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Dive into the research topics where Alena Damborská is active.

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Featured researches published by Alena Damborská.


Hippocampus | 2013

Hippocampal negative event‐related potential recorded in humans during a simple sensorimotor task occurs independently of motor execution

Robert Roman; Milan Brázdil; Jan Chládek; Ivan Rektor; Pavel Jurák; Miroslav Světlák; Alena Damborská; Daniel Joel Shaw; Miloslav Kukleta

A hippocampal‐prominent event‐related potential (ERP) with a peak latency at around 450 ms is consistently observed as a correlate of hippocampal activity during various cognitive tasks. Some intracranial EEG studies demonstrated that the amplitude of this hippocampal potential was greater in response to stimuli requiring an overt motor response, in comparison with stimuli for which no motor response is required. These findings could indicate that hippocampal‐evoked activity is related to movement execution as well as stimulus evaluation and associated memory processes. The aim of the present study was to investigate the temporal relationship between the hippocampal negative potential latency and motor responses. We analyzed ERPs recorded with 22 depth electrodes implanted into the hippocampi of 11 epileptic patients. Subjects were instructed to press a button after the presentation of a tone. All investigated hippocampi generated a prominent negative ERP peaking at ∼420 ms. In 16 from 22 cases, we found that the ERP latency did not correlate with the reaction time; in different subjects, this potential could either precede or follow the motor response. Our results indicate that the hippocampal negative ERP occurs independently of motor execution. We suggest that hippocampal‐evoked activity, recorded in a simple sensorimotor task, is related to the evaluation of stimulus meaning within the context of situation.


Clinical Neurophysiology | 2016

Post-movement processing in visual oddball task - Evidence from intracerebral recording.

Alena Damborská; Robert Roman; Milan Brázdil; Ivan Rektor; Miloslav Kukleta

OBJECTIVE To identify intracerebral sites activated after correct motor response during cognitive task and to assess associations of this activity with mental processes. METHODS Intracerebral EEG was recorded from 205 sites of frontal, temporal and parietal lobes in 18 epileptic patients, who responded by button pressing together with mental counting to target stimuli in visual oddball task. RESULTS Post-movement event-related potentials (ERPs) with mean latency 295 ± 184 ms after movement were found in all subjects in 64% of sites investigated. Generators were consistently observed in mesiotemporal structures, anterior midcingulate, prefrontal, and temporal cortices. Task-variant nonspecific and target specific post-movement ERPs were identified, displaying no significant differences in distribution among generating structures. Both after correct and incorrect performances the post-performance ERPs were observed in frontal and temporal cortices with latency sensitive to error commission in several frontal regions. CONCLUSION Mesiotemporal structures and regions in anterior midcingulate, prefrontal and temporal cortices seem to represent integral parts of network activated after correct motor response in visual oddball task with mental counting. Our results imply equivalent involvement of these structures in task-variant nonspecific and target specific processes, and suggest existence of common nodes for correct and incorrect responses. SIGNIFICANCE Our results contribute to better understanding of neural mechanisms underlying goal-directed behavior.


Clinical Neurophysiology | 2016

The primary motor cortex is involved in the control of a non-motor cognitive action

Miloslav Kukleta; Alena Damborská; Robert Roman; Ivan Rektor; Milan Brázdil

OBJECTIVE Adaptive interactions with the outer world necessitate effective connections between cognitive and executive functions. The primary motor cortex (M1) with its control of the spinal cord motor apparatus and its involvement in the processing of cognitive information related to motor functions is one of the best suited structures of this cognition-action connection. The question arose whether M1 might be involved also in situations where no overt or covered motor action is present. METHODS The EEG data analyzed were recorded during an oddball task in one epileptic patient (19 years) with depth multilead electrodes implanted for diagnostic reasons into the M1 and several prefrontal areas. RESULTS The main result was the finding of an evoked response to non-target stimuli with a pronounced late component in all frontal areas explored, including three loci of the M1. The late component was implicated in the evaluation of predicted and actual action and was synchronized in all three precentral loci and in the majority of prefrontal loci. CONCLUSION The finding is considered as direct evidence of functional involvement of the M1 in cognitive activity not related to motor function. SIGNIFICANCE Our results contribute to better understanding of neural mechanisms underlying cognition.


International Journal of Psychophysiology | 2017

Evoked potentials in final epoch of self-initiated hand movement: A study in patients with depth electrodes

Miloslav Kukleta; Alena Damborská; Baris Turak; Jacques Louvel

Comparison between the intended and performed motor action can be expected to occur in the final epoch of a voluntary movement. In search for electrophysiological correlates of this mental process the purpose of the current study was to identify intracerebral sites activated in final epoch of self-paced voluntary movement. Intracerebral EEG was recorded from 235 brain regions of 42 epileptic patients who performed self-paced voluntary movement task. Evoked potentials starting at 0 to 243ms after the peak of averaged, rectified electromyogram were identified in 21 regions of 13 subjects. The mean amplitude value of these late movement potentials (LMP) was 56.4±27.5μV. LMPs were observed in remote regions of mesiotemporal structures, cingulate, frontal, temporal, parietal, and occipital cortices. Closely before the LMP onset, a significant increase of phase synchronization was observed in all EEG record pairs in 9 of 10 examined subjects; p<0.001, Mann-Whitney U test. In conclusion, mesiotemporal structures, cingulate, frontal, temporal, parietal, and occipital cortices seem to represent integral functionally linked parts of network activated in final epoch of self-paced voluntary movement. Activation of this large-scale neuronal network was suggested to reflect a comparison process between the intended and actually performed motor action. Our results contribute to better understanding of neural mechanisms underlying goal-directed behavior crucial for creation of agentive experience.


Physiological Research | 2012

Late Divergence of Target and Nontarget ERPs in a Visual Oddball Task

Alena Damborská; Milan Brázdil; Ivan Rektor; Eva Janoušová; Jan Chládek; Miloslav Kukleta


Physiological Research | 2013

Stress-Induced Alterations of Left-Right Electrodermal Activity Coupling Indexed by Pointwise Transinformation

Miroslav Světlák; Petr Bob; Robert Roman; Stanislav Ježek; Alena Damborská; Jan Chládek; Daniel Joel Shaw; Miloslav Kukleta


Homeostasis | 2006

Correlation between stimulus-response intervals and peakamplitude latencies of visual P3 Waves

Alena Damborská; Milan Brázdil; Ivan Rektor; Robert Roman; Miloslav Kukleta


Archive | 2018

Electrophysiological brain abnormities in major depressive disorder: microstate analysis on high-density EEG in resting condition

Alena Damborská; Miralena I. Tomescu; Richard Barteček; Dominik Drobisz; Eliška Honzírková; Christoph M. Michel


Archive | 2017

Electrophysiological correlates of functional brain abnormities in major depressive disorder: microstate analysis on high-density EEG in resting conditions

Alena Damborská; Miralena I. Tomescu; Richard Barteček; Eliška Honzírková; Dominik Drobisz; Christoph M. Michel


European Psychiatry | 2017

Neural correlates of Behavioral inhibition in healthy people and in patients with borderline personality disorder and ADHD

Pavla Linhartová; Matyáš Kuhn; Alena Damborská; Martin Lamoš; Michal Mikl; Richard Barteček; Pavel Theiner; Tomáš Kašpárek; Martin Bareš

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Milan Brázdil

Central European Institute of Technology

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Robert Roman

Central European Institute of Technology

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Jan Chládek

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Daniel Joel Shaw

Central European Institute of Technology

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Martin Lamoš

Brno University of Technology

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