862 resultados para Perception tactile
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[Acte royal. 1786-07-13. Versailles]
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Eggs deposited on plants by herbivorous insects represent a threat as they develop into feeding larvae. Plants are not a passive substrate and have evolved sophisticated mechanisms to detect eggs and induce direct and indirect defenses. Recent years have seen exciting development in molecular aspects of egg-induced responses. Some egg-associated elicitors have been identified, and signaling pathways and egg-induced expression profiles are being uncovered. Depending on the mode of oviposition, both the jasmonic acid and salicylic acid pathways seem to play a role in the induction of defense responses. An emerging concept is that eggs are recognized like microbial pathogens and innate immune responses are triggered. In addition, some eggs contain elicitors that induce highly specific defenses in plants. Examples of egg-induced suppression of defense or, on the contrary, egg-induced resistance highlight the complexity of plant-egg interactions in an on-going arms race between herbivores and their hosts. A major challenge is to identify plant receptors for egg-associated elicitors, to assess the specificity of these elicitors and to identify molecular components that underlie various responses to oviposition.
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Background: We examined one's own body image perception and its association with reported weight-related behavior among adolescents of a rapidly developing country in the African region. Methods: We conducted a school-based survey of 1432 students aged 11-17 years in the Seychelles. Weight and height were measured, and thinness, normal weight and overweight were assessed along standard criteria. A self-administered and anonymous questionnaire was administered. Perception of body image was assessed using both a closed-ended question (CEQ) and the Stunkard's pictorial silhouettes (SPS). Finally, a question assessed voluntary attempts to change weight. Results: Overall, 14.1% of the students were thin, 63.9% were normal-weight, and 22.0% were overweight or obese. There was fair agreement between actual weight status and self-perceived body image based on either CEQ or SPS. However, a substantial proportion of the overweight students did not consider themselves as overweight (SPS: 24%, CEQ: 34%) and, inversely, a substantial proportion of the normal-weight students considered themselves as too thin (SPS: 29%, CEQ: 15%). Among the overweight students, an adequate attempt to lose weight was reported more often by boys and girls who perceived themselves as overweight vs. not overweight (72-88% vs. 40-71%, p <0.05 for most comparisons). Among the normal-weight students, an inadequate attempt to gain weight was reported more often by boys and girls who perceived themselves as thin vs. not thin (27-68% vs. 11-19%, p <0.05). Girls had leaner own body ideals than boys. Conclusions: We found that substantial proportions of overweight students did not perceive themselves as overweight and/or did not want to lose weight and, inversely, that many normalweight students perceived themselves as too thin and/or wanted to gain weight: this points to forces that can drive the upwards overweight trends. Appropriate perception of one's weight was associated with adequate weight-control behavior, although not strongly, emphasizing that appropriate weight perception is only one of several factors driving adequate weight-related behavior. These findings emphasize the need to address appropriate perception of one's own weight and adequate weight-related behavior in adolescents for both individual and community weight-related interventions.
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In body ownership illusions participants feel that a mannequin or virtual body (VB) is their own. Earlier results suggest that body ownership over a body seen from behind in extra personal space is possible when the surrogate body is visually stroked and tapped on its back, while spatially and temporal synchronous tactile stimulation is applied to the participant's back. This result has been disputed with the claim that the results can be explained by self-recognition rather than somatic body ownership. We carried out an experiment with 30 participants in a between-groups design. They all saw the back of a VB 1.2 m in front, that moved in real-time determined by upper body motion capture. All felt tactile stimulation on their back, and for 15 of them this was spatially and temporally synchronous with stimulation that they saw on the back of the VB, but asynchronous for the other 15. After 3 min a revolving fan above the VB descended and stopped at the position of the VB neck. A questionnaire assessed referral of touch to the VB, body ownership, the illusion of drifting forwards toward the VB, and the VB drifting backwards. Heart rate deceleration (HRD) and the amount of head movement during the threat period were used to assess the response to the threat from the fan. Results showed that although referral of touch was significantly greater in the synchronous condition than the asynchronous, there were no other differences between the conditions. However, a further multivariate analysis revealed that in the visuotactile synchronous condition HRD and head movement increased with the illusion of forward drift and decreased with backwards drift. Body ownership contributed positively to these drift sensations. Our conclusion is that the setup results in a contradiction-somatic feelings associated with a distant body-that the brain attempts to resolve by generating drift illusions that would make the two bodies coincide.
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BACKGROUND: Current guidelines recommend treating patients according to their absolute cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk. We examined perception of CVD risk among adults and how it can be compared with actual CVD risk. METHODS: The perception of CVD risk was assessed by two questions asking about participants' 'risk to get a heart attack or a stroke over the next 10 years' using semiquantitative and quantitative answers in a population-based survey of 816 individuals aged 40-64 years in the Seychelles (African region). Actual CVD risk was calculated using a standard risk prediction score and 24% of adults aged 40-64 years had elevated risk. RESULTS: Only 59% of individuals could give an estimate of perceived CVD risk based on the semiquantitative question and 31% based on the quantitative question. Reporting a perceived CVD risk was strongly associated with high socio-economic status (SES; odds ratio = 9). Among individuals who reported a perceived CVD risk, 48% overestimated their perceived risk versus their actual risk. Reporting a high perceived CVD risk was associated with treatment for CVD risk factors, older age, low SES, and overweight. Reporting a low perceived CVD risk was associated with male sex, younger age, education, normal BMI, and leisure time exercise. CONCLUSION: Only half of the individuals could provide an estimate of their perceived CVD risk, and this perception was strongly associated with SES. Individuals under treatment perceived higher CVD risk than nontreated individuals. Further studies should determine how risk-related information can be better conveyed to individuals as a means to improve adherence to healthy lifestyles and/or treatment.
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L'étude classique des attributions de responsabilité instiguée par Heider en psychologie sociale s'est principalement bornée à aborder ce processus psychosocial dans une perspective individualiste qui se cantonne aux niveaux intra-individuel et interpersonnel (selon la distinction opérée par Doise). Les réflexions et les travaux empiriques présentés dans cette thèse ont deux objectifs. Dans un premier temps, il s?agit d'élargir cette perspective aux autres niveaux sociologique et idéologique (en faisant notamment recours à l'approche des attributions sociales et aux propositions de Fauconnet sur les règles de responsabilité). Deuxièmement, il s?agit d'éprouver la pertinence d'une telle approche dans un contexte particulier : celui du travail en groupe dont la nature des rapports sociaux qui y étaient présentés ont été manipulés à l'aide de scénarii chez des étudiant-e-s de l?Université de Lausanne. L?objectif principal de cette thèse est donc de tester un modèle d?ancrage des attributions de responsabilité qui permette de souligner les dynamiques représentationnelles sous-jacentes en termes de légitimation ou de remise en cause de l?organisation des groupes. Dans l?ensemble les résultats indiquent que si la nature des rapports sociaux (re)présentés dans un groupe sont de puissants déterminants de la manière de légitimer ou de remettre en cause l?organisation des groupes, le niveau individuel d'adhésion à des croyances idéologiques dominantes, comme la justification du système économique, représente un modérateur des prises de position des répondant-e-s interrogé-e-s. De plus, il semble que ces processus évoluent dans le temps, faisant ainsi apparaître l'existence de phénomènes de socialisation relativement plus complexes que ne le laissent entendre les recherches actuellement effectuées dans ce domaine. En effet, si des connaissances idéologiques sur le monde sont acquises dans les filières universitaires et n?interviennent pas toujours dans les processus de formation des représentations du travail en groupe, des connaissances spécifiques aux disciplines et à la politique de sélection universitaire semblent intervenir dans le processus de légitimation des rapports sociaux dans les groupes au niveau des attributions. En tentant une articulation entre les concepts d?ancrage des représentations sociales, d?attribution et de socialisation, cette thèse permet ainsi de souligner la pertinence qu?il y a à insérer une problématique en termes de croyances idéologiques dans l?étude des groupes sociaux.<br/><br/>Heider?s approach of responsibility attributions almost exclusively emphasized on an individualistic point of view ; i.e. focusing at an intraindividual and interpersonnal level of analysis according to Doise?s distinction. The reflexions and empirical studies presented here firstly aim at broaden this perspective by taking socio-structural as well as societal levels of analysis into account. Secondly, it is to test this approach in the particular domain of organized groups. Manipulation of the structure of social relations in work groups on screenplays were undertaken (in a population of students from the Lausanne University). Hence, the main goal of these studies is to test the impact of the social ancoring of social representations in the responsibility processes in terms of legitimation or opposition to the group organization. All in all, the results show that social structures are powerfull predictors of the formation of social representations of a work situation and so forth of the attribution process. Nevertheless hegemonic ideological beliefs, such as Economical System Justification, do play a substantial moderating role in this process. It also proves to be evolving through time. The present findings show that a complexe process of socialization is occuring during the student?s university life. Indeed, the results let us believe that ideological beliefs may not interact anytime in the group?s perception and in the construction of the representation of the situation. In the same time, it seems that more discipline specific oriented knowledge and the impact of selection policy at the Lausanne University also predict the groupe legimation process and interfer with the ideological beliefs. Trying to articulate concepts of fields of research like social representations, attribution and socialization, the present thesis allows to underline the heuristic potential of reabilitating ideological beliefs at a dispositional level in the study of group process.
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Observers are often required to adjust actions with objects that change their speed. However, no evidence for a direct sense of acceleration has been found so far. Instead, observers seem to detect changes in velocity within a temporal window when confronted with motion in the frontal plane (2D motion). Furthermore, recent studies suggest that motion-in-depth is detected by tracking changes of position in depth. Therefore, in order to sense acceleration in depth a kind of second-order computation would have to be carried out by the visual system. In two experiments, we show that observers misperceive acceleration of head-on approaches at least within the ranges we used [600-800 ms] resulting in an overestimation of arrival time. Regardless of the viewing condition (only monocular or monocular and binocular), the response pattern conformed to a constant velocity strategy. However, when binocular information was available, overestimation was highly reduced.