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Current Biology : CB Jun 2024Collective synchronized behavior has powerful social-communicative functions observed across several animal taxa. Operationally, synchronized behavior can be explained...
Collective synchronized behavior has powerful social-communicative functions observed across several animal taxa. Operationally, synchronized behavior can be explained by individuals responding to shared external cues (e.g., light, sound, or food) as well as by inter-individual adaptation. We contrasted these accounts in the context of a universal human practice-collective dance-by recording full-body kinematics from dyads of laypersons freely dancing to music in a "silent disco" setting. We orthogonally manipulated musical input (whether participants were dancing to the same, synchronous music) and visual contact (whether participants could see their dancing partner). Using a data-driven method, we decomposed full-body kinematics of 70 participants into 15 principal movement patterns, reminiscent of common dance moves, explaining over 95% of kinematic variance. We find that both music and partners drive synchrony, but through distinct dance moves. This leads to distinct kinds of synchrony that occur in parallel by virtue of a geometric organization: anteroposterior movements such as head bobs synchronize through music, while hand gestures and full-body lateral movements synchronize through visual contact. One specific dance move-vertical bounce-emerged as a supramodal pacesetter of coordination, synchronizing through both music and visual contact, and at the pace of the musical beat. These findings reveal that synchrony in human dance is independently supported by shared musical input and inter-individual adaptation. The independence between these drivers of synchrony hinges on a geometric organization, enabling dancers to synchronize to music and partners simultaneously by allocating distinct synchronies to distinct spatial axes and body parts.
PubMed: 38908371
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2024.05.055 -
Journal of Vision Jun 2024Accurately estimating time to contact (TTC) is crucial for successful interactions with moving objects, yet it is challenging under conditions of sensory and contextual...
Accurately estimating time to contact (TTC) is crucial for successful interactions with moving objects, yet it is challenging under conditions of sensory and contextual uncertainty, such as occlusion. In this study, participants engaged in a prediction motion task, monitoring a target that moved rightward and an occluder. The participants' task was to press a key when they predicted the target would be aligned with the occluder's right edge. We manipulated sensory uncertainty by varying the visible and occluded periods of the target, thereby modulating the time available to integrate sensory information and the duration over which motion must be extrapolated. Additionally, contextual uncertainty was manipulated by having a predictable and unpredictable condition, meaning the occluder either reliably indicated where the moving target would disappear or provided no such indication. Results showed differences in accuracy between the predictable and unpredictable occluder conditions, with different eye movement patterns in each case. Importantly, the ratio of the time the target was visible, which allows for the integration of sensory information, to the occlusion time, which determines perceptual uncertainty, was a key factor in determining performance. This ratio is central to our proposed model, which provides a robust framework for understanding and predicting human performance in dynamic environments with varying degrees of uncertainty.
Topics: Humans; Motion Perception; Uncertainty; Male; Female; Adult; Young Adult; Photic Stimulation; Eye Movements; Reaction Time; Time Perception; Psychomotor Performance
PubMed: 38904641
DOI: 10.1167/jov.24.6.14 -
I-Perception 2024When one walks toward a crowd of pedestrians, dealing with their biological motion while controlling one's own self-motion is a difficult perceptual task. Limb...
When one walks toward a crowd of pedestrians, dealing with their biological motion while controlling one's own self-motion is a difficult perceptual task. Limb articulation of a walker is naturally coupled to the walker's translation through the scene and allows the separation of optic flow generated by self-motion from the biological motion of other pedestrians. Recent research has shown that if limb articulation and translation mismatch, such as for walking in place, self-motion perception becomes biased. This bias may reflect an illusory motion attributed to the pedestrian crowd from the articulation of their limbs. To investigate this hypothesis, we presented observers with a simulation of forward self-motion toward a laterally moving crowd of point-light walkers and asked them to report the perceived lateral speed of the crowd. To investigate the dependence of the crowd speed percept on biological motion, we also included conditions in which the points of the walker were spatially scrambled to destroy body form and limb articulation. We observed illusory crowd speed percepts that were related to the articulation rate of the biological motion. Scrambled walkers also produced illusory motion but it was not related to articulation rate. We conclude that limb articulation induces percepts of crowd motion that can be used for interpreting self-motion toward crowds.
PubMed: 38903983
DOI: 10.1177/20416695241246755 -
BioRxiv : the Preprint Server For... Jun 2024Motion perception is considered a hyperacuity. The presence of a visual frame of reference to compute relative motion is necessary to achieve this sensitivity [Legge,...
Motion perception is considered a hyperacuity. The presence of a visual frame of reference to compute relative motion is necessary to achieve this sensitivity [Legge, Gordon E., and F. W. Campbell. "Displacement detection in human vision." 21.2 (1981): 205-213.]. However, there is a special condition where humans are unable to accurately detect relative motion: images moving in a direction consistent with retinal slip where the motion is unnaturally amplified can, under some conditions, appear stable [Arathorn, David W., et al. "How the unstable eye sees a stable and moving world." 13.10.22 (2013)]. In this study, we asked: Is world-fixed retinal image background content necessary for the visual system to compute the direction of eye motion to render in the percept images moving with amplified slip as stable? Or, are non-visual cues sufficient? Subjects adjusted the parameters of a stimulus moving in a random trajectory to match the perceived motion of images moving contingent to the retina. Experiments were done with and without retinal image background content. The perceived motion of stimuli moving with amplified retinal slip was suppressed in the presence of visual content; however, higher magnitudes of motion were perceived under conditions with no visual cues. Our results demonstrate that the presence of retinal image background content is essential for the visual system to compute its direction of motion. The visual content that might be thought to provide a strong frame of reference to detect amplified retinal slips, instead paradoxically drives the misperception of relative motion.
PubMed: 38895454
DOI: 10.1101/2024.06.04.596708 -
BioRxiv : the Preprint Server For... Jun 2024Amblyopia is a developmental disorder associated with reduced performance in visually guided tasks, including binocular navigation within natural environments. To help...
Amblyopia is a developmental disorder associated with reduced performance in visually guided tasks, including binocular navigation within natural environments. To help understand the underlying neurological disorder, we used fMRI to test the impact of amblyopia on the functional organization of scene-selective cortical areas, including the posterior intraparietal gyrus scene-selective (PIGS) area, a recently discovered region that responds selectively to ego-motion within naturalistic environments (Kennedy et al., 2024). Nineteen amblyopic adults (10 female) and thirty age-matched controls (12 female) participated in this study. Amblyopic participants spanned a wide range of amblyopia severity, based on their interocular visual acuity difference and stereoacuity. The visual function questionnaire (VFQ-39) was used to assess the participants' perception of their visual capabilities. Compared to controls, we found weaker scene-selective activity within the PIGS area in amblyopic individuals. By contrast, the level of scene-selective activity across the occipital place area (OPA), parahippocampal place area (PPA), and retrosplenial cortex (RSC)) remained comparable between amblyopic and control participants. The subjects' scores on "general vision" (VFQ-39 subscale) correlated with the level of scene-selective activity in PIGS. These results provide novel and direct evidence for amblyopia-related changes in scene-processing networks, thus enabling future studies to potentially link these changes across the spectrum of documented disabilities in amblyopia.
PubMed: 38895262
DOI: 10.1101/2024.06.05.597579 -
Sensors (Basel, Switzerland) May 2024Many mobile robotics applications require robots to navigate around humans who may interpret the robot's motion in terms of social attitudes and intentions. It is...
Many mobile robotics applications require robots to navigate around humans who may interpret the robot's motion in terms of social attitudes and intentions. It is essential to understand which aspects of the robot's motion are related to such perceptions so that we may design appropriate navigation algorithms. Current works in social navigation tend to strive towards a single ideal style of motion defined with respect to concepts such as comfort, naturalness, or legibility. These algorithms cannot be configured to alter trajectory features to control the social interpretations made by humans. In this work, we firstly present logistic regression models based on perception experiments linking human perceptions to a corpus of linear velocity profiles, establishing that various trajectory features impact human social perception of the robot. Secondly, we formulate a trajectory planning problem in the form of a constrained optimization, using novel constraints that can be selectively applied to shape the trajectory such that it generates the desired social perception. We demonstrate the ability of the proposed algorithm to accurately change each of the features of the generated trajectories based on the selected constraints, enabling subtle variations in the robot's motion to be consistently applied. By controlling the trajectories to induce different social perceptions, we provide a tool to better tailor the robot's actions to its role and deployment context to enhance acceptability.
PubMed: 38894324
DOI: 10.3390/s24113533 -
Cureus May 2024Isolated herpes zoster optic neuritis is a rare sequelae of herpes zoster ophthalmicus (HZO). It can occur in the acute phase of HZO, or as post-herpetic complications....
Isolated herpes zoster optic neuritis is a rare sequelae of herpes zoster ophthalmicus (HZO). It can occur in the acute phase of HZO, or as post-herpetic complications. We report a case of a young patient with poorly controlled diabetes who developed herpes zoster optic neuritis one month after the initial skin manifestation despite completing a two-week course of oral acyclovir 800 mg five times a day. He complained of a five-day history of sudden onset, painless left eye blurring of vision. His vision over the left eye was no light perception with the presence of a left relative afferent pupillary defect. Fundus examination of the left eye revealed a swollen optic disc. Magnetic resonance imaging showed minimal fat streakiness over the left orbit. He was treated with one week of intravenous methylprednisolone 1 g/day, followed by a tapering dose of oral prednisolone (1 mg/kg/day) together with oral acyclovir 800 mg five times a day for another week. His visual acuity remained poor with a slight improvement in vision to hand motion.
PubMed: 38883008
DOI: 10.7759/cureus.60387 -
BMC Surgery Jun 2024We describe a surgical technique for ACL reconstruction combined with anterolateral structure reinforcement and report early clinical follow-up results.
PURPOSE
We describe a surgical technique for ACL reconstruction combined with anterolateral structure reinforcement and report early clinical follow-up results.
METHODS
The semitendinosus and gracilis tendons are braided into 5 strands and the ACL femoral tunnel and tibial tunnel are created. The graft is passed through the tunnel with the use of a traction suture and the tibial end is fixed with absorbable interference screws at 30° of knee flexion. The ACL graft traction suture is used as an anterolateral reconstruction structure to pass through the proximal exit of the ACL femoral tunnel and then through the depth of the iliotibial bundle to the anterior to Gerdy's tubercle, a bony tunnel is created from the anterior to Gerdy's tubercle to the goose foot, and the traction suture is passed through this bony tunnel to form a Loop structure at 20° of knee flexion. Between March 2021 and May 2022 IKDC score, Lysholm score, and Tegner score were performed preoperatively and 6-12 months postoperatively in 24 consecutive patients who met the indications for this procedure and underwent surgery. The patient's maximum flexion angle, the circumference of the thigh, and the stress X-ray between the operated and healthy knee were measured.
RESULTS
Patients showed significant improvement in IKDC score, Lysholm score and Tegner score at a mean follow-up of 7 months postoperatively compared to preoperatively. No significant increase in anterior tibial displacement was found between the patient's operated side and the healthy side.
CONCLUSION
The Loop technique ACLR combined with ALSA can be used in patients with an ACL tear combined with a high degree of positive pivot shift. The patient's subjective perception was significantly improved from the preoperative period and knee stability was restored.
LEVEL OF EVIDENCE
IV, therapeutic study.
Topics: Humans; Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction; Adult; Male; Female; Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries; Treatment Outcome; Young Adult; Follow-Up Studies; Suture Techniques; Range of Motion, Articular; Middle Aged; Tendons; Tibia; Adolescent
PubMed: 38877438
DOI: 10.1186/s12893-024-02439-7 -
Journal of Bodywork and Movement... Jul 2024This study aimed to investigate the effect of sex on regional and widespread pain sensitivity following acute bouts of stretching and to investigate the acute effect of...
INTRODUCTION
This study aimed to investigate the effect of sex on regional and widespread pain sensitivity following acute bouts of stretching and to investigate the acute effect of stretching on regional and widespread pain sensitivity following stretching.
METHODS
73 healthy adults (36 females; mean age 25.6 ± 6.7 years) with an age range from 19 to 62 years were recruited for this experimental study. Regional and distant pain pressure pain thresholds, passive knee extension range of motion and passive resistive torque were measured before and 30 s after four bouts of 30-s static muscle stretching of the knee flexors with 20-s rest between bouts.
RESULTS
No significant sex differences were found for pressure pain thresholds (p > 0.132), range of motion (p = 0.446) or passive resistive torque (p = 0.559) between pre-stretch and post-stretch measures. There were significant increases in pressure pain thresholds (p = 0.010), range of motion (p = 0.001) and passive resistive torque (p = 0.007) between pre-stretch and post-stretch measures.
CONCLUSION
Muscle stretching significantly decreased regional and widespread pain sensitivity, indicating that central pain-modulating mechanisms are engaged during muscle stretching, resulting in stretch-induced hypoalgesia. Moreover, the results showed that the effect of stretching on regional and widespread pain sensitivity is not sex-specific.
Topics: Humans; Adult; Male; Female; Pain Threshold; Muscle Stretching Exercises; Range of Motion, Articular; Young Adult; Sex Factors; Middle Aged; Torque; Muscle, Skeletal; Knee Joint
PubMed: 38876646
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbmt.2024.02.003 -
Nature Communications Jun 2024A brain-computer interface (BCI) enables users to control devices with their minds. Despite advancements, non-invasive BCIs still exhibit high error rates, prompting...
A brain-computer interface (BCI) enables users to control devices with their minds. Despite advancements, non-invasive BCIs still exhibit high error rates, prompting investigation into the potential reduction through concurrent targeted neuromodulation. Transcranial focused ultrasound (tFUS) is an emerging non-invasive neuromodulation technology with high spatiotemporal precision. This study examines whether tFUS neuromodulation can improve BCI outcomes, and explores the underlying mechanism of action using high-density electroencephalography (EEG) source imaging (ESI). As a result, V5-targeted tFUS significantly reduced the error in a BCI speller task. Source analyses revealed a significantly increase in theta and alpha activities in the tFUS condition at both V5 and downstream in the dorsal visual processing pathway. Correlation analysis indicated that the connection within the dorsal processing pathway was preserved during tFUS stimulation, while the ventral connection was weakened. These findings suggest that V5-targeted tFUS enhances feature-based attention to visual motion.
Topics: Humans; Brain-Computer Interfaces; Male; Electroencephalography; Attention; Adult; Female; Young Adult; Visual Cortex; Motion Perception; Photic Stimulation
PubMed: 38862476
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-48576-8