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Dive into the research topics where Benedetto Arnone is active.

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Featured researches published by Benedetto Arnone.


Behavioural Brain Research | 2010

Working and reference memory across the estrous cycle of rat: A long-term study in gonadally intact females

Assunta Pompili; Carlos Tomaz; Benedetto Arnone; Maria Clotilde Tavares; Antonella Gasbarri

The results of many studies conducted over the past two decades suggested a role of estrogen on mammals ability to learn and remember. In the present paper, we analyzed the influence that the endogenous fluctuation of estrogen, naturally present across the different phases of estrous cycle of female rats, can exert over the performance of tasks utilized to assess memory. In particular, we analyzed the performances in an eight arms radial maze task, dependent upon working memory, and in a water maze (WM) task, dependent upon spatial reference memory. The water maze is aversively motivated by the desire to escape onto a safe platform, whereas the radial arm maze (RAM) is motivated by food reward. The difference in reinforcement may affect the speed of learning, the strategy adopted and the necessity for accurate navigation. Therefore, coherent results obtained through the two different tasks can be due to mnemonic factors. The study was conducted during a long period of time, 14 months, utilizing gonadally intact females, without pharmacological and surgical treatments. In order to evaluate the post-acquisition phase we first trained the animals to reach the criterion in performing tasks, and then we submitted them to experimental phase. Our results show that estrogen can have an effect on memory processes, and that this effect may be different in relation to different kinds of memory. In fact, in our study, estrogen selectively improved working memory, but not reference memory, during post-acquisition performance of a RAM task with four baited and four un-baited arms. Moreover, WM performances showed that estrogen have a negative effect on spatial reference memory.


Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2012

Estrogens and memory in physiological and neuropathological conditions

Assunta Pompili; Benedetto Arnone; Antonella Gasbarri

Ovarian hormones can influence brain regions crucial to higher cognitive functions, such as learning and memory, acting at structural, cellular and functional levels, and modulating neurotransmitter systems. Among the main effects of estrogens, the protective role that they may play against the deterioration of cognitive functions occurring with normal aging is of essential importance. In fact, during the last century, there has been a 30 years increase in female life expectancy, from 50 to 83 years; however, the mean age of spontaneous menopause remains stable, 50-51 years, with variability related to race and ethnicity. Therefore, women are now spending a greater fraction of their lives in a hypoestrogenic state. Although many cognitive functions seem to be unaffected by normal aging, age-related impairments are particularly evident in tasks involving working memory (WM), whose deficits are a recognized feature of Alzheimers disease (AD). Many studies conducted over the past two decades showed that the female gonadal hormone estradiol can influence performance of learning and memory tasks, both in animal and humans. There is a great deal of evidence, mostly from animal models, that estrogens can facilitate or enhance performance on WM tasks; therefore, it is very important to clarify their role on this type of memory. To this aim, in this review we briefly describe the most relevant neurobiological bases of estrogens, that can explain their effects on cognitive functioning, and then we summarize the results of works conducted in our laboratory, both on animals and humans, utilizing the menstrual/estrous cycle as a useful noninvasive model. Finally, we review the possible role of estrogens in neuropathological conditions, such as AD and schizophrenia.


Behavioural Brain Research | 2006

Sex-related lateralized effect of emotional content on declarative memory: an event related potential study.

Antonella Gasbarri; Benedetto Arnone; Assunta Pompili; Arianna Marchetti; Francesca Pacitti; Simone Saad Calil; Claudio Pacitti; Maria Clotilde Tavares; Carlos Tomaz

Several studies suggest that emotional arousal can promote memory storage. In this study, we evaluated the effects of emotional content on declarative memory, utilizing an adaptation of two versions of the same story, with different arousing properties (neutral or emotional), which have been already employed in experiments involving the enhancing effects of emotions on memory retention. We used event related potentials (ERP) to evaluate whether there is a sex-related hemispheric lateralization of electrical potentials elicited by the emotional content of a story. We compared left and right hemisphere P300 waves, recorded in P3 and P4 electrode sites, in response to emotional or neutral stimuli in men and women. In the left hemisphere, emotional stimuli elicited a stronger P300 in women, compared to men, as indexed by both amplitude and latency measures; moreover, the emotional content of the story elicited a stronger P300 in the right hemisphere in men than in women. The better memory for the arousal material may be related to the differential P300 at encoding. These data indicate that both sex and cerebral hemisphere constitute important, interacting influences on neural correlates of emotion, and of emotionally influenced memory.


Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience | 2011

Sex-related memory recall and talkativeness for emotional stimuli.

Benedetto Arnone; Assunta Pompili; Maria Clotilde Tavares; Antonella Gasbarri

Recent studies have evidenced an increasing interest in sex-related brain mechanisms and cerebral lateralization subserving emotional memory, language processing, and conversational behavior. We used event-related-potentials (ERP) to examine the influence of sex and hemisphere on brain responses to emotional stimuli. Given that the P300 component of ERP is considered a cognitive neuroelectric phenomenon, we compared left and right hemisphere P300 responses to emotional stimuli in men and women. As indexed by both amplitude and latency measures, emotional stimuli elicited more robust P300 effects in the left hemisphere in women than in men, while a stronger P300 component was elicited in the right hemisphere in men compared to women. Our findings show that the variables of sex and hemisphere interacted significantly to influence the strength of the P300 component to the emotional stimuli. Emotional stimuli were also best recalled when given a long-term, incidental memory test, a fact potentially related to the differential P300 waves at encoding. Moreover, taking into account the sex-related differences in language processing and conversational behavior, in the present study we evaluated possible talkativeness differences between the two genders in the recollection of emotional stimuli. Our data showed that women used a higher number of words, compared to men, to describe both arousal and neutral stories. Moreover, the present results support the view that sex differences in lateralization may not be a general feature of language processing but may be related to the specific condition, such as the emotional content of stimuli.


Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2016

Evidence of estrogen modulation on memory processes for emotional content in healthy young women

Assunta Pompili; Benedetto Arnone; Mario D'Amico; Paolo Federico; Antonella Gasbarri

PURPOSE It is well accepted that emotional content can affect memory, interacting with the encoding and consolidation processes. The aim of the present study was to verify the effects of estrogens in the interplay of cognition and emotion. METHODS Images from the International Affective Pictures System, based on valence (pleasant, unpleasant and neutral), maintaining arousal constant, were viewed passively by two groups of young women in different cycle phases: a periovulatory group (PO), characterized by high level of estrogens and low level of progesterone, and an early follicular group (EF), characterized by low levels of both estrogens and progesterone. The electrophysiological responses to images were measured, and P300 peak was considered. One week later, long-term memory was tested by means of free recall. FINDINGS Intra-group analysis displayed that PO woman had significantly better memory for positive images, while EF women showed significantly better memory for negative images. The comparison between groups revealed that women in the PO phase had better memory performance for positive pictures than women in the EF phase, while no significant differences were found for negative and neutral pictures. According to the free recall results, the subjects in the PO group showed greater P300 amplitude, and shorter latency, for pleasant images compared with women in the EF group. CONCLUSION Our results showed that the physiological hormonal fluctuation of estrogens during the menstrual cycle can influence memory, at the time of encoding, during the processing of emotional information.


Behavioural Brain Research | 2008

Emotional memory and migraine: effects of amitriptyline and sex related difference.

Antonella Gasbarri; Benedetto Arnone; Assunta Pompili; Agata Cifariello; Carmine Marini; M. Clotilde Tavares; Carlos Tomaz

Many studies suggest that emotional arousal improves memory storage. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of emotional content on explicit memory in untreated cephalalgic patients and in migraineurs treated with the antidepressant amitriptyline. We utilized an adaptation of two versions of the same story, with different arousing properties (neutral or emotional), which have been already employed in experiments involving the enhancing effects of emotions on memory retention. Subjects of the present study were healthy subjects and cephalalgic patients, suffering from migraine headache, which included untreated migraineurs and migraineurs treated with the antidepressant amitriptyline. The findings of our experiments suggest that chronic migraine is related to memory impairment. Taking into account that migraine is associated with major depression, in the present research the effect of the antidepressant amitriptyline was also evaluated. Our results showed that amitriptyline has an impairment effect on memory. In fact, the untreated migraineurs, compared to treated, recalled the most emotional phase of the arousal story significantly better. Then, our data suggest that amitriptyline prevents the enhancing effects of emotional content on memory processes. Moreover, in agreement with our previous data, this study suggests the existence of gender differences in the processing of emotional stimuli and underscores the importance of sex on emotional memory mechanisms.


Rivista Di Psichiatria | 2014

Facial emotion recognition in schizophrenia: an event-related potentials study.

Daniela Tempesta; Paolo Stratta; Alfonso Marrelli; Paolo Aloisi; Benedetto Arnone; Antonella Gasbarri; Alessandro Rossi

Previous studies extensively reported an impaired ability to recognize emotional stimuli in patients with schizophrenia. We used pictures from Ekman and Friesen in an event-related potentials study to investigate the neurophysiological correlates of the fear emotional processing compared with happiness in patients with schizophrenia versus healthy subjects. A significant lower P300 amplitude for fear processing but not for P100, N170 and N250 amplitude was found in schizophrenics compared to controls. These data suggest that the ability of basic visual processing is preserved in schizophrenia, whereas facial affect processing is impaired.


Functional Neurology | 2005

Declarative memory retention and emotional stimuli. A study of an Italian sample.

Antonella Gasbarri; Assunta Pompili; Benedetto Arnone; Armida D'onofrio; Arianna Marchetti; Maria Clotilde Tavares; Carlos Tomaz


Behavioural Brain Research | 2006

Erratum to “Sex related lateralized effect of emotional content on declarative memory: An event related potential study” [Behav. Brain Res. 168 (2006) 177–184]

Antonella Gasbarri; Benedetto Arnone; Assunta Pompili; Arianna Marchetti; Francesca Pacitti; Simone Saad Calil; Claudio Pacitti; Maria Clotilde Tavares; Carlos Tomaz


Archive | 2015

Facial emotion recognition in schizophrenia: an event-related potentials study Riconoscimento delle espressioni facciali: uno studio con potenziali evento-correlati

Daniela Tempesta; Paolo Stratta; Alfonso Marrelli; Paolo Aloisi; Benedetto Arnone; Antonella Gasbarri; Alessandro Rossi

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Carlos Tomaz

University of Brasília

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