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Archive for the 'neurocognition' Category

Human brain activity time-locked to perceptual event boundaries.

Posted in movies, events, cognition, neurocognition, cog-neuro, perception, fmri, ijceell06, narrative, neuro-sync, neurology, time-oriented-science on November 3rd, 2006

Nat Neurosci, Vol. 4, No. 6. (June 2001), pp. 651-655.

Temporal structure has a major role in human understanding of everyday events. Observers are able to segment ongoing activity into temporal parts and sub-parts that are reliable, meaningful and correlated with ecologically relevant features of the action. Here we present evidence that a network of brain regions is tuned to perceptually salient event boundaries, both during intentional event segmentation and during naive passive viewing of events. Activity within this network may provide a basis for parsing the temporally evolving environment into meaningful units.

Original post by JM Zacks

Gender related effects of heroin abuse on the simple reaction time task

Posted in adult, abuse, neurocognition, substance on November 3rd, 2006

Addictive Behaviors, Vol. 31, No. 1. (January 2006), pp. 187-190.

Accumulated studies have demonstrated that there are serious negative consequences of drug abuse, especially the impairment of central nervous system (CNS) function. The simple reaction time (SRT) is the simplest model of measuring the function of the CNS. The purpose of the present study is to examine whether the SRT is affected by heroin abuse and whether such drug effect, if exists, is gender related. We found significant slowing of the SRT in both male and female heroin dependent patients at 1-3 months from withdrawal. However, the SRT slowing remitted after 3 months of abstinence in heroin dependent males but not in females. Our results suggested that the SRT is slowed by heroin abuse and such slowing is gender related.

Original post by Ning Liu