- noun vs. verb magentoencephalography
- Malnutrition and hypermetabolism are not risk factors for the presence of hepatic encephalopathy: A cross-sectional study
- Malnutrition and hypermetabolism are not risk factors for the presence of hepatic encephalopathy: A cross-sectional study
- Focal lesions of the frontal, parietal and temporal lobe may interfere with tactile working memory and attention. To characterise the neural correlates of ...Focal lesions of the frontal, parietal and temporal lobe may interfere with tactile working memory and attention. To characterise the neural correlates of intact vibrotactile working memory and attention, functional MRI was conducted in 12 healthy young adults. Participants performed a forced-choice vibrotactile frequency discrimination task, comparing a cue stimulus of fixed frequency to their right thumb with a probe stimulus of identical or higher frequency. To investigate working memory, the time interval between the 2 stimuli was pseudo-randomized (either 2 or 8 s). To investigate selective attention, a distractor stimulus was occasionally presented contralaterally, simultaneous to the probe. Results Delayed vibrotactile frequency discrimination, following a probe presented 8 s after the cue in contrast to a probe presented 2 s after the cue, was associated with activation in the bilateral anterior insula and the right inferior parietal cortex. Frequency discrimination under distraction was correlated with activation in the right anterior insula, in the bilateral posterior parietal cortex, and in the right middle temporal gyrus. Conclusion These results support the notion that working memory and attention are organised in partly overlapping neural circuits. In contrast to previous reports in the visual or auditory domain, this study emphasises the involvement of the anterior insula in vibrotactile working memory and selective attention.
- These results suggest that neuronal and membrane functions are important for rapid auditory processing. This investigation provides a first link between th...These results suggest that neuronal and membrane functions are important for rapid auditory processing. This investigation provides a first link between the electrophysiology, as recorded by magnetoencephalography, and the neurochemistry, as assessed by proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy, of the auditory cortex.
- To investigate the neural network of overt speech production, event-related fMRI was performed in 9 young healthy adult volunteers. A clustered image acqui...To investigate the neural network of overt speech production, event-related fMRI was performed in 9 young healthy adult volunteers. A clustered image acquisition technique was chosen to minimize speech-related movement artifacts. Functional images were acquired during the production of oral movements and of speech of increasing complexity (isolated vowel as well as monosyllabic and trisyllabic utterances). This imaging technique and behavioral task enabled depiction of the articulo-phonologic network of speech production from the supplementary motor area at the cranial end to the red nucleus at the caudal end. Speaking a single vowel and performing simple oral movements involved very similar activation of the cortical and subcortical motor systems. More complex, polysyllabic utterances were associated with additional activation in the bilateral cerebellum, reflecting increased demand on speech motor control, and additional activation in the bilateral temporal cortex, reflecting the stronger involvement of phonologic processing.
- MEG study - Biomag PPoster
- fMRI group at Sunnybrook, Troronto
- Human Brain Mapping 9999(9999):NA (2008)
- Hum Brain Mapp (December 2008)
- Dev Med Child Neurol 50(7):486-486 (July 2008)
- Neuroscience 153(4):1300-1308 (June 2008)
- J Gastroenterol Hepatol 23(4):606-610 (April 2008)
- BMC Neurosci (2007)
- Neurosci Lett 271(2):89-92 (August 1999)
- BMC Neurol 5(1):6 (March 2005)
- Neuroimage (April 2006)
- Neuroreport 9(9):1953-7 (June 1998)
- Cephalalgia 17(6):680-2 (October 1997)
- Cephalalgia 18(4):216-21 (May 1998)
- Cephalalgia 18(5):287-8 (June 1998)
- Pain 77(2):209-13 (August 1998)
- Hepatology 28(5):1199-205 (November 1998)
- Brain Topogr 11(3):193-200 (1999)
- Neurosci Lett 298(3):195-8 (February 2001)
- J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 70(5):685-7 (May 2001)
- Headache 38(8):618-20 (September 1998)
- Cephalalgia 21(5):619-22 (June 2001)


user