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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.
1

Source Analysis of Cortical Responses at Initial Cochlear Implant Use in Children who are Deaf

Yoo, Patrick 19 March 2013 (has links)
Deafness in early development can alter how the brain responds to sound, compromising the restoration of hearing with cochlear implants. We asked how the naïve brain responds to initial cochlear implant stimulation in children who are deaf. Results indicated large variability in initial responses. Deafness associated with GJB-2 mutations led to more uniformity in cortical responses than other etiologies. Responses associated with GJB-2 mutations were characterized by a response peak with large contributions from temporal and frontal regions of the brain. This response may reflect an early stage of auditory development. By contrast, another response type, typical of normal hearing children, received less contribution from frontal regions. Through consistent cochlear implant use, frontal regions of the brain may not be as strongly recruited. Effects of deafness in early development are heterogeneous, which may reflect differences in etiology of deafness and different stages of auditory development.
2

Source Analysis of Cortical Responses at Initial Cochlear Implant Use in Children who are Deaf

Yoo, Patrick 19 March 2013 (has links)
Deafness in early development can alter how the brain responds to sound, compromising the restoration of hearing with cochlear implants. We asked how the naïve brain responds to initial cochlear implant stimulation in children who are deaf. Results indicated large variability in initial responses. Deafness associated with GJB-2 mutations led to more uniformity in cortical responses than other etiologies. Responses associated with GJB-2 mutations were characterized by a response peak with large contributions from temporal and frontal regions of the brain. This response may reflect an early stage of auditory development. By contrast, another response type, typical of normal hearing children, received less contribution from frontal regions. Through consistent cochlear implant use, frontal regions of the brain may not be as strongly recruited. Effects of deafness in early development are heterogeneous, which may reflect differences in etiology of deafness and different stages of auditory development.
3

Congruence-based contextual plausibility modulates cortical activity during vibrotactile perception in virtual multisensory environments

Kang, Kathleen, Rosenkranz, Robert, Karan, Kaan, Altinsoy, Ercan, Li, Shu-Chen 19 March 2024 (has links)
How congruence cues and congruence-based expectations may together shape perception in virtual reality (VR) still need to be unravelled. We linked the concept of plausibility used in VR research with congruence-based modulation by assessing brain responses while participants experienced vehicle riding experiences in VR scenarios. Perceptual plausibility was manipulated by sensory congruence, with multisensory stimulations confirming with common expectations of road scenes being plausible. We hypothesized that plausible scenarios would elicit greater cortical responses. The results showed that: (i) vibrotactile stimulations at expected intensities, given embedded audio-visual information, engaged greater cortical activities in frontal and sensorimotor regions; (ii) weaker plausible stimulations resulted in greater responses in the sensorimotor cortex than stronger but implausible stimulations; (iii) frontal activities under plausible scenarios negatively correlated with plausibility violation costs in the sensorimotor cortex. These results potentially indicate frontal regulation of sensory processing and extend previous evidence of contextual modulation to the tactile sense.

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