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Dive into the research topics where Artem V. Belopolsky is active.

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Featured researches published by Artem V. Belopolsky.


Neuroreport | 2001

General and task-specific frontal lobe recruitment in older adults during executive processes: A fMRI investigation of task- switching

Gregory J. DiGirolamo; Arthur F. Kramer; Vikram Barad; Nicholas J. Cepeda; Daniel H. Weissman; Michael P. Milham; Tracey Wszalek; Neal J. Cohen; Marie T. Banich; Andrew Webb; Artem V. Belopolsky; Edward McAuley

Performance deteriorates when subjects must shift between two different tasks relative to performing either task separately. This switching cost is thought to result from executive processes that are not inherent to the component operations of either task when performed alone. Medial and dorsolateral frontal cortices are theorized to subserve these executive processes. Here we show that larger areas of activation were seen in dorsolateral and medial frontal cortex in both younger and older adults during switching than repeating conditions, confirming the role of these frontal brain regions in executive processes. Younger subjects activated these medial and dorsolateral frontal cortices only when switching between tasks; in contrast, older subjects recruited similar frontal regions while performing the tasks in isolation as well as alternating between them. Older adults recruit medial and dorsolateral frontal areas, and the processes computed by these areas, even when no such demands are intrinsic to the current task conditions. This neural recruitment may be useful in offsetting the declines in cognitive function associated with ageing.


Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport | 2004

Physical activity and executive control: Implications for increased cognitive health during older adulthood

Charles H. Hillman; Artem V. Belopolsky; Erin M. Snook; Arthur F. Kramer; Edward McAuley

Abstract Electrocortical and behavioral responses of low, moderate, and high physically active older adults where compared with a younger control group on neutral and incompatible conditions of a flankers task. Compared to younger adults, high and moderate active older adults exhibited increased event-related potentials component P3 amplitude for the incompatible condition at the frontal electrode site. For the neutral condition, only low active older adults exhibited decreased amplitude at the central-parietal site, compared to younger adults. P3 latency revealed the longest latencies for low active older adults, followed by moderate active, high active, and younger adults, respectively. Reaction time (RT) data revealed that younger adults exhibited faster RT compared to all three older groups. Results suggest that physical activity may improve executive control function in older adults by affecting the distribution of P3 amplitude, which has been related to memory and attentional processes, and by decreasing P3 latency, which relates to the speed of cognitive processing.


Psychonomic Bulletin & Review | 2004

Attentional set interacts with perceptual load in visual search

Jan Theeuwes; Arthur F. Kramer; Artem V. Belopolsky

In the present study, we examined the hypothesis that perceptual load is the primary factor that determines the efficiency of attentional selection. Participants performed a visual search task under conditions of high- and low-load. In line with the perceptual load hypothesis, presenting conditions of highand low-load in separate blocks of trials resulted in processing of to-be-ignored stimuli only in the lowload condition (Experiment 1). However when high- and low-load conditions were randomly mixed in blocks of trials, the participants showed processing of to-be-ignored stimuli in both conditions, suggesting that high perceptual load is not necessarily sufficient to obtain perceptual selectivity (Experiment 2). An analysis of intertrial transition effects showed that on high-load trials, processing of to-be-ignored stimuli occurred only when the previous trial was a low-load trial. The results suggest that low perceptual load can engender broad attentional processing. On the other hand, when a high-load trial was preceded by another high-load trial, little processing of task-irrelevant stimuli was observed. The present results are discussed in terms of the interaction between expectancies and bottom-up factors in the efficiency of attentional selection.


Journal of Molecular Neuroscience | 2002

Effects of aerobic fitness training on human cortical function: a proposal.

Arthur F. Kramer; Stanley J. Colcombe; Kirk I. Erickson; Artem V. Belopolsky; Edward McAuley; Neal J. Cohen; Andrew G. Webb; Gerald J. Jerome; David X. Marquez; Tracey Wszalek

We briefly review the extant human and animal literature on the influence of fitness training on brain, cognition and performance. The animal research provides clear support for neurochemical and structural changes in brain with fitness training. The human literature suggests reliable but process specific changes in cognition with fitness training for young and old adults. We describe a research program which examines the influence of aerobic fitness training on the functional activity of the human using event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging, of humans in fitness interventions.


Psychonomic Bulletin & Review | 2005

Prioritization by transients in visual search.

Artem V. Belopolsky; Arthur F. Kramer; Jan Theeuwes

There is an ongoing debate as to whether prioritizing new objects over old objects (the so-calledpreview benefit) is the result of top-down inhibition of old objects (i.e., visual marking; Watson & Humphreys, 1997) or attentional allocation to new objects, presented with a luminance transient (Donk & Theeuwes, 2001). In the two experiments reported here, we tested whether prioritization by luminance transients alone can produce a subset-selective search similar to the preview effect. Subjects viewed multiobject displays while a subset of objects was briefly flashed. The subjects prioritized up to 14 flashed objects over at least 14 nonflashed objects. Since prioritization by luminance transients can produce a subsetselective search on its own, it may well play an important role in the preview benefit.


Attention Perception & Psychophysics | 2003

Contingent visual marking by transients

Matthew S. Peterson; Artem V. Belopolsky; Arthur F. Kramer

Preview search is a phenomenon in which a set of new items can be searched with seemingly no interference from items already present in the display. The preview effect has been shown to occur only when the presentation of the new items is accompanied by a luminance change (Donk & Theeuwes, 2001). In a series of experiments, we extend the type of transients that can lead to a preview benefit to offsets and motion, and confirm Donk and Theeuwes’s finding that equiluminant color changes do not lead to a preview effect. Like Donk and Theeuwes, we find that preview search does not occur when only the old items undergo a transient change, suggesting that the processes responsible for preview search are triggered when the new items undergo a change detectable by the magnocellular system. In addition, we find that irrelevant transients interfere with preview search only when they match the current attentional set (e.g., luminance change or motion). Results suggest that preview search is not the automatic capture of attention by transients, but rather is contingent on top-down control settings.


International Journal of Psychophysiology | 2006

A cross-sectional examination of age and physical activity on performance and event-related brain potentials in a task switching paradigm

Charles H. Hillman; Arthur F. Kramer; Artem V. Belopolsky; Darin P. Smith


Cognitive Brain Research | 2005

Visual search in temporally segregated displays: Converging operations in the study of the preview benefit

Artem V. Belopolsky; Matthew S. Peterson; Arthur F. Kramer


Journal of Vision | 2010

Prioritization by visual transients in search: Evidence against the visual marking account of the preview benefit

Artem V. Belopolsky; Jan Theeuwes; Arthur F. Kramer


Archive | 2004

Assessing Brain Function and Mental Chronometry with Event-Related Potentials (ERP)

Arthur F. Kramer; Artem V. Belopolsky

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Jan Theeuwes

VU University Amsterdam

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Andrew G. Webb

Pennsylvania State University

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Andrew Webb

University of Illinois at Chicago

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David X. Marquez

University of Illinois at Chicago

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