loss and declines during sleep. Animal studies suggested that sleep need is genetically controlled, yet the physiological mechanisms remain unknown. Here we show in humans that a genetic variant of adenosine deaminase, which is associated with the reduced metabolism of adenosine to inosine, specifically enhances deep sleep and SWA during sleep. In contrast, a distinct polymorphism of the adenosine A 2A receptor gene, which was associated with interindividual differences in anxiety symptoms after caffeine intake in healthy volunteers, affects the electroencephalogram during sleep and wakefulness in a non-state-specific manner. 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The oscillations, referred to as slow-wave activity (SWA), reflect sleep need and sleep intensity. The amount of SWA is homeostatically regulated. It is enhanced after sleep loss and declines during sleep. Animal studies suggested that sleep need is genetically controlled, yet the physiological mechanisms remain unknown. Here we show in humans that a genetic variant of adenosine deaminase, which is associated with the reduced metabolism of adenosine to inosine, specifically enhances deep sleep and SWA during sleep. In contrast, a distinct polymorphism of the adenosine A 2A receptor gene, which was associated with interindividual differences in anxiety symptoms after caffeine intake in healthy volunteers, affects the electroencephalogram during sleep and wakefulness in a non-state-specific manner. Our findings indicate a direct role of adenosine in hum...","owner":{"id":124242273,"first_name":"peter","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"brugger","page_name":"bruggerp","domain_name":"independent","created_at":"2019-08-29T06:54:36.677-07:00","display_name":"peter brugger","url":"https://independent.academia.edu/bruggerp"},"attachments":[{"id":86300209,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/86300209/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"15676.full.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/86300209/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzkwOTk5Myw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"A_functional_genetic_variation_of_adenos.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/86300209/15676.full-libre.pdf?1653237481=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DA_functional_genetic_variation_of_adenos.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913593\u0026Signature=IaWYyDABJcDotL9nI86S8OiVq87qPVRik6xUlBrDQvHNdHveYaiN-OQ5rQeMtJClTlTGHHALmwvg0AEQOG4zy~WE2kPMGR-WibZPV5AWnwRPi6N1OwNzNYG-MYqCLaXk9O5HDTSHIjmqqeDUCCC3cVHAAcz38~i~6dNFt5V8Fz2aya-j6heGZpv6hf~31qIAjAaW1pvi7Js1s6fYvwrEZwr3WkB80dGLyf7mC08R4hNlmTHo5LyJUrppAkDk7RiSUxrU97rgX-0i0Azd~26DNkNlGk~45nhm90FqRtl6Aos5Svz~JjdeXjZgj7gYWz0eykLYcYZbxg7tehLiBsJbLw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":156,"name":"Genetics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Genetics"},{"id":3233,"name":"Animal Studies","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Animal_Studies"},{"id":3855,"name":"Polymorphism","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Polymorphism"},{"id":7710,"name":"Biology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Biology"},{"id":10904,"name":"Electroencephalography","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Electroencephalography"},{"id":26327,"name":"Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Medicine"},{"id":28235,"name":"Multidisciplinary","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Multidisciplinary"},{"id":32003,"name":"Synaptic Plasticity","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Synaptic_Plasticity"},{"id":133324,"name":"Sleep","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Sleep"},{"id":174781,"name":"Oscillations","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Oscillations"},{"id":176503,"name":"Synaptic Transmission","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Synaptic_Transmission"},{"id":187814,"name":"Electroencephalogram","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Electroencephalogram"},{"id":372410,"name":"Genotype","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Genotype"},{"id":577933,"name":"Genetic variation","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Genetic_variation"},{"id":1002732,"name":"Genetic Variability","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Genetic_Variability"},{"id":1147382,"name":"Adenosine Deaminase","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Adenosine_Deaminase"}],"urls":[{"id":20672894,"url":"https://pnas.org/doi/pdf/10.1073/pnas.0505414102"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="79661790"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/79661790/Crossmodal_representation_of_a_functional_robotic_hand_arises_after_extensive_training_in_healthy_participants"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Crossmodal representation of a functional robotic hand arises after extensive training in healthy participants" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/86300173/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/79661790/Crossmodal_representation_of_a_functional_robotic_hand_arises_after_extensive_training_in_healthy_participants">Crossmodal representation of a functional robotic hand arises after extensive training in healthy participants</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Neuropsychologia</span><span>, 2014</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">The way in which humans represent their own bodies is critical in guiding their interactions with...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">The way in which humans represent their own bodies is critical in guiding their interactions with the environment. To achieve successful body-space interactions, the body representation is strictly connected with that of the space immediately surrounding it through efficient visuo-tactile crossmodal integration. Such a body-space integrated representation is not fixed, but can be dynamically modulated by the use of external tools. Our study aims to explore the effect of using a complex tool, namely a functional prosthesis, on crossmodal visuo-tactile spatial interactions in healthy participants. By using the crossmodal visuo-tactile congruency paradigm, we found that prolonged training with a mechanical hand capable of distal hand movements and providing sensory feedback induces a pattern of interference, which is not observed after a brief training, between visual stimuli close to the prosthesis and touches on the body. These results suggest that after extensive, but not short, training the functional prosthesis acquires a visuo-tactile crossmodal representation akin to real limbs. This finding adds to previous evidence for the embodiment of functional prostheses in amputees, and shows that their use may also improve the crossmodal combination of somatosensory feedback delivered by the prosthesis with visual stimuli in the space around it, thus effectively augmenting the patients' visuomotor abilities.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="7d525ea9e2e4b75247ee2c42936a0027" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{"attachment_id":86300173,"asset_id":79661790,"asset_type":"Work","button_location":"profile"}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/86300173/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzkwOTk5Myw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="79661790"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="79661790"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 79661790; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=79661790]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=79661790]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 79661790; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='79661790']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 79661790, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "7d525ea9e2e4b75247ee2c42936a0027" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=79661790]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":79661790,"title":"Crossmodal representation of a functional robotic hand arises after extensive training in healthy participants","translated_title":"","metadata":{"publisher":"Elsevier BV","grobid_abstract":"The way in which humans represent their own bodies is critical in guiding their interactions with the environment. To achieve successful body-space interactions, the body representation is strictly connected with that of the space immediately surrounding it through efficient visuo-tactile crossmodal integration. Such a body-space integrated representation is not fixed, but can be dynamically modulated by the use of external tools. Our study aims to explore the effect of using a complex tool, namely a functional prosthesis, on crossmodal visuo-tactile spatial interactions in healthy participants. By using the crossmodal visuo-tactile congruency paradigm, we found that prolonged training with a mechanical hand capable of distal hand movements and providing sensory feedback induces a pattern of interference, which is not observed after a brief training, between visual stimuli close to the prosthesis and touches on the body. These results suggest that after extensive, but not short, training the functional prosthesis acquires a visuo-tactile crossmodal representation akin to real limbs. This finding adds to previous evidence for the embodiment of functional prostheses in amputees, and shows that their use may also improve the crossmodal combination of somatosensory feedback delivered by the prosthesis with visual stimuli in the space around it, thus effectively augmenting the patients' visuomotor abilities.","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2014,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Neuropsychologia","grobid_abstract_attachment_id":86300173},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/79661790/Crossmodal_representation_of_a_functional_robotic_hand_arises_after_extensive_training_in_healthy_participants","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2022-05-22T09:27:15.099-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":124242273,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":86300173,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/86300173/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Marini_et_al_robotic_limb_last_version_for_ZORA.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/86300173/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzkwOTk5Myw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Crossmodal_representation_of_a_functiona.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/86300173/Marini_et_al_robotic_limb_last_version_for_ZORA-libre.pdf?1653237497=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DCrossmodal_representation_of_a_functiona.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913593\u0026Signature=hSlFafQEibnWrY5xjJc5~eqsaRTcDI3rP6PaqVfn6gGn6CzociMGWmSRDcw-XmimH~EuNEQ0UBBzB56R2DdeSaTNRLcxflHKqoPZq108DdN-38Xa1O-XpBqoF8m1Tn4qAEdebXgk8bp0Sjm4teDz2IlkdAMx7g~RuS5lPGfsSlCuuaif6olFf5uJqyWs4T10fn~77jl4xxRtFdLW0UShTI4PRVb-L20L8UtdtW~AdyJb7sUb6AFCyXfVcrlZsEdiPoazp8e~Vodm39041m1uHlHrjv5e9XlZYLIoEcQVUQvCUj6s6P925fAW3X-9rDshtvhfqta6LO-33G0AdF6IFw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Crossmodal_representation_of_a_functional_robotic_hand_arises_after_extensive_training_in_healthy_participants","translated_slug":"","page_count":43,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"The way in which humans represent their own bodies is critical in guiding their interactions with the environment. To achieve successful body-space interactions, the body representation is strictly connected with that of the space immediately surrounding it through efficient visuo-tactile crossmodal integration. Such a body-space integrated representation is not fixed, but can be dynamically modulated by the use of external tools. Our study aims to explore the effect of using a complex tool, namely a functional prosthesis, on crossmodal visuo-tactile spatial interactions in healthy participants. By using the crossmodal visuo-tactile congruency paradigm, we found that prolonged training with a mechanical hand capable of distal hand movements and providing sensory feedback induces a pattern of interference, which is not observed after a brief training, between visual stimuli close to the prosthesis and touches on the body. These results suggest that after extensive, but not short, training the functional prosthesis acquires a visuo-tactile crossmodal representation akin to real limbs. 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The tight functional coupling between hand and bra...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Congressi Stefano Franscini conference series! The tight functional coupling between hand and brain has greatly shaped the evolution of language, culture and technology. Any reduction or loss of hand function, whether of central or peripheral origin, has devastating effects on the independence and social integration of the affected person. And any treatment, be it through human or technological intervention, must account for this unique coupling. As a result, hand and brain have drawn strong interest from the social, medical and engineering sciences alike. This conference brings together leading researchers from the multiple disciplines studying the unique dexterity and sensory abilities of the hand, its neuromechanical and physiological control, as well as its functional recovery and neuroprosthetic restoration following injury. This is the third CSF conference on these topics, following two successful events organized by Mario Wiesendanger in 1994 (Sensorimotor Function of the Han...</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="8886f8af05cca79f2ac661c64b01ab42" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{"attachment_id":86297347,"asset_id":79657336,"asset_type":"Work","button_location":"profile"}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/86297347/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzkwOTk5Myw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="79657336"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="79657336"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 79657336; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=79657336]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=79657336]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 79657336; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='79657336']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 79657336, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "8886f8af05cca79f2ac661c64b01ab42" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=79657336]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":79657336,"title":"Marie-Claude Hepp-Reymond","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Congressi Stefano Franscini conference series! The tight functional coupling between hand and brain has greatly shaped the evolution of language, culture and technology. Any reduction or loss of hand function, whether of central or peripheral origin, has devastating effects on the independence and social integration of the affected person. And any treatment, be it through human or technological intervention, must account for this unique coupling. As a result, hand and brain have drawn strong interest from the social, medical and engineering sciences alike. This conference brings together leading researchers from the multiple disciplines studying the unique dexterity and sensory abilities of the hand, its neuromechanical and physiological control, as well as its functional recovery and neuroprosthetic restoration following injury. This is the third CSF conference on these topics, following two successful events organized by Mario Wiesendanger in 1994 (Sensorimotor Function of the Han...","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2016,"errors":{}}},"translated_abstract":"Congressi Stefano Franscini conference series! The tight functional coupling between hand and brain has greatly shaped the evolution of language, culture and technology. Any reduction or loss of hand function, whether of central or peripheral origin, has devastating effects on the independence and social integration of the affected person. And any treatment, be it through human or technological intervention, must account for this unique coupling. As a result, hand and brain have drawn strong interest from the social, medical and engineering sciences alike. 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The tight functional coupling between hand and brain has greatly shaped the evolution of language, culture and technology. Any reduction or loss of hand function, whether of central or peripheral origin, has devastating effects on the independence and social integration of the affected person. And any treatment, be it through human or technological intervention, must account for this unique coupling. As a result, hand and brain have drawn strong interest from the social, medical and engineering sciences alike. This conference brings together leading researchers from the multiple disciplines studying the unique dexterity and sensory abilities of the hand, its neuromechanical and physiological control, as well as its functional recovery and neuroprosthetic restoration following injury. 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Focusing on one or several aspects of this broad definition, some authors have suggested that superstitions are a fundamental feature of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). 1-5 We first elaborate on the dichotomy between behavior and belief, mentioned in the above definition, and differentiate superstitious behavior from superstitious belief, or magical ideation. We then propose that different brain circuits may be responsible for these two forms of superstitiousness, and that the type of superstition observed in an individual patient may thus inform investigators about the prominently affected neurocognitive systems.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="2dfb8ed93fee9cee95c37099eeaab038" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{"attachment_id":81503161,"asset_id":72664665,"asset_type":"Work","button_location":"profile"}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503161/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzkwOTk5Myw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="72664665"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="72664665"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664665; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664665]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664665]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664665; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='72664665']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 72664665, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "2dfb8ed93fee9cee95c37099eeaab038" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=72664665]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":72664665,"title":"Superstitiousness in obsessive-compulsive","translated_title":"","metadata":{"grobid_abstract":"ccording to the Merriam-Webster online dictionary (http://www.merriam-webster.com), a superstition is \"a belief or practice resulting from ignorance, fear of the unknown, trust in magic or chance, or a false conception of causation.\" Focusing on one or several aspects of this broad definition, some authors have suggested that superstitions are a fundamental feature of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). 1-5 We first elaborate on the dichotomy between behavior and belief, mentioned in the above definition, and differentiate superstitious behavior from superstitious belief, or magical ideation. 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This study set out to test whether or not the well-known effect of repetition avoidance in sequential response production is likewise mediated by the right hemisphere. It was found that, in 40 healthy subjects, avoidance of repetitions in a random number-generation task correlated positively with a relative superiority for design as compared to letter fluency. Since design fluency is predominantly mediated by the right frontal lobe and letter fluency by the left, this finding supports the notion of a right hemisphere dominance for the avoidance of repetitive responses. This study illustrates the usefulness of a neurobehavioral approach to repetition behavior in the randomization of response. In particular, it demonstrates that the phenomenon of repetition avoidance may be better accounted for in terms of a control mec...</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="72664661"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="72664661"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664661; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664661]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664661]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664661; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='72664661']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 72664661, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=72664661]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":72664661,"title":"Repetitive behavior and repetition avoidance: the role of the right hemisphere","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Based on clinical observations of patients suffering from brain damage, a recent model assumes a right hemisphere dominance for the suppression of repetitive behavior. This study set out to test whether or not the well-known effect of repetition avoidance in sequential response production is likewise mediated by the right hemisphere. It was found that, in 40 healthy subjects, avoidance of repetitions in a random number-generation task correlated positively with a relative superiority for design as compared to letter fluency. Since design fluency is predominantly mediated by the right frontal lobe and letter fluency by the left, this finding supports the notion of a right hemisphere dominance for the avoidance of repetitive responses. This study illustrates the usefulness of a neurobehavioral approach to repetition behavior in the randomization of response. 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Since design fluency is predominantly mediated by the right frontal lobe and letter fluency by the left, this finding supports the notion of a right hemisphere dominance for the avoidance of repetitive responses. This study illustrates the usefulness of a neurobehavioral approach to repetition behavior in the randomization of response. In particular, it demonstrates that the phenomenon of repetition avoidance may be better accounted for in terms of a control mec...","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/72664661/Repetitive_behavior_and_repetition_avoidance_the_role_of_the_right_hemisphere","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2022-03-01T02:26:47.079-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":124242273,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Repetitive_behavior_and_repetition_avoidance_the_role_of_the_right_hemisphere","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"Based on clinical observations of patients suffering from brain damage, a recent model assumes a right hemisphere dominance for the suppression of repetitive behavior. This study set out to test whether or not the well-known effect of repetition avoidance in sequential response production is likewise mediated by the right hemisphere. It was found that, in 40 healthy subjects, avoidance of repetitions in a random number-generation task correlated positively with a relative superiority for design as compared to letter fluency. Since design fluency is predominantly mediated by the right frontal lobe and letter fluency by the left, this finding supports the notion of a right hemisphere dominance for the avoidance of repetitive responses. This study illustrates the usefulness of a neurobehavioral approach to repetition behavior in the randomization of response. In particular, it demonstrates that the phenomenon of repetition avoidance may be better accounted for in terms of a control mec...","owner":{"id":124242273,"first_name":"peter","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"brugger","page_name":"bruggerp","domain_name":"independent","created_at":"2019-08-29T06:54:36.677-07:00","display_name":"peter brugger","url":"https://independent.academia.edu/bruggerp"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":221,"name":"Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychology"},{"id":237,"name":"Cognitive Science","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Cognitive_Science"},{"id":635,"name":"Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychiatry"},{"id":2599,"name":"Psychometrics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychometrics"},{"id":4212,"name":"Cognition","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Cognition"},{"id":9726,"name":"Laterality","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Laterality"},{"id":61474,"name":"Brain","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Brain"},{"id":244814,"name":"Clinical Sciences","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Clinical_Sciences"},{"id":413192,"name":"Sex Factors","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Sex_Factors"},{"id":899716,"name":"Language Proficiency Tests","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Language_Proficiency_Tests"},{"id":1239755,"name":"Neurosciences","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Neurosciences"},{"id":1805946,"name":"Neuroscience and Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Neuroscience_and_Psychiatry"},{"id":3981850,"name":"Language tests","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Language_tests"}],"urls":[{"id":18102282,"url":"http://europepmc.org/backend/ptpmcrender.fcgi?accid=PMC1188734\u0026blobtype=pdf"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="72664657"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664657/Schizotypal_thinking_and_associative_processing_a_response_commonality_analysis_of_verbal_fluency"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Schizotypal thinking and associative processing: a response commonality analysis of verbal fluency" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503158/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664657/Schizotypal_thinking_and_associative_processing_a_response_commonality_analysis_of_verbal_fluency">Schizotypal thinking and associative processing: a response commonality analysis of verbal fluency</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Journal of Psychiatry & Neuroscience</span><span>, 1998</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">To determine whether people with high scores for schizotypal thinking generate more uncommon word...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">To determine whether people with high scores for schizotypal thinking generate more uncommon words in a letter fluency task than people with low scores. Prospective study. University psychology department. Forty healthy, right-handed students. Students were administered the Magical Ideation (MI) Scale and a 2-minute letter fluency task in which they named as many nouns as possible beginning with &quot;A&quot; or &quot;F,&quot; in any order. Total number of words produced and percentage of unique, rare and common words (as determined by the responses of the whole group); scores on MI scale. Participants with high scores (above the median) on the MI scale generated as many words as those who had low scores. People in both groups also generated a comparable number of unique words (named by only 1 person) and common words (named by 6 or more people). As hypothesized, people with high scores on the MI scale generated more rare words (named by fewer than 6 people) than those with low scor...</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="972e194695e494570da190eecd62c5f7" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{"attachment_id":81503158,"asset_id":72664657,"asset_type":"Work","button_location":"profile"}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503158/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzkwOTk5Myw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="72664657"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="72664657"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664657; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664657]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664657]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664657; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='72664657']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 72664657, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "972e194695e494570da190eecd62c5f7" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=72664657]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":72664657,"title":"Schizotypal thinking and associative processing: a response commonality analysis of verbal fluency","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"To determine whether people with high scores for schizotypal thinking generate more uncommon words in a letter fluency task than people with low scores. Prospective study. University psychology department. Forty healthy, right-handed students. Students were administered the Magical Ideation (MI) Scale and a 2-minute letter fluency task in which they named as many nouns as possible beginning with \u0026quot;A\u0026quot; or \u0026quot;F,\u0026quot; in any order. Total number of words produced and percentage of unique, rare and common words (as determined by the responses of the whole group); scores on MI scale. Participants with high scores (above the median) on the MI scale generated as many words as those who had low scores. People in both groups also generated a comparable number of unique words (named by only 1 person) and common words (named by 6 or more people). As hypothesized, people with high scores on the MI scale generated more rare words (named by fewer than 6 people) than those with low scor...","ai_title_tag":"Schizotypal Thinking and Rare Word Generation in Fluency Tasks","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":1998,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Journal of Psychiatry \u0026 Neuroscience"},"translated_abstract":"To determine whether people with high scores for schizotypal thinking generate more uncommon words in a letter fluency task than people with low scores. Prospective study. University psychology department. Forty healthy, right-handed students. Students were administered the Magical Ideation (MI) Scale and a 2-minute letter fluency task in which they named as many nouns as possible beginning with \u0026quot;A\u0026quot; or \u0026quot;F,\u0026quot; in any order. Total number of words produced and percentage of unique, rare and common words (as determined by the responses of the whole group); scores on MI scale. Participants with high scores (above the median) on the MI scale generated as many words as those who had low scores. People in both groups also generated a comparable number of unique words (named by only 1 person) and common words (named by 6 or more people). As hypothesized, people with high scores on the MI scale generated more rare words (named by fewer than 6 people) than those with low scor...","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/72664657/Schizotypal_thinking_and_associative_processing_a_response_commonality_analysis_of_verbal_fluency","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2022-03-01T02:26:44.013-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":124242273,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":81503158,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503158/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"ptpmcrender.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503158/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzkwOTk5Myw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Schizotypal_thinking_and_associative_pro.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/81503158/ptpmcrender-libre.pdf?1646134446=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DSchizotypal_thinking_and_associative_pro.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913593\u0026Signature=aqzllztdCLemX8IO67XTV8BCi9qtJQwazmtEjjyBX8w78tcxHTf0Rl0BFwwk-9jFSPIAnfwb649WBWt6sobMTvAV3e7bAnhn5L1d7WNOMdmdFXV2QswXcDYtHfizBSi8H-8T~StEvULvhCW9eXdkBdtfzoE640iP8o5uMBPsWcb5bGbMBZ4snfi2OzFkImtu4rYs~AZ3KeV9-DoWne0BmVs5NLNyvH5YHctq6k7vBaHScowcEcTcF9yNwTmi~4GZOPM7x7rJYdiLeAu1K79N5HHmWwCXLK1tqBG4y1~pJZbRAfm0Ae8oiQ9bJViQaImUVoQmoDlnrY4hk~evGbUYNw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Schizotypal_thinking_and_associative_processing_a_response_commonality_analysis_of_verbal_fluency","translated_slug":"","page_count":5,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"To determine whether people with high scores for schizotypal thinking generate more uncommon words in a letter fluency task than people with low scores. 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$(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="72664654"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664654/Body_mass_index_and_flanker_size_Does_over_weight_modulate_the_Baldwin_illusion"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Body mass index and flanker size: Does (over)weight modulate the Baldwin illusion?" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503206/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664654/Body_mass_index_and_flanker_size_Does_over_weight_modulate_the_Baldwin_illusion">Body mass index and flanker size: Does (over)weight modulate the Baldwin illusion?</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Cogent Psychology</span><span>, 2020</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Visuospatial processing is a complex process that is vulnerable to bias. Line bisection paradigms...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Visuospatial processing is a complex process that is vulnerable to bias. Line bisection paradigms are used to help detect the factors that balance left and right hemispatial attention that go beyond the domains of perception and action. For example, studies have indicated the “pseudoneglect” phenomenon in the bisection of horizontally presented lines in healthy subjects. Among the modified versions of the traditional line bisection task is the “Baldwin illusion”. In the Baldwin illusion, the subjective midpoint of a line flanked by squares of different sizes is displaced towards the small square. The goal of the study was two-fold. First, we wanted to investigate whether there is an asymmetry in the Baldwin effect depending on leftward or rightward arrangement of the small square and second whether obesity (as measured by body mass index—BMI) would affect bisection of Baldwin-like flanked lines. Thirty-one healthy, right-handed female subjects (20 normal-weight and 11 overweight) ha...</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="c6202a9c426fb2982291307275e52ffc" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{"attachment_id":81503206,"asset_id":72664654,"asset_type":"Work","button_location":"profile"}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503206/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzkwOTk5Myw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="72664654"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="72664654"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664654; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664654]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664654]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664654; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='72664654']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 72664654, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "c6202a9c426fb2982291307275e52ffc" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=72664654]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":72664654,"title":"Body mass index and flanker size: Does (over)weight modulate the Baldwin illusion?","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Visuospatial processing is a complex process that is vulnerable to bias. Line bisection paradigms are used to help detect the factors that balance left and right hemispatial attention that go beyond the domains of perception and action. For example, studies have indicated the “pseudoneglect” phenomenon in the bisection of horizontally presented lines in healthy subjects. Among the modified versions of the traditional line bisection task is the “Baldwin illusion”. In the Baldwin illusion, the subjective midpoint of a line flanked by squares of different sizes is displaced towards the small square. The goal of the study was two-fold. First, we wanted to investigate whether there is an asymmetry in the Baldwin effect depending on leftward or rightward arrangement of the small square and second whether obesity (as measured by body mass index—BMI) would affect bisection of Baldwin-like flanked lines. 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U., Geertzen, J. H. B. (in pres...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Mulder and colleagues [Mulder, T., Hochstenbach, J., Dijkstra, P. U., Geertzen, J. H. B. (in press). Born to adapt, but not in your dreams. Consciousness and Cognition.] report that a majority of amputees continue to experience a normallylimbed body during their night dreams. They interprete this observation as a failure of the body schema to adapt to the new body shape. The present note does not question this interpretation, but points to the already existing literature on the phenomenology of the phantom limb in dreams. A summary of published investigations is complemented by a note on phantom phenomena in the dreams of paraplegic patients and persons born without a limb. Integration of the available data allows the recommendation for prospective studies to consider dream content in more detail. For instance, ‘‘adaptation” to the loss of a limb can also manifest itself by seeing oneself surrounded by amputees. 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$(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="72664645"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664645/Individual_differences_and_impact_of_gender_on_curvature_redirection_thresholds"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Individual differences and impact of gender on curvature redirection thresholds" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503196/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664645/Individual_differences_and_impact_of_gender_on_curvature_redirection_thresholds">Individual differences and impact of gender on curvature redirection thresholds</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Proceedings of the 15th ACM Symposium on Applied Perception</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">To enable real walking in a virtual environment (VE) that is larger than the available physical s...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">To enable real walking in a virtual environment (VE) that is larger than the available physical space, redirection techniques that introduce multisensory conflicts between visual and nonvisual cues to manipulate different aspects of a user's trajectory could be applied. When applied within certain thresholds, these manipulations could go unnoticed and immersion remains intact. Research effort has been spent on identifying these thresholds and a wide range of thresholds was reported in different studies. These differences in thresholds could be explained by many factors such as individual differences, walking speed, or context settings such as environment design, cognitive load, distractors, etc. In this paper, we present a study to investigate the role of gender on curvature redirection thresholds (RDTs) using the maximum likelihood procedure with the classical two-alternative force choice task. Results show high variability in individuals' RDTs, and that on average women have higher curvature RDTs than men. Furthermore, results also confirm existing findings about the negative correlation between walking speed and curvature RDTs.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="af192623b3df7830aa16b800aae0bb4a" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{"attachment_id":81503196,"asset_id":72664645,"asset_type":"Work","button_location":"profile"}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503196/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzkwOTk5Myw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="72664645"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="72664645"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664645; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664645]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664645]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664645; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='72664645']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 72664645, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "af192623b3df7830aa16b800aae0bb4a" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=72664645]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":72664645,"title":"Individual differences and impact of gender on curvature redirection thresholds","translated_title":"","metadata":{"publisher":"ACM","ai_title_tag":"Gender Differences in Curvature Redirection Thresholds","grobid_abstract":"To enable real walking in a virtual environment (VE) that is larger than the available physical space, redirection techniques that introduce multisensory conflicts between visual and nonvisual cues to manipulate different aspects of a user's trajectory could be applied. 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They often do not feel able to incorporate the artificial hand into their bodily self. Furthermore, prosthesis fitting is not usually tailored to accommodate the characteristics of an individual’s phantom limb sensations. These are experienced by almost all persons with an acquired amputation and comprise the motor and postural properties of the lost limb. This article presents and validates a multimodal dataset including an extensive qualitative and quantitative assessment of phantom limb sensations in 15 transradial amputees, surface electromyography and accelerometry data of the forearm, and measurements of gaze behavior during exercises requiring pointing or repositioning of the forearm and the phantom hand. The data also include acquisitions from 29 able-bodied participants, matched for gender and age. Special emphasis was given to tracking the visuo-motor coupling betwee...</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="7ed563dde213cd7b05948b346b11be83" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{"attachment_id":81503148,"asset_id":72664642,"asset_type":"Work","button_location":"profile"}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503148/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="72664642"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="72664642"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664642; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664642]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664642]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664642; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='72664642']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 72664642, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "7ed563dde213cd7b05948b346b11be83" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=72664642]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":72664642,"title":"Gaze, behavioral, and clinical data for phantom limbs after hand amputation from 15 amputees and 29 controls","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Despite recent advances in prosthetics, many upper limb amputees still use prostheses with some reluctance. 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Special emphasis was given to tracking the visuo-motor coupling betwee...","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/72664642/Gaze_behavioral_and_clinical_data_for_phantom_limbs_after_hand_amputation_from_15_amputees_and_29_controls","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2022-03-01T02:26:32.677-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":124242273,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":81503148,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503148/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"s41597-020-0402-1.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503148/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Gaze_behavioral_and_clinical_data_for_ph.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/81503148/s41597-020-0402-1-libre.pdf?1646134453=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DGaze_behavioral_and_clinical_data_for_ph.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913594\u0026Signature=WZKROAX6~2KJk-ieJV6SGK8H5eeJM3jDS5NwTcCBDMvyc7RyP1DIxiMeKXLCp0VbzBjHMKWdM0-fd5Io51T6vQg9n7nXEO1oWYtv5dW6BMtsSwMfHPo7HEys3YOcanzIB56YKynhXxWqQoQ5cwqP69kMFcrxhumdvvgFq7pFQ0l-cIwztv6qJvyrMnwh~zkuw~Y7koJ1h6D~4moDiKNVkLo2~9PykKrtgNVjFVnv9W-40Cz63hbZS-TcDnmtqdqKpE7drfnorlcpENuwlwwx7buwi4M0n0gAHvbRz0EYPXSP1LDpN~3ZiU~XUkI55yl6vCojOZ9dzeUc9ZyN2LmeYQ__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Gaze_behavioral_and_clinical_data_for_phantom_limbs_after_hand_amputation_from_15_amputees_and_29_controls","translated_slug":"","page_count":14,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"Despite recent advances in prosthetics, many upper limb amputees still use prostheses with some reluctance. They often do not feel able to incorporate the artificial hand into their bodily self. Furthermore, prosthesis fitting is not usually tailored to accommodate the characteristics of an individual’s phantom limb sensations. These are experienced by almost all persons with an acquired amputation and comprise the motor and postural properties of the lost limb. This article presents and validates a multimodal dataset including an extensive qualitative and quantitative assessment of phantom limb sensations in 15 transradial amputees, surface electromyography and accelerometry data of the forearm, and measurements of gaze behavior during exercises requiring pointing or repositioning of the forearm and the phantom hand. The data also include acquisitions from 29 able-bodied participants, matched for gender and age. Special emphasis was given to tracking the visuo-motor coupling betwee...","owner":{"id":124242273,"first_name":"peter","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"brugger","page_name":"bruggerp","domain_name":"independent","created_at":"2019-08-29T06:54:36.677-07:00","display_name":"peter brugger","url":"https://independent.academia.edu/bruggerp"},"attachments":[{"id":81503148,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503148/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"s41597-020-0402-1.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503148/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Gaze_behavioral_and_clinical_data_for_ph.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/81503148/s41597-020-0402-1-libre.pdf?1646134453=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DGaze_behavioral_and_clinical_data_for_ph.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913594\u0026Signature=WZKROAX6~2KJk-ieJV6SGK8H5eeJM3jDS5NwTcCBDMvyc7RyP1DIxiMeKXLCp0VbzBjHMKWdM0-fd5Io51T6vQg9n7nXEO1oWYtv5dW6BMtsSwMfHPo7HEys3YOcanzIB56YKynhXxWqQoQ5cwqP69kMFcrxhumdvvgFq7pFQ0l-cIwztv6qJvyrMnwh~zkuw~Y7koJ1h6D~4moDiKNVkLo2~9PykKrtgNVjFVnv9W-40Cz63hbZS-TcDnmtqdqKpE7drfnorlcpENuwlwwx7buwi4M0n0gAHvbRz0EYPXSP1LDpN~3ZiU~XUkI55yl6vCojOZ9dzeUc9ZyN2LmeYQ__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":615540,"name":"Scientific Data","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Scientific_Data"}],"urls":[{"id":18102275,"url":"http://www.nature.com/articles/s41597-020-0402-1.pdf"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="72664635"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664635/Influence_of_the_Intensive_Care_Unit_Environment_on_the_Reliability_of_the_Montreal_Cognitive_Assessment"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Influence of the Intensive Care Unit Environment on the Reliability of the Montreal Cognitive Assessment" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503195/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664635/Influence_of_the_Intensive_Care_Unit_Environment_on_the_Reliability_of_the_Montreal_Cognitive_Assessment">Influence of the Intensive Care Unit Environment on the Reliability of the Montreal Cognitive Assessment</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Frontiers in Neurology</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Background: Neuropsychological screening becomes increasingly important for the evaluation of sub...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Background: Neuropsychological screening becomes increasingly important for the evaluation of subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) and stroke patients. It is often performed during the surveillance period on the intensive (ICU), while it remains unknown, whether the distraction in this environment influences the results. We aimed to study the reliability of the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) in the ICU environment. Methods: Consecutive stable patients with recent brain injury (tumor, trauma, stroke, etc.) were evaluated twice within 36 h using official parallel versions of the MoCA (MoCA). The sequence of assessment was randomized into (a) busy ICU first or (b) quiet office first with subsequent crossover. For repeated MoCA, we determined sequence, period, location effects, and the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC). Results: N = 50 patients were studied [n = 30 (60%) male], with a mean age of 57 years. The assessment's sequence ["ICU first" mean MoCA −1.14 (SD 2.34) vs. "Office first" −0.73 (SD 1.52)] did not influence the MoCA (p = 0.47). On the 2nd period, participants scored 0.96 points worse (SD 2.01; p = 0.001), indicating no MoCA learning effect but a possible difference in parallel versions. There was no location effect (p = 0.31) with MoCA between locations (Office minus ICU) of −0.32 (SD 2.21). The ICC for repeated MoCA was 0.87 (95% CI 0.79-0.92). Conclusions: The reliability of the MoCA was excellent, independent from the testing environment being ICU or office. This finding is helpful for patient care and studies investigating the effect of a therapeutic intervention on the neuropsychological outcome after SAH, stroke or traumatic brain injury.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="fad86940b54a1b9d8b49b5cdc56a9a61" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{"attachment_id":81503195,"asset_id":72664635,"asset_type":"Work","button_location":"profile"}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503195/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="72664635"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="72664635"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664635; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664635]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664635]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664635; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='72664635']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 72664635, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "fad86940b54a1b9d8b49b5cdc56a9a61" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=72664635]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":72664635,"title":"Influence of the Intensive Care Unit Environment on the Reliability of the Montreal Cognitive Assessment","translated_title":"","metadata":{"publisher":"Frontiers Media SA","grobid_abstract":"Background: Neuropsychological screening becomes increasingly important for the evaluation of subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) and stroke patients. It is often performed during the surveillance period on the intensive (ICU), while it remains unknown, whether the distraction in this environment influences the results. We aimed to study the reliability of the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) in the ICU environment. Methods: Consecutive stable patients with recent brain injury (tumor, trauma, stroke, etc.) were evaluated twice within 36 h using official parallel versions of the MoCA (MoCA). The sequence of assessment was randomized into (a) busy ICU first or (b) quiet office first with subsequent crossover. For repeated MoCA, we determined sequence, period, location effects, and the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC). Results: N = 50 patients were studied [n = 30 (60%) male], with a mean age of 57 years. The assessment's sequence [\"ICU first\" mean MoCA −1.14 (SD 2.34) vs. \"Office first\" −0.73 (SD 1.52)] did not influence the MoCA (p = 0.47). On the 2nd period, participants scored 0.96 points worse (SD 2.01; p = 0.001), indicating no MoCA learning effect but a possible difference in parallel versions. There was no location effect (p = 0.31) with MoCA between locations (Office minus ICU) of −0.32 (SD 2.21). The ICC for repeated MoCA was 0.87 (95% CI 0.79-0.92). Conclusions: The reliability of the MoCA was excellent, independent from the testing environment being ICU or office. This finding is helpful for patient care and studies investigating the effect of a therapeutic intervention on the neuropsychological outcome after SAH, stroke or traumatic brain injury.","publication_name":"Frontiers in Neurology","grobid_abstract_attachment_id":81503195},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/72664635/Influence_of_the_Intensive_Care_Unit_Environment_on_the_Reliability_of_the_Montreal_Cognitive_Assessment","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2022-03-01T02:26:30.121-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":124242273,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":81503195,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503195/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"ed67ee0f16a940592047a0def48eb539ac4f.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503195/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Influence_of_the_Intensive_Care_Unit_Env.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/81503195/ed67ee0f16a940592047a0def48eb539ac4f-libre.pdf?1646134441=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DInfluence_of_the_Intensive_Care_Unit_Env.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913594\u0026Signature=XYnKPOSC44o8~FHkK2IpaZ35TtaPEWVXc~CgdNlaA6aOX36tMOqsVDL0KHLiFBLfAsSBOcOUTtAi8G3EXH2S2rGzUn4MaQ6O5JwLU2s5IQChKLCVcuB8pw7iOJFxZ1LDwFpFNABMg9a51lkPT~A4TncwowtQYewq1edto0q8OFj3zNQZGBXYoQQIFJNO9Iq7BnkMU8oA-J7EZ6HWKfkYMjU2IDusQLC~ggO~mDWuUsz1RIwH2KKupSuS-ew3z8Cj5BHeq5L~NDmhbRjh4B8I8kYj8h2Ug2cUBp1rC9j7VkO1EmCXd1v6SPiKqrmY1tIDM5JljZxuc0b4TF6Irett6g__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Influence_of_the_Intensive_Care_Unit_Environment_on_the_Reliability_of_the_Montreal_Cognitive_Assessment","translated_slug":"","page_count":5,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"Background: Neuropsychological screening becomes increasingly important for the evaluation of subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) and stroke patients. It is often performed during the surveillance period on the intensive (ICU), while it remains unknown, whether the distraction in this environment influences the results. We aimed to study the reliability of the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) in the ICU environment. Methods: Consecutive stable patients with recent brain injury (tumor, trauma, stroke, etc.) were evaluated twice within 36 h using official parallel versions of the MoCA (MoCA). The sequence of assessment was randomized into (a) busy ICU first or (b) quiet office first with subsequent crossover. For repeated MoCA, we determined sequence, period, location effects, and the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC). Results: N = 50 patients were studied [n = 30 (60%) male], with a mean age of 57 years. The assessment's sequence [\"ICU first\" mean MoCA −1.14 (SD 2.34) vs. \"Office first\" −0.73 (SD 1.52)] did not influence the MoCA (p = 0.47). On the 2nd period, participants scored 0.96 points worse (SD 2.01; p = 0.001), indicating no MoCA learning effect but a possible difference in parallel versions. There was no location effect (p = 0.31) with MoCA between locations (Office minus ICU) of −0.32 (SD 2.21). The ICC for repeated MoCA was 0.87 (95% CI 0.79-0.92). Conclusions: The reliability of the MoCA was excellent, independent from the testing environment being ICU or office. This finding is helpful for patient care and studies investigating the effect of a therapeutic intervention on the neuropsychological outcome after SAH, stroke or traumatic brain injury.","owner":{"id":124242273,"first_name":"peter","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"brugger","page_name":"bruggerp","domain_name":"independent","created_at":"2019-08-29T06:54:36.677-07:00","display_name":"peter brugger","url":"https://independent.academia.edu/bruggerp"},"attachments":[{"id":81503195,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503195/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"ed67ee0f16a940592047a0def48eb539ac4f.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503195/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Influence_of_the_Intensive_Care_Unit_Env.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/81503195/ed67ee0f16a940592047a0def48eb539ac4f-libre.pdf?1646134441=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DInfluence_of_the_Intensive_Care_Unit_Env.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913594\u0026Signature=XYnKPOSC44o8~FHkK2IpaZ35TtaPEWVXc~CgdNlaA6aOX36tMOqsVDL0KHLiFBLfAsSBOcOUTtAi8G3EXH2S2rGzUn4MaQ6O5JwLU2s5IQChKLCVcuB8pw7iOJFxZ1LDwFpFNABMg9a51lkPT~A4TncwowtQYewq1edto0q8OFj3zNQZGBXYoQQIFJNO9Iq7BnkMU8oA-J7EZ6HWKfkYMjU2IDusQLC~ggO~mDWuUsz1RIwH2KKupSuS-ew3z8Cj5BHeq5L~NDmhbRjh4B8I8kYj8h2Ug2cUBp1rC9j7VkO1EmCXd1v6SPiKqrmY1tIDM5JljZxuc0b4TF6Irett6g__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":221,"name":"Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychology"},{"id":244814,"name":"Clinical Sciences","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Clinical_Sciences"},{"id":1239755,"name":"Neurosciences","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Neurosciences"}],"urls":[{"id":18102271,"url":"https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fneur.2019.00734/full"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="72664633"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664633/Grey_matter_or_social_matters_Causal_attributions_in_the_era_of_biological_psychiatry"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Grey matter or social matters? Causal attributions in the era of biological psychiatry" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503192/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664633/Grey_matter_or_social_matters_Causal_attributions_in_the_era_of_biological_psychiatry">Grey matter or social matters? Causal attributions in the era of biological psychiatry</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>European psychiatry : the journal of the Association of European Psychiatrists</span><span>, Aug 31, 2018</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Fig. 1. Correlation between the strength of an individual's amputation desire and the surface are...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Fig. 1. Correlation between the strength of an individual's amputation desire and the surface area of a circumscribed region in the inferior parietal lobe (depicted in B). C: Boxand-whisker plots show distributions of plausibility ratings for two types of causality arguably implied by this correlation, i.e. neural primacy (dark bars) or behavioural primacy (light bars). A and B reprinted, (with permission), from ref. [6].</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="b43fe27400fd2858489f56f7d62f5b52" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{"attachment_id":81503192,"asset_id":72664633,"asset_type":"Work","button_location":"profile"}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503192/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="72664633"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="72664633"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664633; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664633]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664633]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664633; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='72664633']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 72664633, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "b43fe27400fd2858489f56f7d62f5b52" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=72664633]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":72664633,"title":"Grey matter or social matters? Causal attributions in the era of biological psychiatry","translated_title":"","metadata":{"ai_title_tag":"Causal Attributions in Biological Psychiatry and Grey Matter","grobid_abstract":"Fig. 1. Correlation between the strength of an individual's amputation desire and the surface area of a circumscribed region in the inferior parietal lobe (depicted in B). C: Boxand-whisker plots show distributions of plausibility ratings for two types of causality arguably implied by this correlation, i.e. neural primacy (dark bars) or behavioural primacy (light bars). A and B reprinted, (with permission), from ref. 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Correlation between the strength of an individual's amputation desire and the surface area of a circumscribed region in the inferior parietal lobe (depicted in B). C: Boxand-whisker plots show distributions of plausibility ratings for two types of causality arguably implied by this correlation, i.e. neural primacy (dark bars) or behavioural primacy (light bars). A and B reprinted, (with permission), from ref. [6].","owner":{"id":124242273,"first_name":"peter","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"brugger","page_name":"bruggerp","domain_name":"independent","created_at":"2019-08-29T06:54:36.677-07:00","display_name":"peter brugger","url":"https://independent.academia.edu/bruggerp"},"attachments":[{"id":81503192,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503192/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Brugger_20et_20al_202018a.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503192/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Grey_matter_or_social_matters_Causal_att.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/81503192/Brugger_20et_20al_202018a-libre.pdf?1646134443=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DGrey_matter_or_social_matters_Causal_att.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913594\u0026Signature=UJjdvB1M0nruoc2sXZLkp93WGdQxsM7E91TkPXfyQ5uL2QgA1gFPDbNb9yvMOwKF52Fta1eUZXrklmmGfOUUXqMTF4YmQKJrRV1LxaTY3W-wsKalJ9pnILZADWHiNQIcPrr9LqC2ap~EldSbi2s4XkxUOvprJ4mMivkHuxhWPfSrBPFfYQiwmvecfN-vKzaHwHjfSmnxG02jy6~G33s9ZVC6Gcyp-7PHx348yp3S8PD9DkBnnQPEGB6HhJNf2t7wqXQhMbXBoH6A8DQvNiiTRBBsiweMFWQbMMXTeuMN1xdr-AJqEniQsHUoSoTCyAQ5ebCUtDfVguPfk1T2jGGxDA__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":221,"name":"Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychology"},{"id":26327,"name":"Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Medicine"},{"id":2922956,"name":"Psychology and Cognitive Sciences","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychology_and_Cognitive_Sciences"},{"id":3454899,"name":"european psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/european_psychiatry"},{"id":3763225,"name":"Medical and Health Sciences","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Medical_and_Health_Sciences"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="72664630"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664630/Persistent_effects_of_playing_football_and_associated_subconcussive_head_trauma_on_brain_structure_and_function_a_systematic_review_of_the_literature"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Persistent effects of playing football and associated (subconcussive) head trauma on brain structure and function: a systematic review of the literature" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503186/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664630/Persistent_effects_of_playing_football_and_associated_subconcussive_head_trauma_on_brain_structure_and_function_a_systematic_review_of_the_literature">Persistent effects of playing football and associated (subconcussive) head trauma on brain structure and function: a systematic review of the literature</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>British Journal of Sports Medicine</span><span>, 2016</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Aim/objectiveThere is ongoing controversy about persistent neurological deficits in active and fo...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Aim/objectiveThere is ongoing controversy about persistent neurological deficits in active and former football (soccer) players. We reviewed the literature for associations between football activities (including heading/head injuries) and decline in brain structure/function.DesignSystematic literature review.Data sourcesMEDLINE, Embase, PsycINFO, CINAHL, Cochrane-CRCT, SportDiscus, Cochrane-DSR=4 (accessed 2 August 2016).Eligibility criteria for selecting studiesOriginal studies reporting on football-related persistent effects on brain structure/function. Results from neurocognitive testing, neuroimaging and EEG were compared with controls and/or correlated with heading frequency and/or head injuries. Methodological quality was rated for risk-of-bias, including appropriateness of controls, correction for multiple statistical testing and assessment of heading frequency and head injuries.Results30 studies with 1691 players were included. Those 57% (8/14) of case–control studies report...</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="edaa2a8ca3ea57b6c2ed611ab31512a8" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{"attachment_id":81503186,"asset_id":72664630,"asset_type":"Work","button_location":"profile"}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503186/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="72664630"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="72664630"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664630; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664630]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664630]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664630; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='72664630']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 72664630, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "edaa2a8ca3ea57b6c2ed611ab31512a8" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=72664630]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":72664630,"title":"Persistent effects of playing football and associated (subconcussive) head trauma on brain structure and function: a systematic review of the literature","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Aim/objectiveThere is ongoing controversy about persistent neurological deficits in active and former football (soccer) players. We reviewed the literature for associations between football activities (including heading/head injuries) and decline in brain structure/function.DesignSystematic literature review.Data sourcesMEDLINE, Embase, PsycINFO, CINAHL, Cochrane-CRCT, SportDiscus, Cochrane-DSR=4 (accessed 2 August 2016).Eligibility criteria for selecting studiesOriginal studies reporting on football-related persistent effects on brain structure/function. Results from neurocognitive testing, neuroimaging and EEG were compared with controls and/or correlated with heading frequency and/or head injuries. Methodological quality was rated for risk-of-bias, including appropriateness of controls, correction for multiple statistical testing and assessment of heading frequency and head injuries.Results30 studies with 1691 players were included. Those 57% (8/14) of case–control studies report...","publisher":"BMJ","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2016,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"British Journal of Sports Medicine"},"translated_abstract":"Aim/objectiveThere is ongoing controversy about persistent neurological deficits in active and former football (soccer) players. We reviewed the literature for associations between football activities (including heading/head injuries) and decline in brain structure/function.DesignSystematic literature review.Data sourcesMEDLINE, Embase, PsycINFO, CINAHL, Cochrane-CRCT, SportDiscus, Cochrane-DSR=4 (accessed 2 August 2016).Eligibility criteria for selecting studiesOriginal studies reporting on football-related persistent effects on brain structure/function. Results from neurocognitive testing, neuroimaging and EEG were compared with controls and/or correlated with heading frequency and/or head injuries. Methodological quality was rated for risk-of-bias, including appropriateness of controls, correction for multiple statistical testing and assessment of heading frequency and head injuries.Results30 studies with 1691 players were included. 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We reviewed the literature for associations between football activities (including heading/head injuries) and decline in brain structure/function.DesignSystematic literature review.Data sourcesMEDLINE, Embase, PsycINFO, CINAHL, Cochrane-CRCT, SportDiscus, Cochrane-DSR=4 (accessed 2 August 2016).Eligibility criteria for selecting studiesOriginal studies reporting on football-related persistent effects on brain structure/function. Results from neurocognitive testing, neuroimaging and EEG were compared with controls and/or correlated with heading frequency and/or head injuries. Methodological quality was rated for risk-of-bias, including appropriateness of controls, correction for multiple statistical testing and assessment of heading frequency and head injuries.Results30 studies with 1691 players were included. Those 57% (8/14) of case–control studies report...","owner":{"id":124242273,"first_name":"peter","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"brugger","page_name":"bruggerp","domain_name":"independent","created_at":"2019-08-29T06:54:36.677-07:00","display_name":"peter brugger","url":"https://independent.academia.edu/bruggerp"},"attachments":[{"id":81503186,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503186/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Tarnutzer-BJSM-Effects-football-2016.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503186/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Persistent_effects_of_playing_football_a.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/81503186/Tarnutzer-BJSM-Effects-football-2016-libre.pdf?1646134446=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DPersistent_effects_of_playing_football_a.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913594\u0026Signature=VvTN8FkZ3beAU0LlJ1h95VSAwVuQRzmfZP3XE~1drv103C2Nw7e3PsIdm7nWjEUyodiEGGCY7d2kOK9WlGjJMdcEIZ6FgTxQbJOmDfnL5AAYLFDvTkrxAlh46CiVUeu6O8BHx2ntL~HtVgOfGpLW5iU6xFY~E5dXhSTNgghXQtH2kBacLeB8MZMw8Qhskn1DqBknUgXtCtoUw9K3OKZgC~dqn6MZk9vm1zSf96cnJ--zWS40Q0DughBH18lJU~tDogVRCX7ekViO4YEv9fNmPgFX08JVWPM2oR-tPTgDl-3ecXhZQ-fYCsQdEn7PAUyqhz8DXo0662hU7oMiwuHGJw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":48,"name":"Engineering","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Engineering"},{"id":922,"name":"Education","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Education"},{"id":3763225,"name":"Medical and Health Sciences","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Medical_and_Health_Sciences"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="72664628"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664628/The_Z%C3%BCrich_Maxi_Mental_Status_Inventory_Z%C3%BCMAX_Test_Retest_Reliability_and_Discriminant_Validity_in_Stroke_Survivors"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of The Zürich Maxi Mental Status Inventory (ZüMAX): Test-Retest Reliability and Discriminant Validity in Stroke Survivors" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503190/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664628/The_Z%C3%BCrich_Maxi_Mental_Status_Inventory_Z%C3%BCMAX_Test_Retest_Reliability_and_Discriminant_Validity_in_Stroke_Survivors">The Zürich Maxi Mental Status Inventory (ZüMAX): Test-Retest Reliability and Discriminant Validity in Stroke Survivors</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Cognitive and behavioral neurology : official journal of the Society for Behavioral and Cognitive Neurology</span><span>, 2016</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">To examine discriminant validity and test-retest reliability of the Zürich maxi mental status inv...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">To examine discriminant validity and test-retest reliability of the Zürich maxi mental status inventory (ZüMAX) in patients with stroke. The ZüMAX is a novel domain-specific cognitive assessment tool to screen for disturbances in neuropsychological function. The test can be used in stroke rehabilitation to estimate severity of cognitive impairment. Because evidence for validity and reliability is lacking, the tool&#39;s clinical use is limited. We administered the ZüMAX in a test-retest design to 33 community-dwelling stroke survivors, and once to 35 healthy controls matched for age and sex. We found significant group differences in subscores for the cognitive domains of executive functions and language as well as total score (P=0.001 to 0.004); we did not find group differences for the domains of praxia (defined as the ability to perform purposeful actions), visual perception and construction, or learning and memory. Test-retest reliability of the total score was good (intraclass c...</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="db3034bc2caaf946755c3eef721e5eeb" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{"attachment_id":81503190,"asset_id":72664628,"asset_type":"Work","button_location":"profile"}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503190/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="72664628"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="72664628"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664628; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664628]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664628]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664628; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='72664628']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 72664628, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "db3034bc2caaf946755c3eef721e5eeb" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=72664628]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":72664628,"title":"The Zürich Maxi Mental Status Inventory (ZüMAX): Test-Retest Reliability and Discriminant Validity in Stroke Survivors","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"To examine discriminant validity and test-retest reliability of the Zürich maxi mental status inventory (ZüMAX) in patients with stroke. 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Associations with morphological alterations such as reduced cortical thickness and surface area. Nothing is known, however, about the potential involvement of subcortical structures. The thalamus and basal ganglia process, relay, and integrate sensorimotor information and are involved in the preparation and execution of movements. Moreover, both of these structures house somatotopic representations of all body parts. We therefore investigated subcortical correlates of xenomelia by assessing basal ganglia and thalamus by means of vertex-wise shape analyses. For that purpose, we compared the shape of the thalamus, putamen, caudate nucleus, and the pallidum in 13 men suffering from xenomelia, all desiring a leg amputation, compared to 13 healthy control men. We hypothesised that the target leg is misrepresented in subcortical structures of individuals with xenomelia, especially in locations with a somatotopic representation. Shape analyses showed thinning of bilateral dorsomedial putamina, left ventromedial caudate nucleus and left medial pallidum associated with xenomelia. This was accompanied by thickening of bilateral lateral pallida and the left frontolateral thalamus. These shape differences were mainly located in sensorimotor areas of somatotopic leg representations. The present study provides strong evidence for shape differences in striatal, pallidal, and thalamic subregions housing subcortical body part representations. It adds to previously described neural correlates of a condition one can barely empathize with and invites future connectivity analyses in cortico-subcortical networks.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="77b9bd09453a031adae58975b1771376" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{"attachment_id":81503188,"asset_id":72664625,"asset_type":"Work","button_location":"profile"}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503188/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="72664625"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="72664625"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664625; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664625]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664625]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664625; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='72664625']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 72664625, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "77b9bd09453a031adae58975b1771376" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=72664625]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":72664625,"title":"Shape alterations of basal ganglia and thalamus in xenomelia","translated_title":"","metadata":{"publisher":"Elsevier BV","grobid_abstract":"Xenomelia is a rare condition characterized by the persistent desire for the amputation of physically healthy limbs. Associations with morphological alterations such as reduced cortical thickness and surface area. Nothing is known, however, about the potential involvement of subcortical structures. The thalamus and basal ganglia process, relay, and integrate sensorimotor information and are involved in the preparation and execution of movements. Moreover, both of these structures house somatotopic representations of all body parts. We therefore investigated subcortical correlates of xenomelia by assessing basal ganglia and thalamus by means of vertex-wise shape analyses. For that purpose, we compared the shape of the thalamus, putamen, caudate nucleus, and the pallidum in 13 men suffering from xenomelia, all desiring a leg amputation, compared to 13 healthy control men. We hypothesised that the target leg is misrepresented in subcortical structures of individuals with xenomelia, especially in locations with a somatotopic representation. Shape analyses showed thinning of bilateral dorsomedial putamina, left ventromedial caudate nucleus and left medial pallidum associated with xenomelia. This was accompanied by thickening of bilateral lateral pallida and the left frontolateral thalamus. These shape differences were mainly located in sensorimotor areas of somatotopic leg representations. The present study provides strong evidence for shape differences in striatal, pallidal, and thalamic subregions housing subcortical body part representations. It adds to previously described neural correlates of a condition one can barely empathize with and invites future connectivity analyses in cortico-subcortical networks.","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2016,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"NeuroImage: Clinical","grobid_abstract_attachment_id":81503188},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/72664625/Shape_alterations_of_basal_ganglia_and_thalamus_in_xenomelia","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2022-03-01T02:26:22.981-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":124242273,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":81503188,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503188/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"0912-main.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503188/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Shape_alterations_of_basal_ganglia_and_t.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/81503188/0912-main-libre.pdf?1646134444=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DShape_alterations_of_basal_ganglia_and_t.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913594\u0026Signature=DDORfLCoDu6Vi-krEXKS0~p94GvrwuUrbUXJeg-btxP2a~d8BoekacBc5f7~oMw7sL8arQREmjpWjA4qk4mH9HBaBqxLbStqgk~FXJiIKIBSlwM3Ib9awhMnPySX9zHLr~BkRjN38ydGxGyf7Z5HAZdzIOb4nCJjZz5IKlvFOT8F5aK00WQ9Nmaw6XJr-kIDIuc8iGeUecVILK66N5GEktFgFsZo7qezMUvy1~0RDJ4FNuh7lh5V5CzPOvPKNmR~D3IdyjvsquzYUxN88rMjBEv4CoUN8nbxopjyk1oEv7pCd924jUlP3BPipAi~PA8ULtq3O1RTURnn9~km~az4Lg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Shape_alterations_of_basal_ganglia_and_thalamus_in_xenomelia","translated_slug":"","page_count":11,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"Xenomelia is a rare condition characterized by the persistent desire for the amputation of physically healthy limbs. Associations with morphological alterations such as reduced cortical thickness and surface area. Nothing is known, however, about the potential involvement of subcortical structures. The thalamus and basal ganglia process, relay, and integrate sensorimotor information and are involved in the preparation and execution of movements. Moreover, both of these structures house somatotopic representations of all body parts. We therefore investigated subcortical correlates of xenomelia by assessing basal ganglia and thalamus by means of vertex-wise shape analyses. For that purpose, we compared the shape of the thalamus, putamen, caudate nucleus, and the pallidum in 13 men suffering from xenomelia, all desiring a leg amputation, compared to 13 healthy control men. We hypothesised that the target leg is misrepresented in subcortical structures of individuals with xenomelia, especially in locations with a somatotopic representation. Shape analyses showed thinning of bilateral dorsomedial putamina, left ventromedial caudate nucleus and left medial pallidum associated with xenomelia. This was accompanied by thickening of bilateral lateral pallida and the left frontolateral thalamus. These shape differences were mainly located in sensorimotor areas of somatotopic leg representations. The present study provides strong evidence for shape differences in striatal, pallidal, and thalamic subregions housing subcortical body part representations. It adds to previously described neural correlates of a condition one can barely empathize with and invites future connectivity analyses in cortico-subcortical networks.","owner":{"id":124242273,"first_name":"peter","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"brugger","page_name":"bruggerp","domain_name":"independent","created_at":"2019-08-29T06:54:36.677-07:00","display_name":"peter brugger","url":"https://independent.academia.edu/bruggerp"},"attachments":[{"id":81503188,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81503188/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"0912-main.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81503188/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Shape_alterations_of_basal_ganglia_and_t.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/81503188/0912-main-libre.pdf?1646134444=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DShape_alterations_of_basal_ganglia_and_t.pdf\u0026Expires=1733913594\u0026Signature=DDORfLCoDu6Vi-krEXKS0~p94GvrwuUrbUXJeg-btxP2a~d8BoekacBc5f7~oMw7sL8arQREmjpWjA4qk4mH9HBaBqxLbStqgk~FXJiIKIBSlwM3Ib9awhMnPySX9zHLr~BkRjN38ydGxGyf7Z5HAZdzIOb4nCJjZz5IKlvFOT8F5aK00WQ9Nmaw6XJr-kIDIuc8iGeUecVILK66N5GEktFgFsZo7qezMUvy1~0RDJ4FNuh7lh5V5CzPOvPKNmR~D3IdyjvsquzYUxN88rMjBEv4CoUN8nbxopjyk1oEv7pCd924jUlP3BPipAi~PA8ULtq3O1RTURnn9~km~az4Lg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":6200,"name":"Magnetic Resonance Imaging","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Magnetic_Resonance_Imaging"},{"id":52176,"name":"Brain Mapping","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Brain_Mapping"},{"id":66228,"name":"Thalamus","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Thalamus"},{"id":123287,"name":"Three Dimensional Imaging","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Three_Dimensional_Imaging"},{"id":149489,"name":"Amputation","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Amputation"},{"id":289271,"name":"Aged","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Aged"},{"id":484219,"name":"Basal ganglia","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Basal_ganglia"},{"id":2234200,"name":"Functional Laterality","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Functional_Laterality"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="72664314"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664314/Limb_amputation_and_other_disability_desires_as_a_medical_condition"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Limb amputation and other disability desires as a medical condition" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/81502999/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/72664314/Limb_amputation_and_other_disability_desires_as_a_medical_condition">Limb amputation and other disability desires as a medical condition</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>The lancet. Psychiatry</span><span>, 2016</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Some people have a profound dissatisfaction with what is considered an able-bodied state by most ...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Some people have a profound dissatisfaction with what is considered an able-bodied state by most others. These individuals desire to be disabled, by conventional standards. In this Review, we integrate research findings about the desire for a major limb amputation or paralysis (xenomelia). Neuropsychological and neuroimaging explorations of xenomelia show functional and structural abnormalities in predominantly right hemisphere cortical circuits of higher-order bodily representation, including affective and sexual aspects of corporeal awareness. These neural underpinnings of xenomelia do not necessarily imply a neurological cause, and a full understanding of the condition requires consideration of the interface between neural and social contributions to the bodily self and the concept of disability. Irrespective of cause, disability desires are accompanied by a disabling bodily dysphoria, in many respects similar to gender dysphoria, and we suggest that they should be considered a m...</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="34157c2c62612d3f0c2106a4e2fffca5" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{"attachment_id":81502999,"asset_id":72664314,"asset_type":"Work","button_location":"profile"}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/81502999/download_file?st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzkwOTk5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="72664314"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="72664314"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664314; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664314]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=72664314]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 72664314; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='72664314']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 72664314, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "34157c2c62612d3f0c2106a4e2fffca5" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=72664314]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":72664314,"title":"Limb amputation and other disability desires as a medical condition","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Some people have a profound dissatisfaction with what is considered an able-bodied state by most others. 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Psychiatry"},"translated_abstract":"Some people have a profound dissatisfaction with what is considered an able-bodied state by most others. These individuals desire to be disabled, by conventional standards. In this Review, we integrate research findings about the desire for a major limb amputation or paralysis (xenomelia). Neuropsychological and neuroimaging explorations of xenomelia show functional and structural abnormalities in predominantly right hemisphere cortical circuits of higher-order bodily representation, including affective and sexual aspects of corporeal awareness. These neural underpinnings of xenomelia do not necessarily imply a neurological cause, and a full understanding of the condition requires consideration of the interface between neural and social contributions to the bodily self and the concept of disability. 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It is typically...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Asomatognosia designates the experience that one’s body has faded from awareness. It is typically a somaesthetic experience but may target the visual modality (“asomatoscopy”). Frequently associated symptoms are the loss of ownership or agency over a limb. Here, we elaborate on the rigorous nosographic classification of asomatognosia and introduce a structured interview to capture both its core symptoms and associated signs of bodily estrangement. We additionally report the case of a pure left-sided hemiasomatognosia occurring after surgical removal of a meningioma in the right atrium. Despite the wide lesions of the right angular gyrus and of the temporo-parietal junction, the patient did not present visuospatial deficits or bodily awareness disorders other than hemiasomatognosia. The patient and 10 matched controls’ motor imagery was formally assessed with a limb laterality task in which they had to decide whether hands and feet presented under different angles of rotation depicte...</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="57430080"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="57430080"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 57430080; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=57430080]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=57430080]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 57430080; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='57430080']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 57430080, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=57430080]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":57430080,"title":"Asomatognosia: Structured Interview and Assessment of Visuomotor Imagery","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Asomatognosia designates the experience that one’s body has faded from awareness. It is typically a somaesthetic experience but may target the visual modality (“asomatoscopy”). Frequently associated symptoms are the loss of ownership or agency over a limb. Here, we elaborate on the rigorous nosographic classification of asomatognosia and introduce a structured interview to capture both its core symptoms and associated signs of bodily estrangement. We additionally report the case of a pure left-sided hemiasomatognosia occurring after surgical removal of a meningioma in the right atrium. Despite the wide lesions of the right angular gyrus and of the temporo-parietal junction, the patient did not present visuospatial deficits or bodily awareness disorders other than hemiasomatognosia. The patient and 10 matched controls’ motor imagery was formally assessed with a limb laterality task in which they had to decide whether hands and feet presented under different angles of rotation depicte...","publisher":"Frontiers Media SA","publication_name":"Frontiers in Psychology"},"translated_abstract":"Asomatognosia designates the experience that one’s body has faded from awareness. It is typically a somaesthetic experience but may target the visual modality (“asomatoscopy”). Frequently associated symptoms are the loss of ownership or agency over a limb. Here, we elaborate on the rigorous nosographic classification of asomatognosia and introduce a structured interview to capture both its core symptoms and associated signs of bodily estrangement. We additionally report the case of a pure left-sided hemiasomatognosia occurring after surgical removal of a meningioma in the right atrium. Despite the wide lesions of the right angular gyrus and of the temporo-parietal junction, the patient did not present visuospatial deficits or bodily awareness disorders other than hemiasomatognosia. The patient and 10 matched controls’ motor imagery was formally assessed with a limb laterality task in which they had to decide whether hands and feet presented under different angles of rotation depicte...","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/57430080/Asomatognosia_Structured_Interview_and_Assessment_of_Visuomotor_Imagery","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2021-10-12T23:58:41.477-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":124242273,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Asomatognosia_Structured_Interview_and_Assessment_of_Visuomotor_Imagery","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"Asomatognosia designates the experience that one’s body has faded from awareness. It is typically a somaesthetic experience but may target the visual modality (“asomatoscopy”). Frequently associated symptoms are the loss of ownership or agency over a limb. Here, we elaborate on the rigorous nosographic classification of asomatognosia and introduce a structured interview to capture both its core symptoms and associated signs of bodily estrangement. We additionally report the case of a pure left-sided hemiasomatognosia occurring after surgical removal of a meningioma in the right atrium. Despite the wide lesions of the right angular gyrus and of the temporo-parietal junction, the patient did not present visuospatial deficits or bodily awareness disorders other than hemiasomatognosia. The patient and 10 matched controls’ motor imagery was formally assessed with a limb laterality task in which they had to decide whether hands and feet presented under different angles of rotation depicte...","owner":{"id":124242273,"first_name":"peter","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"brugger","page_name":"bruggerp","domain_name":"independent","created_at":"2019-08-29T06:54:36.677-07:00","display_name":"peter brugger","url":"https://independent.academia.edu/bruggerp"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":221,"name":"Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychology"},{"id":2498386,"name":"Frontiers in Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Frontiers_in_Psychology"}],"urls":[{"id":12866066,"url":"https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.544544/full"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> </div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/google_contacts-0dfb882d836b94dbcb4a2d123d6933fc9533eda5be911641f20b4eb428429600.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb $('.js-google-connect-button').click(function(e) { e.preventDefault(); 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