Sentences with phrase «brain measures»

«Since gaze shifting is linked to a larger vocabulary in preschoolers, we suspected that eye gaze might be important earlier when babies are first learning the sounds of a new language, and we wanted to use brain measures to test this,» Brooks said.
«The potential for brain measures like the ones we developed here is that they can tell us something about the particular brain abnormalities that drive an individual's suffering.
«We found that the degree to which infants visually tracked the tutors and the toys they held was linked to brain measures of infant learning, showing that social behaviors give helpful information to babies in a complex natural language learning situation,» Kuhl said.
The ENIGMA (Enhancing NeuroImaging Genetics through Meta - Analysis) Consortium was set up to analyze brain measures and genotypes from multiple sites across the world to improve the power to detect
To examine this question, we preregistered a series of analyses using Multiple Indicator Multiple Causes (MIMIC) models (Jöreskog & Goldberger, 1975; Kievit et al., 2012) to relate the mean and slope estimates for fluid intelligence to the various brain measures, and asked:
Hamakawa H, Murashita J, Yamada N, Inubushi T, Kato N, Kato T. Reduced intracellular pH in the basal ganglia and whole brain measured by 31P - MRS in bipolar disorder.
Warren Meck of Duke University argues that the brain measures long stretches of time by producing pulses.
Electrodes implanted in Nagle's brain measure the neural signals generated when he concentrates on trying to move one of his paralysed limbs.
Using electroencephalography (EEG)-- in which electrodes placed in the brain measure neural activity — the team saw a sharp wave of action in the mouse brains from the hippocampus in the midbrain to the neocortex (the outermost brain layer).
Future research will test how well different medications and treatments can shift or modify these brain measures as well as improve symptoms and clinical outcomes for patients.
The fact that Kuhl's team has discovered a brain measure that increasingly correlates with outcomes over time is «really exciting,» says neuroscientist Kristen Gillespie - Lynch of the College of Staten Island in New York.
The brain measures the difference and experiences it as stereoscopic depth.
The visual areas in the brain measure these differences, and we experience the result as stereo — what we all have enjoyed as children playing with View - Master toys.
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