cognitive neuroscience

Primate Motor Cognition & Behavior

Primate Motor Cognition & Behavior

L’attività di ricerca è volta a studiare i meccanismi neurali corticali che sottendono il controllo motorio, utilizzando un modello animale con primati non umani. L’obiettivo principale è indagare i processi di pianificazione, monitoraggio e adattamento delle azioni individuali durante l’interazione con altri individui. Il nostro lavoro integra neurofisiologia comportamentale, analisi computazionale e paradigmi di decision-making sociale per comprendere i processi neurali che guidano la coordinazione motoria tra soggetti interagenti. 

SOCIAL BRAIN: a multi-tiered behavioral, autonomic, neuroimaging and noninvasive brain stimulation study of cerebello-cerebral network involved in social prediction.

SOCIAL BRAIN: a multi-tiered behavioral, autonomic, neuroimaging and noninvasive brain stimulation study of cerebello-cerebral network involved in social prediction.

La cognizione sociale è fondamentale per la vita umana. Identificare i meccanismi neuro-funzionali che mediano la cognizione sociale è essenziale non solo per approfondire la comprensione del funzionamento cerebrale, ma anche per trattare disturbi che compromettono le competenze sociali. Sebbene le reti corticali alla base della cognizione sociale siano state ampiamente studiate, evidenze recenti indicano il cervelletto come un nodo chiave, finora “trascurato”, del cervello sociale.

Mechanisms of social prediction in the cerebellum: an integrated multilevel approach.

Mechanisms of social prediction in the cerebellum: an integrated multilevel approach.

Il gruppo di ricerca è volto allo studio del ruolo predittivo del Cervelletto nell’ambito della Cognizione Sociale.

Vengono sviluppati paradigmi comportamentali dedicati a testare specificamente le abilità predittive sociali a diversi livelli di complessità.

Intranasal rapamycin ameliorates Alzheimer-like cognitive decline in a mouse model of Down syndrome

Background: Down syndrome (DS) individuals, by the age of 40s, are at increased risk to develop Alzheimer-like dementia, with deposition in brain of senile plaques and neurofibrillary tangles. Our laboratory recently demonstrated the disturbance of PI3K/AKT/mTOR axis in DS brain, prior and after the development of Alzheimer Disease (AD). The aberrant modulation of the mTOR signalling in DS and AD age-related cognitive decline affects crucial neuronal pathways, including insulin signaling and autophagy, involved in pathology onset and progression.

Visualising numerals. An ERPs study with the attentional SNARC task

Inspecting or transforming the position of Arabic numbers in mental space helps everyday mathematical calculations. Nonetheless the neural and functional bases of this ability are poorly understood. Here we show that imagining the position of Arabic numbers on a horizontal mental number line speeds up the detection of targets appearing at corresponding positions in visual space. No similar advantage is found when numbers are merely perceived or classified according to their magnitude.

The way to “left” piazza del Popolo. damage to white matter tracts in representational neglect for places

The ability of seeing with the mind’s eye, the visual mental imagery, is peculiarly compromised in patients with representational neglect. Representational neglect affects the processing of the left side of a mental image and may selectively concern the ability to imagine places and/or objects. Right-brain damaged patients with representational neglect for places (RN+) lose the ability to imagine themselves within a familiar place and fail in transforming an egocentric representation of the environment into an allocentric one and vice-versa.

Norepinephrine in the medial pre-frontal cortex supports accumbens shell responses to a novel palatable food in food-restricted mice only

Previous findings from this laboratory demonstrate: (1) that different classes of addictive drugs require intact norepinephrine (NE) transmission in the medial pre Frontal Cortex (mpFC) to promote conditioned place preference and to increase dopamine (DA) tone in the nucleus accumbens shell (NAc Shell); (2) that only food-restricted mice require intact NE transmission in the mpFC to develop conditioned preference for a context associated with milk chocolate; and (3) that food-restricted mice show a significantly larger increase of mpFC NE outflow then free fed mice when experiencing the pal

Phantom limb sensations in the ear of a patient with a brachial plexus lesion

Referred phantom sensations are frequently reported following a peripheral injury. However, very few cases describe such sensations of the ear, and it remains unclear how the aural nerve territory can be remapped to one specific peripheral nerve region. We report on a patient with brachial plexus avulsion who underwent sensory testing and was asked to report the location of the stimulated site and any other sensations experienced. The patient spontaneously described the sensation of his arm being separate from his body.

Around the world, adolescence is a time of heightened sensation seeking and immature self-regulation

The dual systems model of adolescent risk‐taking portrays the period as one characterized by a combination of heightened sensation seeking and still‐maturing self‐regulation, but most tests of this model have been conducted in the United States or Western Europe. In the present study, these propositions are tested in an international sample of more than 5000 individuals between ages 10 and 30 years from 11 countries in Africa, Asia, Europe and the Americas, using a multi‐method test battery that includes both self‐report and performance‐based measures of both constructs.

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