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Dive into the research topics where Julie Vidal is active.

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Featured researches published by Julie Vidal.


Brain and Cognition | 2012

Response Inhibition in Adults and Teenagers: Spatiotemporal Differences in the Prefrontal Cortex.

Julie Vidal; Travis Mills; Elizabeth W. Pang; Margot J. Taylor

Inhibition is a core executive function reliant on the frontal lobes that shows protracted maturation through to adulthood. We investigated the spatiotemporal characteristics of response inhibition during a visual go/no-go task in 14 teenagers and 14 adults using magnetoencephalography (MEG) and a contrast between two no-go experimental conditions designed to eliminate a common confound in earlier studies comparing go with no-go trials. Source analyses were performed using an event-related beamformer algorithm with co-registered individual structural MRIs. Performance was controlled to be similar across subjects. Analyses of MEG data revealed bilateral prefrontal activity in the inhibitory condition for both age groups, but with different spatiotemporal patterns: around 300ms after stimulus onset in middle frontal gyri in teenagers vs. around 260ms in inferior frontal gyri in adults. Moreover, the inhibition of a prepotent motor response showed a stronger recruitment of the left hemisphere in teenagers than in adults and of the right hemisphere in adults than in teenagers. These findings provide high-resolution temporal and spatial information regarding response inhibition in adolescents compared to adults, independent of motor components and performance differences.


Autism | 2013

White matter and development in children with an autism spectrum disorder

Kathleen M. Mak-Fan; Drew Morris; Julie Vidal; Evdokia Anagnostou; Wendy Roberts; Margot J. Taylor

Recent research suggests that brain development follows an abnormal trajectory in children with autism spectrum disorders (ASD). The current study examined changes in diffusivity with age within defined white matter tracts in a group of typically developing children and a group of children with an ASD, aged 6 to 14 years. Age by group interactions were observed for frontal, long distant, interhemispheric and posterior tracts, for longitudinal, radial and mean diffusivity, but not for fractional anisotropy. In all cases, these measures of diffusivity decreased with age in the typically developing group, but showed little or no change in the ASD group. This supports the hypothesis of an abnormal developmental trajectory of white matter in this population, which could have profound effects on the development of neural connectivity and contribute to atypical cognitive development in children with ASD.


Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience | 2014

Neural mechanisms of inhibitory control continue to mature in adolescence

Anjili S. Vara; Elizabeth W. Pang; Julie Vidal; Evdokia Anagnostou; Margot J. Taylor

Highlights • Brain mechanisms involved in inhibitory control were examined in adults and teens.• No differences were seen on reaction time and accuracy for the Go/No-go tasks.• Adults showed the expected activation in right inferior frontal gyrus.• Teens showed a delayed and left dominant activation of inferior frontal gyri.• Teens also recruited temporal and parietal regions to support inhibitory processing.


Brain and Cognition | 2014

Neuromagnetic correlates of intra- and extra-dimensional set-shifting.

Anna Oh; Julie Vidal; Margot J. Taylor; Elizabeth W. Pang

Set-shifting is essential to cognitive flexibility and relies on frontal lobe function. Previous studies have mostly focused on feedback processes following shifting rather than set-shifting itself. We designed an MEG paradigm without feedback to directly investigate the neural correlates of set-shifting. Adults (n=16) matched one of two coloured images with a third stimulus, the target, by either the colour or shape dimension of the target. Half of the shift trials involved colour-to-colour or shape-to-shape (intra-dimensional: ID) shifting and the other half involved colour-to-shape or shape-to-colour (extra-dimensional: ED) shifting. MEG was continuously recorded on a 151 channel CTF system. We used beamforming to analyze responses to the first (shift) and the third (repeat) trials in each set. These trials were contrasted separately for ID and ED sets. Shift versus repeat trials showed larger MEG activations for intra-dimensional shifting in the right inferior frontal gyrus (BA 47), left medial frontal gyrus (BA 10) and right superior frontal gyrus (BA 9) as early as 100ms, and in left middle frontal gyrus (BA 11) between 250-500ms. Activations related to extra-dimensional shifting were detected in left inferior frontal gyrus (BA 44), left middle frontal gyrus (BA 11), and right middle frontal gyrus (BA 46) between 100ms and 350ms, followed by superior frontal gyrus (BA 8/BA 10) between 250-500ms. Intra-dimensional and extra-dimensional shifting also activated bilateral and right parietal areas, respectively. This study establishes the location and timing of frontal and parietal activations during an intra-dimensional versus extra-dimensional shifting task.


Cerebral Cortex | 2015

Coordinated Information Generation and Mental Flexibility: Large-Scale Network Disruption in Children with Autism

Bratislav Misic; Sam M. Doesburg; Zainab Fatima; Julie Vidal; Vasily A. Vakorin; Margot J. Taylor; Anthony R. McIntosh

Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) includes deficits in social cognition, communication, and executive function. Recent neuroimaging studies suggest that ASD disrupts the structural and functional organization of brain networks and, presumably, how they generate information. Here, we relate deficits in an aspect of cognitive control to network-level disturbances in information processing. We recorded magnetoencephalography while children with ASD and typically developing controls performed a set-shifting task designed to test mental flexibility. We used multiscale entropy (MSE) to estimate the rate at which information was generated in a set of sources distributed across the brain. Multivariate partial least-squares analysis revealed 2 distributed networks, operating at fast and slow time scales, that respond completely differently to set shifting in ASD compared with control children, indicating disrupted temporal organization within these networks. Moreover, when typically developing children engaged these networks, they achieved faster reaction times. When children with ASD engaged these networks, there was no improvement in performance, suggesting that the networks were ineffective in children with ASD. Our data demonstrate that the coordination and temporal organization of large-scale neural assemblies during the performance of cognitive control tasks is disrupted in children with ASD, contributing to executive function deficits in this group.


Molecular Autism | 2014

Is inhibitory control a 'no-go' in adolescents with autism spectrum disorder?

Anji S Vara; Elizabeth W. Pang; Krissy Doyle-Thomas; Julie Vidal; Margot J. Taylor; Evdokia Anagnostou

BackgroundAutism spectrum disorder (ASD) refers to a range of neurodevelopmental conditions characterized by social communication deficits, repetitive behaviours, and restrictive interests. Impaired inhibition has been suggested to exacerbate the core symptoms of ASD. This is particularly critical during adolescence when social skills are maturing to adult levels. Using magnetoencephalography (MEG), we identified the location and timing pattern of neural activity associated with inhibition in adolescents with autism, compared to typically developing adolescents.MethodsThe MEG data from 15 adolescents with ASD and 15 age-matched controls (13 to 17 years) were collected during a go/no-go task with inverse ratios of go/no-go trials in two conditions: an inhibition condition (1:2) and a baseline condition (2:1). No-go trials from the two conditions were analyzed using beamformer source localizations from 200u2009ms to 400u2009ms post-stimulus onset. Significant activations were determined using permutation testing.ResultsAdolescents with ASD recruited first the right middle frontal gyrus (200 to 250u2009ms) followed by the left postcentral gyrus (250 to 300u2009ms) and finally the left middle frontal and right medial frontal gyri (300 to 400u2009ms). Typically developing adolescents recruited first the left middle frontal gyrus (200 to 250u2009ms), followed by the left superior and inferior frontal gyri (250 to 300u2009ms), then the right middle temporal gyrus (300 to 350u2009ms), and finally the superior and precentral gyri and right inferior lobule (300 to 400u2009ms).ConclusionsAdolescents with ASD showed recruitment limited largely to the frontal cortex unlike typically developing adolescents who recruited parietal and temporal regions as well. These findings support the presence of an atypical, restricted inhibitory network in adolescents with ASD compared to controls.


Frontiers in Human Neuroscience | 2013

Inhibitory control and visuo-spatial reversibility in Piaget's seminal number conservation task: a high-density ERP study

Grégoire Borst; Grégory Simon; Julie Vidal; Olivier Houdé

The present high-density event-related potential (ERP) study on 13 adults aimed to determine whether number conservation relies on the ability to inhibit the overlearned length-equals-number strategy and then imagine the shortening of the row that was lengthened. Participants performed the number-conservation task and, after the EEG session, the mental imagery task. In the number-conservation task, first two rows with the same number of tokens and the same length were presented on a computer screen (COV condition) and then, the tokens in one of the two rows were spread apart (INT condition). Participants were instructed to determine whether the two rows had an identical number of tokens. In the mental imagery task, two rows with different lengths but the same number of tokens were presented and participants were instructed to imagine the tokens in the longer row aligning with the tokens in the shorter row. In the number-conservation task, we found that the amplitudes of the centro-parietal N2 and fronto-central P3 were higher in the INT than in the COV conditions. In addition, the differences in response times between the two conditions were correlated with the differences in the amplitudes of the fronto-central P3. In light of previous results reported on the number-conservation task in adults, the present results suggest that inhibition might be necessary to succeed the number-conservation task in adults even when the transformation of the length of one of the row is displayed. Finally, we also reported correlations between the speed at which participants could imagine the shortening of one of the row in the mental imagery task, the speed at which participants could determine that the two rows had the same number of tokens after the tokens in one of the row were spread apart and the latency of the late positive parietal component in the number-conservation task. Therefore, performing the number-conservation task might involve mental transformation processes in adults.


Neuropsychologia | 2018

Neural basis of functional fixedness during creative idea generation: An EEG study

Anaëlle Camarda; Émilie Salvia; Julie Vidal; Benoit Weil; Nicolas Poirel; Olivier Houdé; Grégoire Borst; Mathieu Cassotti

ABSTRACT Decades of problem solving and creativity research have converged to show that the ability to generate new and useful ideas can be blocked or impeded by intuitive biases leading to mental fixations. The present study aimed at investigating the neural bases of the processes involved in overcoming fixation effects during creative idea generation. Using the AU task adapted for EEG recording, we examined whether participants ability to provide original ideas was related to alpha power changes in both the frontal and temporo‐parietal regions. Critically, for half of the presented objects, the classical use of the object was primed orally, and a picture of the classical use was presented visually to increase functional fixedness (Fixation Priming condition). For the other half, only the name of the object and a picture of the object was provided to the participants (control condition). As expected, priming the classical use of an object before the generation of creative alternative uses of the object impeded participants performances in terms of remoteness. In the control condition, while the frontal alpha synchronization was maintained across all successive time windows in participants with high remoteness scores, the frontal alpha synchronization decreased in participants with low remoteness scores. In the Fixation Priming condition, in which functional fixedness was maximal, both participants with high and low remoteness scores maintained frontal alpha synchronization throughout the period preceding their answer. Whereas participants with high remoteness scores maintained alpha synchronization in the temporo‐parietal regions throughout the creative idea generation period, participants with low remoteness scores displayed alpha desynchronization in the same regions during this period. We speculate that individuals with high remoteness scores might generate more creative ideas than individuals with low remoteness scores because they rely more on internal semantic association and selection processes. HighlightsWe investigated the neural bases of the processes involved in overcoming a fixation.We used a new version of the AU task adapted for EEG recording.Priming the classical use of an object impeded creative performances.Creativity was related to alpha power changes in frontal and parietal regions.


Developmental Psychology | 2016

The forest, the trees, and the leaves: Differences of processing across development.

Claire-Sara Krakowski; Nicolas Poirel; Julie Vidal; Margot Roell; Arlette Pineau; Grégoire Borst; Olivier Houdé

To act and think, children and adults are continually required to ignore irrelevant visual information to focus on task-relevant items. As real-world visual information is organized into structures, we designed a feature visual search task containing 3-level hierarchical stimuli (i.e., local shapes that constituted intermediate shapes that formed the global figure) that was presented to 112 participants aged 5, 6, 9, and 21 years old. This task allowed us to explore (a) which level is perceptively the most salient at each age (i.e., the fastest detected level) and (b) what kind of attentional processing occurs for each level across development (i.e., efficient processing: detection time does not increase with the number of stimuli on the display; less efficient processing: detection time increases linearly with the growing number of distractors). Results showed that the global level was the most salient at 5 years of age, whereas the global and intermediate levels were both salient for 9-year-olds and adults. Interestingly, at 6 years of age, the intermediate level was the most salient level. Second, all participants showed an efficient processing of both intermediate and global levels of hierarchical stimuli, and a less efficient processing of the local level, suggesting a local disadvantage rather than a global advantage in visual search. The cognitive cost for selecting the local target was higher for 5- and 6-year-old children compared to 9-year-old children and adults. These results are discussed with regards to the development of executive control. (PsycINFO Database Record


Journal of Educational Psychology | 2013

Inhibitory Control Is Needed for the Resolution of Arithmetic Word Problems: A Developmental Negative Priming Study.

Amélie Lubin; Julie Vidal; Céline Lanoë; Olivier Houdé; Grégoire Borst

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Grégoire Borst

Paris Descartes University

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Olivier Houdé

Paris Descartes University

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Evdokia Anagnostou

Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabilitation Hospital

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Amélie Lubin

Paris Descartes University

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Céline Lanoë

Paris Descartes University

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Nicolas Poirel

Paris Descartes University

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Olivier Houdé

Paris Descartes University

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