951 resultados para working memory
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Aim: To characterize, compare and classify the performance of students with attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) according to the semiology of errors and to describe the neuroimaging findings in these students. Methods: We evaluated 36 primary school boys and girls aged between 8 and 11 years old in the 3 rd to 5 th grades. The children were divided in two groups. Group I consisted of 18 students with an interdisciplinary diagnosis of ADHD (60% boys and 40% girls). Group II consisted of 18 children with good academic performance, paired by gender, age and grade with children in group I. The collective and individual versions of the Pro-ortografia spelling tests were applied. Results: Statistically significant differences were found in almost all the tests of the individual and collective versions of the spelling evaluation, with children with ADHD showing a higher average number of errors. Neuroimaging examinations indicated that 81% of the students in GI showed hypoperfusion in the frontal lobe, 7% had hypoperfusion of the thalamus and basal ganglia, 6% showed hypoperfusion in the basal ganglia only and 6% showed hypoperfusion in the left and right frontal lobes. Conclusions: Children with ADHD demonstrated poorer knowledge of the use of spelling rules in Brazilian Portuguese, which could be related to changes in blood flow in the frontal lobe, parietal lobe, thalamus and basal ganglia. These changes could cause a lack of attention, affecting phonological working memory and the planning of writing. © 2011 AELFA.
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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
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Pós-graduação em Educação - FFC
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Pós-graduação em Psicologia do Desenvolvimento e Aprendizagem - FC
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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O período crítico de plasticidade do córtex cerebral é a etapa do desenvolvimento pós-natal do sistema nervoso onde os circuitos neurais são mais suscetíveis à mudanças influenciadas por informações oriundas do ambiente. No córtex pré-frontal de humanos, responsável pelas funções executivas, o período crítico de plasticidade estende-se desde o nascimento até o final da adolescência e início da vida adulta. Isto é definido, entre outros fatores, pelo amadurecimento das redes perineuronais, uma estrutura especializada da matriz extracelular, localizada em volta do corpo celular e dendritos proximais de interneurônios inibitórios. O objetivo desta pesquisa foi verificar o efeito do ambiente em etapas distintas da adolescência sobre a estrutura e a função do córtex pré-frontal de ratos e a distribuição da expressão espacial e temporal das redes perineuronais sob estas condições. As funções executivas foram avaliadas através de testes comportamentais medindo a capacidade de memória operacional e a inibição comportamental. Observamos que estímulos estressores crônicos imprevisíveis provocam alterações no período crítico de plasticidade do córtex pré-frontal e, consequentemente, influenciam o amadurecimento das funções executivas. Observamos também que o estresse crônico induz modificação no padrão de amadurecimento das redes perineuronais no córtex pré-frontal. Estes resultados indicam a vulnerabilidade do córtex pré-frontal de ratos adolescentes para os efeitos negativos de estímulos ambientais estressores sobre o período crítico de plasticidade.
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O objetivo do presente trabalho foi investigar, empregando testes neuropsicológicos selecionados, a duração dos efeitos benéficos do programa de estimulação multissensorial e cognitiva realizado em idosos vivendo em instituições de longa permanência ou em comunidade. Os participantes do estudo foram idosos institucionalizados (n=20, 75,1 ± 6,8 anos de idade) e não institucionalizados (n=15, 74,1 ± 3,9 anos de idade), com 65 anos de idade ou mais, sem histórico de traumatismo crânio-encefálico, acidente vascular encefálico ou depressão primária, acuidade visual mínima 20/30 mensurada pelo Teste de Snellen e que participaram regularmente do Programa de Estimulação Multissensorial e Cognitiva. Foram realizadas reavaliações em cinco períodos (2, 4, 6, 8 e 12 meses) após a finalização da intervenção multissensorial e cognitiva. Para isso empregou-se o Mini Exame do Estado Mental (MEEM); nomeação de Boston; fluência verbal semântica (FVS) e fonológica (FVF), testes da Bateria Montreal de Avaliação da Comunicação (MAC), Teste de Narrativa “Roubo de Biscoitos” e testes neuropsicológicos selecionados da Bateria Cambridge (CANTAB) incluindo: Triagem Motora (Motor Screening – MOT); Processamento Rápido de Informação Visual (Rapid Visual Information Processing – RVP); Tempo de Reação (Reaction Time - RTI); Aprendizagem Pareada (Paired Associates Learning - PAL); Memória de Trabalho Espacial (Spatial Working Memory - SWM) e Pareamento com Atraso (Delayed matching to sample - DMS). Os resultados apontaram diferenças estatisticamente significativas entre os grupos revelando taxa de declínio cognitivo maior nos idosos institucionalizados. Esses resultados confirmam sugestão anterior de que o ambiente pobre de estímulos somato-motores e cognitivos das instituições de longa permanência aceleram o declínio cognitivo senil. Além disso, a análise das curvas ROC seguido dos cálculos de sensibilidade, especificidade e eficiência para cada teste revelou que os testes da bateria CANTAB para memória e aprendizado espacial pareado assim como para memória espacial de trabalho permitiram a distinção entre os grupos I e NI em todas janelas de reavaliação. Os resultados demonstraram que uma vez cessado o programa de estimulação, se observa em ambos os grupos declínio cognitivo progressivo, com perdas mais precoces e mais intensas nos idosos institucionalizados do que naqueles vivendo em comunidade com suas famílias. Além disso, observou-se que a duração dos efeitos benéficos sobre o desempenho nos testes neuropsicológicos de ambos os grupos é heterogêneo, e que os efeitos de proteção guardam relação estreita com a natureza das oficinas. Por conta disso os escores dos testes de linguagem declinaram mais lentamente. Os resultados reúnem evidências que permitem a recomendação de programas regulares de estimulação somatomotora e cognitiva para idosos institucionalizados com o intuito de promover a redução da taxa de progressão do declínio cognitivo senil.
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PURPOSE: The development and application of collective pedagogical activities to assess phonological skills in pre-readers and beginning readers and could serve as potential screening tools to help in the early identification of students at risk for dyslexia. METHODS: The FAE tasks (alternative tools for educators) were built on classical phonological tasks known as sound categorization and in the Protocol for Cognitive-Linguistic Skills. FAE tasks basically consisted of matching pictures as well as pictures to spoken words according to their phonological similarity in the onset (alliteration) or rhyme and were given to 45 students on the first grade, of both genres and 7.3 years old on average. RESULTS: The protocol proved to be effective, confirming that phonological awareness, verbal working memory and rapid naming abilities constitute the main risk factors for dyslexia, and to which the FAE tasks were more strongly correlated jointly with the phonemic discrimination. FAE tasks were also strongly correlated with literacy skills. CONCLUSIONS: Students at risk for dyslexia can be efficiently identified through scientifically developed pedagogical tools, adapted and tested for the Brazilian's educational reality. This is a promising research field with the potential to help in avoiding the currently excessive number of students mistakenly labeled as having learning disabilities and improperly referred to specialized public services, as well as to indicate the more appropriate theoretical-empirical framework to guide our educational policies.
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Pós-graduação em Psicologia do Desenvolvimento e Aprendizagem - FC
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Pós-graduação em Psicologia do Desenvolvimento e Aprendizagem - FC
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The Numerical Cognition is influenced by biological, cognitive, educational, and cultural factors and entails the following systems: Number Sense (NS) represents the innate ability to recognize, compare, add, and subtract small quantities, without the need of counting; Number Production (NP) which includes reading, writing and counting numbers or objects; Number Comprehension (NC), i.e., the understanding the nature of the numerical symbols and their number, and the calculation (CA). The aims of the present study were to: i) assess theoretical constructs (NS, NC, NP and CA) in children from public schools from 1 st -to 6 th - grades; and ii) investigate their relationship with schooling and working memory. The sample included 162 children, both genders, of 7-to 12-years-old that studied in public school from 1 st -to 6 th -grades, which participated in the normative study of Zareki-R (Battery of neuropsychological tests for number processing and calculation in children, Revised; von Aster & Dellatolas, 2006). Children of 1 st and 2 nd grades demonstrated an inferior global score in NC, NP and CA. There were no genderrelated differences. The results indicated that the contribution of NS domain in Zareki-R performance is low in comparison to the other three domains, which are dependent on school-related arithmetic skills.
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The Numerical Cognition is infl uenced by biological, cognitive, educational and cultural factors. It consists of a primary system, called Number Sense that would be innate and universal, also of secondary systems: the Calculation, implied to perform mathematical operations by means of symbols or words and Number Processing, which is divided into two components, Number Comprehension, related with the understanding of numerical symbols and Number Production, which includes reading, writing and coun-ting numbers. However, studies that show the development of these functions in children of preschool age are scarce. Therefore, aims of this study were to investigate numerical cognition in preschool Brazilian children to demonstrate the construct validity of the ZAREKI-K (A Neuropsychological Battery for the Assessment of Treatment of Numbers and Calculation for preschool children). The participants were 42 children of both genders, who attended public elementary schools; the children were evaluated by this battery and WISC-III. The results indicated signifi cant differences associated with age which children of 6 years had better scores on subtests related to Number Production, Calculation and Number Comprehension, as well moderate and high correlations between some subtests of both instruments, demonstrating the construct validity of the battery. In conclusion, preliminary normative data were obtained for ZAREKI-K. The analyses suggested that it is a promising tool for the assessment of numerical cognition in preschool children.Keywords: Mathematics, number, preschoolers, working memory, Developmental Dyscalculia.
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The neural control of the cardiovascular system is a complex process that involves many structures at different levels of nervous system. Several cortical areas are involved in the control of systemic blood pressure, such as the sensorimotor cortex, the medial prefrontal cortex and the insular cortex. Non-invasive brain stimulation techniques - repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) and transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) - induce sustained and prolonged functional changes of the human cerebral cortex. rTMS and tDCS has led to positive results in the treatment of some neurological and psychiatric disorders. Because experiments in animals show that cortical modulation can be an effective method to regulate the cardiovascular system, non-invasive brain stimulation might be a novel tool in the therapeutics of human arterial hypertension. We here review the experimental evidence that non-invasive brain stimulation can influence the autonomic nervous system and discuss the hypothesis that focal modulation of cortical excitability by rTMS or tDCS can influence sympathetic outflow and, eventually, blood pressure, thus providing a novel therapeutic tool for human arterial hypertension. (C) 2009 Published by Elsevier Ltd.
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Objectives: The use of noninvasive cortical electrical stimulation with weak currents has significantly increased in basic and clinical human studies. Initial, preliminary studies with this technique have shown encouraging results; however, the safety and tolerability of this method of brain stimulation have not been sufficiently explored yet. The purpose of our study was to assess the effects of direct current (DC) and alternating current (AC) stimulation at different intensities in order to measure their effects on cognition, mood, and electroencephalogram. Methods: Eighty-two healthy, right-handed subjects received active and sham stimulation in a randomized order. We conducted 164 ninety-minute sessions of electrical stimulation in 4 different protocols to assess safety of (1) anodal DC of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC); (2) cathodal DC of the DLPFC; (3) intermittent anodal DC of the DLPFC and; (4) AC on the zygomatic process. We used weak currents of 1 to 2 mA (for DC experiments) or 0.1 to 0.2 mA (for AC experiment). Results: We found no significant changes in electroencephalogram, cognition, mood, and pain between groups and a low prevalence of mild adverse effects (0.11% and 0.08% in the active and sham stimulation groups, respectively), mainly, sleepiness and mild headache that were equally distributed between groups. Conclusions: Here, we show no neurophysiological or behavioral signs that transcranial DC stimulation or AC stimulation with weak currents induce deleterious changes when comparing active and sham groups. This study provides therefore additional information for researchers and ethics committees, adding important results to the safety pool of studies assessing the effects of cortical stimulation using weak electrical currents. Further studies in patients with neuropsychiatric disorders are warranted.
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Background: schizophrenia's endophenotipic profile is not only generally complex, but often varies from case to case. The perspective of trying to define specific anatomic correlates of the syndrome has led to disappointing results. In that context, neurophysiologic hypotheses (e. g. glutamatergic hypothesis) and connectivity hypotheses became prominent. Nevertheless, despite their commitment to the principle of denying 'localist' views and approaching the syndrome's endophenotype from a whole brain perspective, efforts to integrate both have not flourished at this moment in time. Objectives: This paper aims to introduce a new etiological model that integrates the glutamatergic and the WM (WM) hypotheses of schizophrenia's etiology. This model proposes to serve as a framework in order to relate to patterns of brain abnormalities from the onset of the syndrome to stages of advanced chronification. Highlights: Neurotransmitter abnormalities forego noticeable WM abnormalities. The former, chiefly represented by NMDAR hypo-function and associated molecular cascades, is related to the first signs of cell loss. This process is both directly and indirectly integrated to the underpinning of WM structural abnormalities; not only is the excess of glutamate toxic to the WM, but its disruption is associated to the expression of known genetic risk factors (e. g., NRG-1). A second level of the model develops the idea that abnormal neurotransmission within specific neural populations ('motifs') impair particular cognitive abilities, while subsequent WM structural abnormalities impair the integration of brain functions and multimodality. As a result of this two-stage dynamic, the affected individual progresses from experiencing specific cognitive and psychological deficits, to a condition of cognitive and existential fragmentation, linked to hardly reversible decreases in psychosocial functioning.