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Dive into the research topics where Alice Tomassini is active.

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Featured researches published by Alice Tomassini.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2015

Rhythmic oscillations of visual contrast sensitivity synchronized with action

Alice Tomassini; Donatella Spinelli; Marco Jacono; Giulio Sandini; Maria Concetta Morrone

It is well known that the motor and the sensory systems structure sensory data collection and cooperate to achieve an efficient integration and exchange of information. Increasing evidence suggests that both motor and sensory functions are regulated by rhythmic processes reflecting alternating states of neuronal excitability, and these may be involved in mediating sensory-motor interactions. Here we show an oscillatory fluctuation in early visual processing time locked with the execution of voluntary action, and, crucially, even for visual stimuli irrelevant to the motor task. Human participants were asked to perform a reaching movement toward a display and judge the orientation of a Gabor patch, near contrast threshold, briefly presented at random times before and during the reaching movement. When the data are temporally aligned to the onset of movement, visual contrast sensitivity oscillates with periodicity within the theta band. Importantly, the oscillations emerge during the motor planning stage, ∼500 ms before movement onset. We suggest that brain oscillatory dynamics may mediate an automatic coupling between early motor planning and early visual processing, possibly instrumental in linking and closing up the visual-motor control loop.


Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience | 2011

Perceived duration of visual and tactile stimuli depends on perceived speed

Alice Tomassini; Monica Gori; David C. Burr; Giulio Sandini; Maria Concetta Morrone

It is known that the perceived duration of visual stimuli is strongly influenced by speed: faster moving stimuli appear to last longer. To test whether this is a general property of sensory systems we asked participants to reproduce the duration of visual and tactile gratings, and visuo-tactile gratings moving at a variable speed (3.5–15 cm/s) for three different durations (400, 600, and 800 ms). For both modalities, the apparent duration of the stimulus increased strongly with stimulus speed, more so for tactile than for visual stimuli. In addition, visual stimuli were perceived to last approximately 200 ms longer than tactile stimuli. The apparent duration of visuo-tactile stimuli lay between the unimodal estimates, as the Bayesian account predicts, but the bimodal precision of the reproduction did not show the theoretical improvement. A cross-modal speed-matching task revealed that visual stimuli were perceived to move faster than tactile stimuli. To test whether the large difference in the perceived duration of visual and tactile stimuli resulted from the difference in their perceived speed, we repeated the time reproduction task with visual and tactile stimuli matched in apparent speed. This reduced, but did not completely eliminate the difference in apparent duration. These results show that for both vision and touch, perceived duration depends on speed, pointing to common strategies of time perception.


Journal of Neurophysiology | 2012

Active movement restores veridical event-timing after tactile adaptation.

Alice Tomassini; Monica Gori; David C. Burr; Giulio Sandini; Maria Concetta Morrone

Growing evidence suggests that time in the subsecond range is tightly linked to sensory processing. Event-time can be distorted by sensory adaptation, and many temporal illusions can accompany action execution. In this study, we show that adaptation to tactile motion causes a strong contraction of the apparent duration of tactile stimuli. However, when subjects make a voluntary motor act before judging the duration, it annuls the adaptation-induced temporal distortion, reestablishing veridical event-time. The movement needs to be performed actively by the subject: passive movement of similar magnitude and dynamics has no effect on adaptation, showing that it is the motor commands themselves, rather than reafferent signals from body movement, which reset the adaptation for tactile duration. No other concomitant perceptual changes were reported (such as apparent speed or enhanced temporal discrimination), ruling out a generalized effect of body movement on somatosensory processing. We suggest that active movement resets timing mechanisms in preparation for the new scenario that the movement will cause, eliminating inappropriate biases in perceived time. Our brain seems to utilize the intention-to-move signals to retune its perceptual machinery appropriately, to prepare to extract new temporal information.


Journal of Neurophysiology | 2018

Passive sensorimotor stimulation triggers long lasting alpha-band fluctuations in visual perception

Alice Tomassini; Alessandro D’Ausilio

Movement planning and execution rely on the anticipation and online control of the incoming sensory input. Evidence suggests that sensorimotor processes may synchronize visual rhythmic activity in preparation of action performance. Indeed, we recently reported periodic fluctuations of visual contrast sensitivity that are time-locked to the onset of an intended movement of the arm. However, the origin of the observed visual modulations has so far remained unclear because of the endogenous (and thus temporally undetermined) activation of the sensorimotor system that is associated with voluntary movement initiation. In this study, we activated the sensorimotor circuitry involved in the hand control in an exogenous and controlled way by means of peripheral stimulation of the median nerve and characterized the spectrotemporal dynamics of the ensuing visual perception. The stimulation of the median nerve triggers robust and long-lasting (∼1 s) alpha-band oscillations in visual perception, whose strength is temporally modulated in a way that is consistent with the changes in alpha power described at the neurophysiological level after sensorimotor stimulation. These findings provide evidence in support of a causal role of the sensorimotor system in modulating oscillatory activity in visual areas with consequences for visual perception. NEW & NOTEWORTHY This study shows that the peripheral activation of the somatomotor hand system triggers long-lasting alpha periodicity in visual perception. This demonstrates that not only the endogenous sensorimotor processes involved in movement preparation but also the passive stimulation of the sensorimotor system can synchronize visual activity. The present work suggests that oscillation-based mechanisms may subserve core (task independent) sensorimotor integration functions.


conference of the international speech communication association | 2018

Analyzing vocal tract movements during speech accommodation

Sankar Mukherjee; Thierry Legou; Leonardo Lancia; Pauline M. Hilt; Alice Tomassini; Luciano Fadiga; Alessandro D'Ausilio; Leonardo Badino; Noël Nguyen

When two people engage in verbal interaction, they tend to accommodate on a variety of linguistic levels. Although recent attention has focused on to the acoustic characteristics of convergence in speech, the underlying articulatory mechanisms remain to be explored. Using 3D electromagnetic articulography (EMA), we simultaneously recorded articulatory movements in two speakers engaged in an interactive verbal game, the domino task. In this task, the two speakers take turn in chaining bi-syllabic words according to a rhyming rule. By using a robust speaker identification strategy, we identified for which specific words speakers converged or diverged. Then, we explored the different vocal tract features characterizing speech accommodation. Our results suggest that tongue movements tend to slow down during convergence whereas maximal jaw opening during convergence and divergence differs depending on syllable position.


Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences | 2018

Rhythmic motor behaviour influences perception of visual time

Alice Tomassini; Tiziana Vercillo; Francesco Torricelli; Maria Concetta Morrone

Temporal processing is fundamental for an accurate synchronization between motor behaviour and sensory processing. Here, we investigate how motor timing during rhythmic tapping influences perception of visual time. Participants listen to a sequence of four auditory tones played at 1 Hz and continue the sequence (without auditory stimulation) by tapping four times with their finger. During finger tapping, they are presented with an empty visual interval and are asked to judge its length compared to a previously internalized interval of 150 ms. The visual temporal estimates show non-monotonic changes locked to the finger tapping: perceived time is maximally expanded at halftime between the two consecutive finger taps, and maximally compressed near tap onsets. Importantly, the temporal dynamics of the perceptual time distortion scales linearly with the timing of the motor tapping, with maximal expansion always being anchored to the centre of the inter-tap interval. These results reveal an intrinsic coupling between distortion of perceptual time and production of self-timed motor rhythms, suggesting the existence of a timing mechanism that keeps perception and action accurately synchronized.


Multisensory Research | 2013

Motor commands induce time compression for tactile stimuli

Alice Tomassini; Monica Gori; Gabriel Baud-Bovy; Giulio Sandini; Maria Concetta Morrone

Saccades cause compression of visual space towards the saccadic target, and also a compression of time, both phenomena thought to be related to the problem of maintaining saccadic stability. Interestingly, similar phenomena occur around the time of hand movements, when brief tactile stimuli are systematically mislocalized in the direction of the movement. In this study we measured whether hand movements also cause an alteration of the perceived timing of the touch signals. Participants compared the temporal separation between two pairs of tactile taps delivered to either the right moving or left stationary hand. An auditory tone cued participants to move their right hand as fast as possible along a track. At variable delays from sound presentation the first pair of tactile taps (test) was presented with a fixed onset asynchrony of 150 ms. After 2 s from test presentation the second pair of taps was delivered (probe) with a variable temporal separation. When the tactile stimuli were presented on the motor effector, their perceived temporal separation was reduced. The time compression began approximately 150 ms before movement onset, it increased until just before the hand started moving and continued during the movement. The time compression was effector-specific, as perceived time was veridical for the left stationary hand, ruling out high-level attentional modulation. The results indicate that tactile time intervals are compressed around the time of hand movements. As for vision the mislocalizations of time and space of touch stimuli may be consequences of a mechanism attempting to achieve perceptual stability.


Journal of Vision | 2010

The spatial selectivity of neural timing mechanisms for tactile events

Alice Tomassini; Monica Gori; David C. Burr; Giulio Sandini; Concetta Morrone


Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences | 2014

Rhythmic Oscillations of Visual Contrast Sensitivity Triggered by Voluntary Action and their Link to Perceived Time Compression

Maria Concetta Morrone; Alice Tomassini; Marco Jacono; Donatella Spinelli; Giulio Sandini


Human Brain Mapping | 2018

The neural oscillatory markers of phonetic convergence during verbal interaction

Sankar Mukherjee; Leonardo Badino; Pauline M. Hilt; Alice Tomassini; Alberto Inuggi; Luciano Fadiga; Noël Nguyen; Alessandro D'Ausilio

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Giulio Sandini

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Monica Gori

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Gabriel Baud-Bovy

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Donatella Spinelli

Sapienza University of Rome

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Marco Jacono

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Noël Nguyen

Aix-Marseille University

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Alessandro D'Ausilio

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Concetta Morrone

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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