Jacques Pellet
University of Montpellier
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jacques Pellet.
Schizophrenia Research | 2011
Fabien Schneider; Aurélie Royer; Anne Grosselin; Jacques Pellet; Fabrice-Guy Barral; Bernard Laurent; Denis Brouillet; François Lang
The activity of brain regions of the so-called default mode network (DMN) attenuates during the performance of goal-directed tasks. These activity decreases (named task-induced deactivations; TID) are though to reflect the reallocation of cognitive resources from the DMN to areas implicated in the execution of the task. Recently, DMN activity suppression has been studied in schizophrenia patients. Although these works showed that TID are altered in schizophrenia, they also revealed inconsistent findings. We hypothesized that reallocation of resources is altered in schizophrenia patients and is context or task specific. We investigated TID using functional MRI in 26 schizophrenic patients and 13 control subjects while performing two different goal-directed tasks (the Hayling Sentence Completion Test and the N-Back task). Both whole brain and region of interest conjunction analyses were conducted to investigate brain areas commonly deactivated in the two tasks (task unspecific deactivations). Task-unspecific deactivations were not observed in the schizophrenia group, although these were strongly significant in the control group. Differences between patient and control participants were observed in different regions of the DMN depending whether the subjects performed the Hayling or the N-back task. These results suggest that reallocation of cognitive resources is altered in our patient sample. Moreover, TID were task-unspecific indicating that resources reallocation is context dependent in schizophrenia. DMN activity attenuates differently in schizophrenia patients depending on the cognitive processes involved in the task.
Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2009
Aurélie Royer; Fabien Schneider; Anne Grosselin; Jacques Pellet; Fabrice-Guy Barral; Bernard Laurent; Denis Brouillet; François Lang
Schizophrenia patients show some deficits in executive processes (impaired behavioural performance and abnormal brain functioning). The aim of this study is to explore the brain activity of schizophrenia patients during different inhibitory tasks. We used functional magnetic resonance imaging to investigate to investigate the restraint and deletion aspects of inhibition in 19 patients with schizophrenia and 12 normal subjects during the performance of the Hayling and the N-back tasks. The patients demonstrated impaired performance (more errors and longer reaction times) in the Hayling task. Schizophrenia subjects activated the same fronto-parietal network as the control subjects but demonstrated stronger parietal activations. For the N-back task, the deficit shown by the patients was limited to the number of target omissions. The reaction times and the number of false alarms did not differ in the two groups. We interpret this pattern of deficit as an alteration of working memory processes (and unaltered inhibition). Schizophrenia subjects showed higher activations in a fronto-parietal network. Since schizophrenia patients reached normal inhibitory performances in the N-back task and not in the Hayling task, the frontal hyperactivation may reflect an increased effort or a compensatory mechanism that facilitates the performance of executive tasks. During the Hayling task, this frontal hyperactivation was not achieved, and its absence was associated with a performance deficit relative to the performance of normal subjects.
Cognitive Neuropsychiatry | 2012
Aurélie Royer; Anne Grosselin; Cécile Bellot; Jacques Pellet; Stéphane Billard; François Lang; Denis Brouillet; Catherine Massoubre
Introduction. Cognitive deficits are commonly reported in schizophrenia and have a significant impact on the daily life of patients and on their social and work inclusion. Cognitive remediation therapies (CRT) may enhance the capabilities of schizophrenia patients. Although social and work integration is the ultimate goal of CRT, previous studies have failed to carry out a detailed assessment of the effects on everyday life. Methods. Fifty-nine schizophrenia patients were randomised into two groups (remediation or usual treatment) to test the effects of a new remediation programme, which included both rehearsal and strategy learning, on cognitive functions. An ecological test was used to evaluate its transfer to daily living skills. Results. Cognitive improvements are revealed in CRT patients, mainly in memory and executive functions. Patients showing some deficiencies to perform the ecological test had better scores after the CRT. Moreover, they significantly improve their social activity scores. Conclusions. CRT would facilitate mental load monitoring by enhancing or reallocating cognitive resources, facilitating the patients organisation and autonomy. The rehearsal learning approach improves the ability to carry out automatic operations that are less demanding in terms of cognitive resources, thereby increasing the resources available for acquisition and efficient use of strategies provided during the strategy learning approach.
Schizophrenia Research and Treatment | 2013
Jessica Sevos; Anne Grosselin; Jacques Pellet; Catherine Massoubre; Denis Brouillet
For schizophrenic patients, the world can appear as deprived of practical meaning, which normally emerges from sensory-motor experiences. However, no research has yet studied the integration between perception and action in this population. In this study, we hypothesize that patients, after having controlled the integrity of their visuospatial integration, would nevertheless present deficit in sensory-motor simulation. In this view, we compare patients to control subjects using two stimulus-response compatibility (SRC) tasks. Experiment 1 is performed to ensure that visuo-spatial integration is not impaired (Simon Effect). Experiment 2 replicates a study from Tucker and Ellis (1998) to explore the existence of sensory-motor compatibility between stimulus and response (Object Affordance). In control subjects, the SRC effect appears in both experiments. In schizophrenic patients, it appears only when stimuli and responses share the same spatial localization. This loss of automatic sensory-motor simulation could emerge from a lack of relation between the object and the subjects environment.
Frontiers in Psychology | 2016
Jessica Sevos; Anne Grosselin; Denis Brouillet; Jacques Pellet; Catherine Massoubre
The simple perception of an object can potentiate an associated action. This affordance effect depends heavily on the action context in which the object is presented. In recent years, psychologists, psychiatrists, and phenomenologists have agreed that subjects with schizophrenia may not perceive the affordances of people or objects that could lead to a loss of ease in their actions. We examined whether the addition of contextually congruent elements, during the perception of everyday objects, could promote the emergence of object-affordance effects in subjects with schizophrenia and controls. Participants performed two Stimulus–Response-Compatibility tasks in which they were presented with semantic primes related to sense of property (Experiment 1) or goal of action (Experiment 2) prior to viewing each graspable object. Controls responded faster when their response hand and the graspable part of the object were compatibly oriented, but only when the context was congruent with the individual’s needs and goals. When the context operated as a constraint, the affordance-effect was disrupted. These results support the understanding that object-affordance is flexible and not just intrinsic to an object. However, the absence of this object-affordance effect in subjects with schizophrenia suggests the possible impairment of their ability to experience the internal simulation of motor action potentialities. In such case, all activities of daily life would require the involvement of higher cognitive processes rather than lower level sensorimotor processes. The study of schizophrenia requires the consideration of concepts and methods that arise from the theories of embodied and situated cognition.
The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry | 2002
Catherine Massoubre; François Lang; Burkard Jaeger; Michel Jullien; Jacques Pellet
Encephale-revue De Psychiatrie Clinique Biologique Et Therapeutique | 1985
Daniel P. Bobon; Remy von Frenckell; B. Troisfontaines; Christian Mormont; Jacques Pellet
Annales médico-psychologiques | 2002
D Bouley; C Massoubre; C Serre; François Lang; L Chazot; Jacques Pellet
Annales médico-psychologiques | 1984
B. Troisfontaines; Daniel P. Bobon; C. Digonnet; François Lang; Christian Mormont; Jacques Pellet; R. von Frenckell
/data/revues/00143855/00730002/0800008X/ | 2008
Stéphane Lucas Navarro; Jacques Pellet; François Lang