Examinando por Autor "Albert, Jacobo"
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Ítem Neural activity associated with metaphor comprehension: spatial analysis(Neuroscience Letters, 2005) Sotillo, María; Carretié, Luis; Hinojosa, José Antonio; Tapia, Manuel; Mercado, Francisco; López, Sara; Albert, JacoboThough neuropsychological data indicate that the right hemisphere (RH) plays a major role in metaphor processing, other studies suggest that, at least during some phases of this processing, a RHadvantage may not exist. The present study explores, through a temporally agile neural signal¿the event-related potentials (ERPs)¿, and through source-localization algorithms applied to ERP recordings, whether the crucial phase of metaphor comprehension presents or not a RH advantage. Participants (n = 24) were submitted to a S1¿S2 experimental paradigm. S1 consisted of visually presented metaphoric sentences (e.g., ¿Green lung of the city¿), followed by S2, which consisted of words that could (i.e., ¿Park¿) or could not (i.e., ¿Semaphore¿) be defined by S1. ERPs elicited by S2 were analyzed using temporal principal component analysis (tPCA) and source-localization algorithms. These analyses revealed that metaphorically related S2 words showed significantly higher N400 amplitudes than non-related S2 words. Source-localization algorithms showed differential activity between the two S2 conditions in the right middle/superior temporal areas. These results support the existence of an important RH contribution to (at least) one phase of metaphor processing and, furthermore, implicate the temporal cortex with respect to that contribution.Ítem Neural response to sustained affective visual stimulation using an indirect task(Experimental Brain Research, 2006) Carretié, Luis; Hinojosa, José Antonio; Albert, Jacobo; Mercado, FranciscoEvent-related potentials were recorded from 30 subjects using sustained stimulation and an indirect task, two strategies which facilitate affective responses that are complete and free of cognitive interference. Stimuli were of three types: pleasant, unpleasant and neutral. A three-phase pattern was found. The first phase, an amplitude increase in response to negative stimuli higher than to neutral and pleasant stimuli, was produced at 160 ms after stimulus onset, the prefrontal cortex being the origin of this phase. The second phase, characterized by maximal amplitudes in response to positive stimuli, was produced at 400 ms, originating in the visual cortex. Finally, the third phase, another amplitude increase in response to negative stimuli, was produced at 680 ms, and its source was located in the left precentral gyrus. Present data show that the cortical response to sustained emotional visual stimulation presented within indirect tasks provides information on attention-, motivation-and motor-related biases that complement information obtained under other experimental conditions.