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Featured researches published by Joann Lianekhammy.


Attention Perception & Psychophysics | 2004

The visual and haptic perception of natural object shape

J. Farley Norman; Hideko F. Norman; Anna Marie Clayton; Joann Lianekhammy; Gina Zielke

In this study, we evaluated observers’ ability to compare naturally shaped three-dimensional (3-D) objects, using their senses of vision and touch. In one experiment, the observers haptically manipulated 1 object and then indicated which of 12 visible objects possessed the same shape. In the second experiment, pairs of objects were presented, and the observers indicated whether their 3-D shape was thesame ordifferent. The 2 objects were presented either unimodally (vision-vision or haptic-haptic) or cross-modally (vision-haptic or haptic-vision). In both experiments, the observers were able to compare 3-D shape across modalities with reasonably high levels of accuracy. In Experiment 1, for example, the observers’ matching performance rose to 72% correct (chance performance was 8.3%) after five experimental sessions. In Experiment 2, small (but significant) differences in performance were obtained between the unimodal vision-vision condition and the two cross-modal conditions. Taken together, the results suggest that vision and touch have functionally overlapping, but not necessarily equivalent, representations of 3-D shape.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2009

Brain responses to repeated visual experience among low and high sensation seekers: role of boredom susceptibility

Yang Jiang; Joann Lianekhammy; Adam L. Lawson; Chunyan Guo; Donald R. Lynam; Jane E. Joseph; Brian T. Gold; Thomas H. Kelly

To better understand individual differences in sensation seeking and its components, including boredom susceptibility and experience seeking, we examined brain responses of high and low sensation seekers during repeated visual experience. Individuals scoring in the top and bottom quartiles from a college-aged population on the Brief Sensation-Seeking Scale (BSSS) participated in an event-related potentials (ERPs) experiment. Line drawings of common objects were randomly intermixed and presented 1-3 times. Sixty-four channel ERP responses were recorded while participants classified items as man-made or not man-made in a repetition priming task. The two groups showed different ERP responses at frontal electrode sites after seeing a visual stimulus for 400-800 ms. The frontal late positive components (LPC) showed different habituation of ERP responses to new and studied repeated objects between high and low sensation seekers. Source localization analysis (LORETA) indicated that during visual stimulus adaptation the ventral pre-frontal cortex showed lack of frontal involvement among high sensation seekers. Furthermore, frontal LPC latencies during repeated visual exposure correlated with boredom susceptibility and experience seeking subscales. The distinct profiles of brain responses to repeated visual experience in high and low sensation seekers provide evidence that individual differences in neural adaptation can be linked to personality dimensions.


Journal of Alzheimer's Disease | 2014

Synaptophysin and synaptojanin-1 in Down syndrome are differentially affected by Alzheimer's disease.

Sarah Martin; Amy L.S. Dowling; Joann Lianekhammy; Ira T. Lott; Eric Doran; M. Paul Murphy; Tina L. Beckett; Frederick A. Schmitt; Elizabeth Head

Adults with Down syndrome (DS) develop Alzheimers disease (AD) neuropathology by 40 years of age. Synaptophysin (SYN) consistently declines with age and is further reduced with sporadic AD. Thus, we hypothesized that SYN would be reduced in DS with AD. The gene for synaptojanin-1 (SYNJ1), involved in synaptic vesicle recycling, is on chromosome 21. We measured SYN and SYNJ1 in an autopsy series of 39 cases with DS and 28 without DS, along with 7 sporadic AD cases. SYN was significantly lower in DSAD compared with DS alone and similar to sporadic AD. Reduced SYN is associated with AD neuropathology and with Aβ levels in DS, as is seen in sporadic AD. SYNJ1 was significantly higher in DS and correlated with several measures of Aβ. SYNJ1 was higher in DSAD and significantly higher than SYNJ1 in sporadic AD. Although significantly higher in DS, SYNJ1 is further increased with AD neuropathology suggesting interesting differences in a synapse-associated protein that is overexpressed in trisomy 21.


2010 Biomedical Sciences and Engineering Conference | 2010

Early detection of Alzheimer's disease using nonlinear analysis of EEG via Tsallis entropy

Thibaut De Bock; Satyajit Das; Maruf Mohsin; Nancy B. Munro; Lee M. Hively; Yang Jiang; Charles D. Smith; David R. Wekstein; Gregory A. Jicha; Adam Lawson; Joann Lianekhammy; Erin Walsh; Seth Kiser; Chelsea L. Black

A preliminary study by Sneddon et al. (2005) using visual working memory tasks coupled with quantified EEG (qEEG) analysis distinguished mild dementia subjects from normal aging ones with a high degree of accuracy. The present study hypothesizes that a simpler task such as having a subject count backwards mentally by ones can be coupled with qEEG to yield a similar degree of accuracy for classifying early dementia. The study focuses on participants with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and includes both a delayed visual match-to-sample (working memory) task and a counting backwards task (eyes closed) for comparison. The counting backwards protocol included 15 normal aging and 11 MCI participants, and the working memory task included 9 normal aging and 7 MCI individuals. The EEG data were quantified using Tsallis entropy, and the brain regions analyzed included the prefrontal cortex, occipital lobe, and the posterior parietal cortex. The counting backwards task had a sensitivity of 82%, a specificity of 73%, and an overall accuracy of 77% whereas the working memory task had a sensitivity of 100%, a specificity of 89%, and an overall accuracy of 94%. The results suggest that simple tasks such as having a subject count backwards may distinguish MCI (p<;0.05) sufficiently to use as a rough screening tool, but psychophysical tasks such as working memory tests appear a potentially much more useful approach for diagnosing either MCI or very early Alzheimers disease.


Journal of Feminist Family Therapy | 2011

Alpha Asymmetry in Female Military Spouses Following Deployment

Ronald Jay Werner–Wilson; Joann Lianekhammy; Laura M. Frey; Trent S. Parker; Nathan D. Wood; Claire Kimberly; Martha S. Perry; Kristyn M. Blackburn; Lauren W. Smith; Katherine Terrana; Jillian Pucket; Melissa Dalton

In the present investigation the authors incorporate a social/affective neuroscience approach to assess the relationship between deployment and electrical brain activity of women married to service members. In particular, the researchers examined influences associated with alpha asymmetry over the frontal cortex. Results suggest that length of time since returning from deployment and symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder are associated with greater activity in the right hemisphere of the brain which is associated with a tendency to withdraw from an uncomfortable stimulus.


Social Work in Health Care | 2017

Self-care among healthcare social workers: An exploratory study

J. Jay Miller; Joann Lianekhammy; Natalie D. Pope; Jacquelyn Lee; Erlene Grise-Owens

ABSTRACT Despite growing interest in self-care, few studies have explicitly examined the self-care practices of healthcare social workers. This exploratory study investigated self-care among practitioners (N = 138) in one southeastern state. Overall, data suggest that healthcare social workers only moderately engaged in self-care. Additionally, analyses revealed significant differences in self-care practices by financial stability, overall health, and licensure status, respectively. Interestingly, perceived health status and current financial situation were significant predictors for overall self-care practices. After a brief review of the literature, this narrative will explicate findings, elucidate discussion points, identify salient implications, and conclude with areas for future research.


American Journal of Family Therapy | 2015

World of Warcraft Widows: Spousal Perspectives of Online Gaming and Relationship Outcomes

Joann Lianekhammy; Judy van de Venne

A content and thematic analysis was conducted using forum messages from websites developed for wives of online gamers who play World of Warcraft. Blog posts from 50 women describing conflict in their marital relationship involving their husbands online game play were analyzed. Four overarching themes were identified and discussed in terms of the impact of online gaming on family functioning and relationships, emotional outcomes, and coping mechanisms. Results of ensuing issues arising from excessive gaming as perceived by the non-gaming spouse and ways in which they cope with these issues are shared.


Social Work in Health Care | 2018

Exploring the self-compassion of health-care social workers: How do they fare?

Joann Lianekhammy; J. Jay Miller; Jacquelyn Lee; Natalie D. Pope; Sheila Barnhart; Erlene Grise-Owens

ABSTRACT Indubitably, the challenges facing health-care social workers are becoming increasingly complex. Whilst these problematic professional circumstances compound the need for self-compassion among health-care social workers, few studies, if any, have explicitly examined self-compassion among this practitioner group. This cross-sectional study explored self-compassion among a sample of practitioners (N = 138) in one southeastern state. Results indicate that health-care social workers in this sample engage in self-compassion only moderately. Further, occupational and demographic/life characteristics (e.g., age, years practicing social work, average hours worked per week, health status, and relationship status, among others) are able to predict self-compassion scores. After a terse review of relevant literature, this paper will explicate findings from this study, discuss relevant points derived from said findings, and identify salient implication for health-care social work praxis.


Contemporary Family Therapy | 2015

Adolescents’ and Parents’ Expression of Empathy: A Social Neuroscience Perspective

Jillian M. Hawks; Trent S. Parker; Ronald Jay Werner-Wilson; Nichole Huff; Joann Lianekhammy


Contemporary Family Therapy | 2014

Alpha to Omega: A Neurological Analysis of Marital Conflict in a Pilot Study

Claire Kimberly; Ronald Jay Werner-Wilson; Trent S. Parker; Joann Lianekhammy

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Claire Kimberly

University of Southern Mississippi

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Jacquelyn Lee

University of North Carolina at Wilmington

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Yang Jiang

University of Kentucky

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Adam Lawson

Eastern Kentucky University

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