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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
21

Neural Changes Associated with Treatment Outcome in Children with Externalizing Problems

Woltering, Steven 08 January 2013 (has links)
The current thesis directly investigated whether changes in the neural correlates of self-regulation (SR) are associated with the effectiveness of treatment for children’s externalizing problems. In order to test this, seventy-one children 8–12 years of age with clinical levels of externalizing behaviour and their parents completed a 12-week cognitive behavioural therapy program (12 sessions) with a parent management training component that was aimed at improving SR. Electroencephalogram (EEG) correlates of SR were evaluated before and after treatment with a go/no-go task requiring inhibitory control on the children. Results showed that event-related potential (ERP) correlates of SR, such as the frontal N2 and frontal P3 event-related potential magnitudes, differed between the clinical sample and a matched comparison group before treatment: the clinical sample had larger N2 magnitudes and smaller frontal P3 magnitudes. Children who showed improvement (45%) with treatment demonstrated a decrease in the magnitude of the N2 in comparison with children who did not improve. For improvers only, source analysis during the time period of the N2 modeled activation decreases in dorsomedial and ventromedial prefrontal cortex as well as the anterior medial temporal lobe. A decrease in N2 magnitudes and corresponding reductions in source activation, in children who improved with treatment, might reflect improved efficiency in the neural mechanisms of SR. These findings may be important steps toward a better identification of neural markers of SR and a better understanding of the mechanisms of treatment efficacy.
22

Neural Changes Associated with Treatment Outcome in Children with Externalizing Problems

Woltering, Steven 08 January 2013 (has links)
The current thesis directly investigated whether changes in the neural correlates of self-regulation (SR) are associated with the effectiveness of treatment for children’s externalizing problems. In order to test this, seventy-one children 8–12 years of age with clinical levels of externalizing behaviour and their parents completed a 12-week cognitive behavioural therapy program (12 sessions) with a parent management training component that was aimed at improving SR. Electroencephalogram (EEG) correlates of SR were evaluated before and after treatment with a go/no-go task requiring inhibitory control on the children. Results showed that event-related potential (ERP) correlates of SR, such as the frontal N2 and frontal P3 event-related potential magnitudes, differed between the clinical sample and a matched comparison group before treatment: the clinical sample had larger N2 magnitudes and smaller frontal P3 magnitudes. Children who showed improvement (45%) with treatment demonstrated a decrease in the magnitude of the N2 in comparison with children who did not improve. For improvers only, source analysis during the time period of the N2 modeled activation decreases in dorsomedial and ventromedial prefrontal cortex as well as the anterior medial temporal lobe. A decrease in N2 magnitudes and corresponding reductions in source activation, in children who improved with treatment, might reflect improved efficiency in the neural mechanisms of SR. These findings may be important steps toward a better identification of neural markers of SR and a better understanding of the mechanisms of treatment efficacy.
23

Étude des corrélats neurobiologiques des effets à long terme des commotions cérébrales liées au sport

Tremblay, Sebastien 04 1900 (has links)
L’âge, le génotype et les traumatismes crâniens (TCC) sont trois facteurs de risque majeurs du développement de la maladie d’Alzheimer (MA). Avec une accumulation d’évidences démontrant la persistance d’anomalies cérébrales suite aux plus légers des TCC, qui affichent d’ailleurs la plus haute incidence, il devient impératif de tester l’hypothèse selon laquelle même les commotions cérébrales puissent interagir avec l’âge et les gènes afin de précipiter la neurodégénération. Trente ex-athlètes de haut niveau (âge M = 60 ans), dont la moitié a subi des commotions cérébrales il y a plus de 30 ans, ont été évalués en neuropsychologie, en neuroimagerie multimodale ainsi qu’en génétique. De nombreuses mesures neuroanatomiques, dont l’expansion du volume des ventricules latéraux, se trouvent à corréler avec divers déficits cognitifs (mémoire différée et de reconnaissance) détectés chez les participants commotionnés. D’un intérêt particulier, certains de ces résultats sont modulés par le polymorphisme nucléotidique simple du gène Apolipoprotéine E. Ces résultats appuient l’hypothèse selon laquelle la commotion cérébrale chez de jeunes athlètes serait un facteur de risque de neurodégénération dans le vieillissement normal. / Age, genotype and traumatic brain injury (TBI) are three of the most important risk factors of Alzheimer’s Disease. With a growing body of evidence showing the persistent deleterious effects of the mildest form of TBI, it becomes imperative to test the hypothesis that sports concussion could interact with aging to precipitate neurodegeneration. Thirty former high-level athletes (mean age = 60 yrs), half of them having sustained sports concussion during their young adulthood, underwent neuropsychological, neuroanatomical and APOE genotype examination. Data analysis revealed numerous neurobiological anomalies, such as ventricular enlargement, correlating with cognitive deficits (delayed and recognition memory) in concussed participants. Of particular interest, some neuroanatomical measures were found to be modulated by APOE single-nucleotide polymorphisms. These findings support the idea that sports concussions sustained in early adulthood are a risk factor of neurodegeneration in late adulthood.
24

Decision-making and Self-regulation from a Social-personality Neuroscience Perspective

Hirsh, Jacob 05 September 2012 (has links)
Pitting long-term goals against short-term desires is among the most difficult tasks in human decision-making. According to behavioural and neuroeconomic theories of self-regulation, these decisions involve a competition between “hot” reward-focused impulses and “cool” cognitive control mechanisms. The current dissertation examines this topic from the perspective of social and personality neuroscience, exploring the cognitive and affective dynamics underlying the self-regulatory process. Chapters 1 and 2 explore how the “hot” system is dispositionally expressed in the personality trait of Extraversion, and the implications of this finding for decision-making behaviour. Turning to the “cool” system, Chapter 3 examines the role of effective performance monitoring in predicting real-world self-regulatory outcomes. Finally, Chapter 4 addresses the question of whether self-regulatory performance can be improved, reporting the effects of a goal-setting intervention on long-term decision-making. Results across the studies are discussed within an integrative model of self-regulation, situated within a social-personality neuroscience framework.
25

Birds of a Convergent Feather: The Interrelationship between Similarity, Conflict and Cross-group Friendship Potential

Danyluck, Chad 21 November 2012 (has links)
I examined whether perceptions of intergroup similarity and conflict interact to predict prejudice and facilitation of an intergroup social interaction as a consequence of physiological linkage – a state correlated with successful social interactions wherein two people's autonomic nervous systems synch-up in time. Studies 1 and 2a, revealed an association between similarity, conflict and low prejudice. In Study 2b participants completed essays priming similarity and conflict in order to test the indirect effect of their interaction with participants' physiological reactivity on the success of a dyadic social interaction. Similarity, conflict and physiological reactivity interacted to predict physiological linkage, which in turn moderated the effects of conflict on the success of the social interaction. These results suggest that physiological and social cognitive processes play key roles in determining the important moment when an outgroup stranger becomes a potential friend.
26

Birds of a Convergent Feather: The Interrelationship between Similarity, Conflict and Cross-group Friendship Potential

Danyluck, Chad 21 November 2012 (has links)
I examined whether perceptions of intergroup similarity and conflict interact to predict prejudice and facilitation of an intergroup social interaction as a consequence of physiological linkage – a state correlated with successful social interactions wherein two people's autonomic nervous systems synch-up in time. Studies 1 and 2a, revealed an association between similarity, conflict and low prejudice. In Study 2b participants completed essays priming similarity and conflict in order to test the indirect effect of their interaction with participants' physiological reactivity on the success of a dyadic social interaction. Similarity, conflict and physiological reactivity interacted to predict physiological linkage, which in turn moderated the effects of conflict on the success of the social interaction. These results suggest that physiological and social cognitive processes play key roles in determining the important moment when an outgroup stranger becomes a potential friend.
27

Decision-making and Self-regulation from a Social-personality Neuroscience Perspective

Hirsh, Jacob 05 September 2012 (has links)
Pitting long-term goals against short-term desires is among the most difficult tasks in human decision-making. According to behavioural and neuroeconomic theories of self-regulation, these decisions involve a competition between “hot” reward-focused impulses and “cool” cognitive control mechanisms. The current dissertation examines this topic from the perspective of social and personality neuroscience, exploring the cognitive and affective dynamics underlying the self-regulatory process. Chapters 1 and 2 explore how the “hot” system is dispositionally expressed in the personality trait of Extraversion, and the implications of this finding for decision-making behaviour. Turning to the “cool” system, Chapter 3 examines the role of effective performance monitoring in predicting real-world self-regulatory outcomes. Finally, Chapter 4 addresses the question of whether self-regulatory performance can be improved, reporting the effects of a goal-setting intervention on long-term decision-making. Results across the studies are discussed within an integrative model of self-regulation, situated within a social-personality neuroscience framework.
28

An Event-related Potential Investigation on Associative Encoding and the Effects of Intra-list Semantic Similarity

Kim, Alice Sun-Nam 14 July 2009 (has links)
Event-related potentials were recorded as subjects were presented with pairs of words, one word at a time, to examine the electrocortical manifestations of association formation and the effect of intra-list semantic similarity. Two types of lists were presented: Same – all pairs belonged to the same semantic category; Different – all pairs belonged to a different semantic category. Subjects were told to memorize the pairs for a following paired associate recall test. Recall was better for the Different than Same lists. Subsequent recall was predicted by the amplitudes of a potential lasting throughout the epoch and the P555 to each word of a pair (likely reflecting state- and item-related encoding activity, respectively), as well as a late positive wave that occurred after the offset of the second word, which is thought to reflect association formation. A larger N425 was elicited by pairs in the Different than Same lists, likely reflecting semantic integration.
29

Étude des corrélats neurobiologiques des effets à long terme des commotions cérébrales liées au sport

Tremblay, Sebastien 04 1900 (has links)
L’âge, le génotype et les traumatismes crâniens (TCC) sont trois facteurs de risque majeurs du développement de la maladie d’Alzheimer (MA). Avec une accumulation d’évidences démontrant la persistance d’anomalies cérébrales suite aux plus légers des TCC, qui affichent d’ailleurs la plus haute incidence, il devient impératif de tester l’hypothèse selon laquelle même les commotions cérébrales puissent interagir avec l’âge et les gènes afin de précipiter la neurodégénération. Trente ex-athlètes de haut niveau (âge M = 60 ans), dont la moitié a subi des commotions cérébrales il y a plus de 30 ans, ont été évalués en neuropsychologie, en neuroimagerie multimodale ainsi qu’en génétique. De nombreuses mesures neuroanatomiques, dont l’expansion du volume des ventricules latéraux, se trouvent à corréler avec divers déficits cognitifs (mémoire différée et de reconnaissance) détectés chez les participants commotionnés. D’un intérêt particulier, certains de ces résultats sont modulés par le polymorphisme nucléotidique simple du gène Apolipoprotéine E. Ces résultats appuient l’hypothèse selon laquelle la commotion cérébrale chez de jeunes athlètes serait un facteur de risque de neurodégénération dans le vieillissement normal. / Age, genotype and traumatic brain injury (TBI) are three of the most important risk factors of Alzheimer’s Disease. With a growing body of evidence showing the persistent deleterious effects of the mildest form of TBI, it becomes imperative to test the hypothesis that sports concussion could interact with aging to precipitate neurodegeneration. Thirty former high-level athletes (mean age = 60 yrs), half of them having sustained sports concussion during their young adulthood, underwent neuropsychological, neuroanatomical and APOE genotype examination. Data analysis revealed numerous neurobiological anomalies, such as ventricular enlargement, correlating with cognitive deficits (delayed and recognition memory) in concussed participants. Of particular interest, some neuroanatomical measures were found to be modulated by APOE single-nucleotide polymorphisms. These findings support the idea that sports concussions sustained in early adulthood are a risk factor of neurodegeneration in late adulthood.
30

Androgen Receptor Expression in Satellite Cells in the Levator Ani of the Rat

Swift-Gallant, Ashlyn 20 December 2011 (has links)
The sexual differentiation of the spinal nucleus of bulbocavernosus (SNB) and the bulbocavernosus (BC) and levator ani (LA) muscles that the SNB innervates, are masculinized by androgens acting on the BC/LA. The site of androgen receptors (AR) responsible for the masculinization of the neuromuscular system is not known. A potential site of action is satellite cells: proliferation of these cells is androgen-dependent and satellite cells seem to contribute to the size of the LA. Fluorescent immunohistochemistry and confocal microscopy were used to co-localize satellite cells and AR within the LA of postnatal day one and three male and female rats. Results indicate that satellite cells express AR and reveal a difference in proportion of satellite cells expressing AR between the LA and control muscle. Interpretations of these findings, including whether the relatively small proportion of AR accounted for by satellite cells is enough to masculinize the SNB system, are discussed.

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