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Dive into the research topics where Giorgio Beltrami is active.

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Featured researches published by Giorgio Beltrami.


Vision Research | 1995

Saccade latency toward auditory targets depends on the relative position of the sound source with respect to the eyes

Daniela Zambarbieri; Giorgio Beltrami; Maurizio Versino

The latency of saccadic eye movements evoked by the presentation of auditory and visual targets was studied while starting eye position was either 0 or 20 deg right, or 20 deg left. The results show that for any starting position the latency of visually elicited saccades increases with target eccentricity with respect to the eyes. For auditory elicited saccades and for any starting position the latency decreases with target eccentricity with respect to the eyes. Therefore auditory latency depends on a retinotopic motor error, as in the case of visual target presentation.


Journal of Vestibular Research-equilibrium & Orientation | 1997

EYE-HEAD COORDINATION TOWARD AUDITORY AND VISUAL TARGETS IN HUMANS

Daniela Zambarbieri; R. Schmid; Maurizio Versino; Giorgio Beltrami

Eye-head coordination during gaze orientation toward auditory targets in total darkness has been examined in human subjects. The findings have been compared, for the same subjects, with those obtained by using visual targets. The use of auditory targets when investigating eye-head coordination has some advantages with respect to the more common use of visual targets: (i) more eccentric target positions can be presented to the subject; (ii) visual feedback is excluded during the execution of gaze displacement; (iii) complex patterns of saccadic responses can be elicited. This last aspect is particularly interesting for examining the coupling between the eyes and the head displacements. The experimental findings indicate that during gaze orientation toward a visual or an auditory target the central nervous system adopts the same strategy of using both the saccadic mechanism and the head motor plant. In spite of a common strategy, qualitative and quantitative parameters of the resulting eye-head coordination are slightly different, depending on the nature of the target. The findings relating to patterns of eye-head coordination seem to indicate a dissociation between the eyes and the head, which receive different motor commands independently generated from the gaze error signal. The experimental findings reported in this paper have been summarized in a model of the gaze control system that makes use of a gaze feedback hypothesis through the central reconstruction of the eye and head positions.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2000

Auditory saccade impairment after central thalamus lesions

Maurizio Versino; Giorgio Beltrami; C Uggetti; V. Cosi

Visual and auditory saccades were studied in three patients with an isolated lesion located in the central thalamus. Visual saccades proved to be normal, whereas for auditory stimuli, the amplitude of the first saccade was asymmetric: saccades ipsilateral to the lesion were significantly smaller than those directed to the contralateral side. The patients were able to make a corrective saccade and hence to improve gain and to decrease gain asymmetry. It is suggested that patients were able to localise auditory targets correctly, but did not correctly take into account eye position during the saccade, probably as a consequence of an inaccurate efference copy (corollary discharge) signal. The findings are in keeping with the hypothesis that the central thalamus deals with saccades that are based on extraretinal signals.


The Cerebellum | 2011

Theta-Burst Stimulation of the Cerebellum Interferes with Internal Representations of Sensory-Motor Information Related to Eye Movements in Humans

Silvia Colnaghi; Stefano Ramat; Egidio D’Angelo; Andrea Cortese; Giorgio Beltrami; Arrigo Moglia; Maurizio Versino

Continuous theta-burst stimulation (cTBS) applied over the cerebellum exerts long-lasting effects by modulating long-term synaptic plasticity, which is thought to be the basis of learning and behavioral adaptation. To investigate the impact of cTBS over the cerebellum on short-term sensory-motor memory, we recorded in two groups of eight healthy subject each the visually guided saccades (VGSs), the memory-guided saccades (MGSs), and the multiple memory-guided saccades (MMGSs), before and after cTBS (cTBS group) or simulated cTBS (control group). In the cTBS group, cTBS determined hypometria of contralateral centrifugal VGSs and worsened the accuracy of MMGS bilaterally. In the control group, no significant differences were found between the two recording sessions. These results indicate that cTBS over the cerebellum causes eye movement effects that last longer than the stimulus duration. The VGS contralateral hypometria suggested that we eventually inhibited the fastigial nucleus on the stimulated side. MMGSs in normal subjects have a better final accuracy with respect to MGSs. Such improvement is due to the availability in MMGSs of the efference copy of the initial reflexive saccade directed toward the same peripheral target, which provides a sensory-motor information that is memorized and then used to improve the accuracy of the subsequent volitional memory-guided saccade. Thus, we hypothesize that cTBS disrupted the capability of the cerebellum to make an internal representation of the memorized sensory-motor information to be used after a short interval for forward control of saccades.


Biomedical sensors, fibers, and optical delivery systems | 1999

NIRS monitoring of muscle contraction to control a prosthetic device

Thomas Bianchi; Daniela Zambarbieri; Giorgio Beltrami; Gennaro Verni

The fitting of upper-extremity amputees requires special efforts, and its significance has been increased by the development of the myoelectrically controlled prosthetic arm. This solution is not free of problems due to the nature of the amputation, to the electromagnetic noise affecting the myelectrical signal and to the perspiration due to the contact between socket and the residual limb. Starting from the fact that NIRS and electromyographic signals are similar during a muscle contraction, we have first studied the NIRS signal during forearm muscle contractions in normal and amputee subjects. Then a new system to interface the NIRS unit and the myoelectrical prosthetic hand has been developed. The NIRS unit has been used as optical sensor and all the operations (I/O and signal processing) are performed via software. This system has been tested on normal and amputee subjects performing hand grasping using a visual biofeedback control scheme. All the subjects have been able to perform these operations demonstrating the NIRS technique. This could represent an alternative solution for controlling a prosthetic device.


Acta Neurologica Scandinavica | 2009

A clinically oriented approach to smooth pursuit eye movement quantitative evaluation

Maurizio Versino; Giorgio Beltrami; Daniela Zambarbieri; G. Castelnovo; Roberto Bergamaschi; Alfredo Romani; V. Cosi

The electrooculographic technique was used to record smooth pursuit eye movements in 71 healthy subjects homogeneously distributed within an age range between the 2nd and the 6th decades. The target moved at constant velocity (triangular ramps) and 9 different target velocities (V), from 10 deg/s to 50 deg/s were considered and presented according to pseudorandom sequence. Ad hoc software suppressed catch‐up saccades so that a pursuit index (PI) value was computed for each ramp taking into account only the smooth pursuit tracking modality. It was demonstrated that the relationship between V and PI could be described by the linear model PI =a + b* V. Pursuit index was proved to be influenced by the age of subject (decade factor in the analysis of variance), since an almost linear increase in b values yields a reduction of pursuit index values. The method was tested in 22 multiple sclerosis patients and an association was found between the occurrence of cerebellar signs and the reduction of a value.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2005

Binocular control of saccades in idiopathic Parkinson's disease

Maurizio Versino; Chiara Zavanone; Silvia Colnaghi; Giorgio Beltrami; Claudio Pacchetti; Roberta Zangaglia; V. Cosi

Abstract: We focused on the saccade disconjugate control in idiopathic Parkinsons disease patients. Our data showed that in IPD patients the saccade precision was differently impaired in the two eyes—namely, the disconjugate component was larger than in controls—more for the remembered than for the reflexive task.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2011

A new device to assess static ocular torsion.

Stefano Ramat; Alessandro Nesti; Maurizio Versino; Silvia Colnaghi; Catia Magnaghi; Alessandro Bianchi; Giorgio Beltrami

In clinical settings, static ocular torsion is assessed by taking a fundus photograph and measuring the angle between a horizontal line and the line connecting the fovea to the head of the optic nerve (centro‐cecal axis rotation; CCAR). We developed and tested a system specifically aimed at CCAR measurements, based on low‐cost commercial hardware, and that implements an adaptive research algorithm that selects and presents bright dots on a monitor to outline the borders of the blind spot, locate its center, and measure CCAR. We examined 10 healthy subjects who underwent four CCAR measurements to evaluate the reliability of the system and compared our results with those of fundus photographic examination. Our data showed an excyclophoria, with mean ocular torsion of 6.4° in the right and 6.7° in the left eye. These values are in keeping with those in the literature. Moreover, the values of the intraclass correlation coefficients suggest excellent reliability of the technique.


Archive | 2010

A Multi-Purpose Wireless Sensor Network Based on Zigbee Technology

Gian Mario Bertolotti; Giorgio Beltrami; Andrea Cristiani; Roberto Gandolfi; Remo Lombardi

Among a wide offer of wireless technologies, ZigBee is one of the most actractive for connecting low–volume devices, such as sensors. This paper aims at presenting a project which is being carried on at Microcomputers and Biomedical Devices laboratory (Department of Computer Science, Faculty of Engineering, University of Pavia, Italy). The goal of the project is the development of a prototype of ZigBee sensors network for temperature monitoring. The idea is to evaluate the capability of ZigBee technology in order to build wireless sensors networks for environmental monitoring. The use of a single chip which integrates a microcontroller and a ZigBee transceiver gives the possibility of developing wireless devices with small dimensions, low power consumption, and a good computing capability.


Acta Neurologica Scandinavica | 2009

Saccadic and smooth pursuit eye movements in memory-impaired elderly people

Maurizio Versino; Alfredo Romani; Giorgio Beltrami; V. Cosi

The aim of the study was to compare eye movements recorded in 14 non‐demented memory impaired elderly subjects with those of 36 sex‐ and education‐matched controls. Eye movements were recorded with the bitemporal electrooculographic technique, and analyzed with a personal computer. Saccades were elicited in accordance with reflexive, predictive and antisaccade paradigms. Smooth pursuit eye movements were elicited with a triangular ramp paradigm. The memory‐impaired subjects showed a higher prevalence of increased reflexive saccade latency and a lower smooth pursuit performance index. In addition, we detected a correlation between antisaccade and reflexive saccade latencies. Our results showed very slight differences in eye movement parameters. However, our findings are in keeping with the hypothesis of a subtle involvement of differing cortical areas in memory impaired subjects

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