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Dive into the research topics where Leandro L. Di Stasi is active.

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Featured researches published by Leandro L. Di Stasi.


Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews | 2013

Saccadic velocity as an arousal index in naturalistic tasks.

Leandro L. Di Stasi; Andrés Catena; José J. Cañas; Stephen L. Macknik; Susana Martinez-Conde

Experimental evidence indicates that saccadic metrics vary with task difficulty and time-on-task in naturalistic scenarios. We explore historical and recent findings on the correlation of saccadic velocity with task parameters in clinical, military, and everyday situations, and its potential role in ergonomics. We moreover discuss the hypothesis that changes in saccadic velocity indicate variations in sympathetic nervous system activation; that is, variations in arousal.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2014

Highly informative natural scene regions increase microsaccade production during visual scanning.

Michael B. McCamy; Jorge Otero-Millan; Leandro L. Di Stasi; Stephen L. Macknik; Susana Martinez-Conde

Classical image statistics, such as contrast, entropy, and the correlation between central and nearby pixel intensities, are thought to guide ocular fixation targeting. However, these statistics are not necessarily task relevant and therefore do not provide a complete picture of the relationship between informativeness and ocular targeting. Moreover, it is not known whether either informativeness or classical image statistics affect microsaccade production; thus, the role of microsaccades in information acquisition is also unknown. The objective quantification of the informativeness of a scene region is a major challenge, because it can vary with both image features and the task of the viewer. Thus, previous definitions of informativeness suffered from subjectivity and inconsistency across studies. Here we developed an objective measure of informativeness based on fixation consistency across human observers, which accounts for both bottom-up and top-down influences in ocular targeting. We then analyzed fixations in more versus less informative image regions in relation to classical statistics. Observers generated more microsaccades on more informative than less informative image regions, and such regions also exhibited low redundancy in their classical statistics. Increased microsaccade production was not explained by increased fixation duration, suggesting that the visual system specifically uses microsaccades to heighten information acquisition from informative regions.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2014

Task difficulty in mental arithmetic affects microsaccadic rates and magnitudes

Eva Siegenthaler; Francisco M. Costela; Michael B. McCamy; Leandro L. Di Stasi; Jorge Otero-Millan; Andreas Sonderegger; Rudolf Groner; Stephen L. Macknik; Susana Martinez-Conde

Microsaccades are involuntary, small‐magnitude saccadic eye movements that occur during attempted visual fixation. Recent research has found that attention can modulate microsaccade dynamics, but few studies have addressed the effects of task difficulty on microsaccade parameters, and those have obtained contradictory results. Further, no study to date has investigated the influence of task difficulty on microsaccade production during the performance of non‐visual tasks. Thus, the effects of task difficulty on microsaccades, isolated from sensory modality, remain unclear. Here we investigated the effects of task difficulty on microsaccades during the performance of a non‐visual, mental arithmetic task with two levels of complexity. We found that microsaccade rates decreased and microsaccade magnitudes increased with increased task difficulty. We propose that changes in microsaccade rates and magnitudes with task difficulty are mediated by the effects of varying attentional inputs on the rostral superior colliculus activity map.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2013

Microsaccade and drift dynamics reflect mental fatigue.

Leandro L. Di Stasi; Michael B. McCamy; Andrés Catena; Stephen L. Macknik; José J. Cañas; Susana Martinez-Conde

Our eyes are always in motion. Even during periods of relative fixation we produce so‐called ‘fixational eye movements’, which include microsaccades, drift and tremor. Mental fatigue can modulate saccade dynamics, but its effects on microsaccades and drift are unknown. Here we asked human subjects to perform a prolonged and demanding visual search task (a simplified air traffic control task), with two difficulty levels, under both free‐viewing and fixation conditions. Saccadic and microsaccadic velocity decreased with time‐on‐task whereas drift velocity increased, suggesting that ocular instability increases with mental fatigue. Task difficulty did not influence eye movements despite affecting reaction times, performance errors and subjective complexity ratings. We propose that variations in eye movement dynamics with time‐on‐task are consistent with the activation of the brains sleep centers in correlation with mental fatigue. Covariation of saccadic and microsaccadic parameters moreover supports the hypothesis of a common generator for microsaccades and saccades. We conclude that changes in fixational and saccadic dynamics can indicate mental fatigue due to time‐on‐task, irrespective of task complexity. These findings suggest that fixational eye movement dynamics have the potential to signal the nervous systems activation state.


Sleep Medicine Reviews | 2015

Sleep disturbances of adult women suffering from fibromyalgia: A systematic review of observational studies

Carolina Diaz-Piedra; Leandro L. Di Stasi; Carol M. Baldwin; Gualberto Buela-Casal; Andrés Catena

Although sleep complaints are often reported in patients with fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS), there is no conclusive evidence that these complaints represent symptomatic disorders of sleep physiology. Thus, the question of the role of sleep disturbances as an etiological or maintenance factor in FMS remains open. This study identifies the subjective and objective characteristics of sleep disturbances in adult women diagnosed with FMS. We carried out a systematic review of publications since 1990, the publication year of the American College of Rheumatology criteria of FMS. We selected empirical studies comparing sleep characteristics of adult women with FMS and healthy women or women with rheumatic diseases. We identified 42 articles. Patients with FMS were more likely to exhibit sleep complaints and also a less efficient, lighter and fragmented sleep. The evidence of a FMS signature on objective measures of sleep is inconsistent, however, as the majority of studies lacks statistical power. Current evidence cannot confirm the role played by sleep physiology in the pathogenesis or maintenance of FMS symptoms; nonetheless, it is clear that sleep disturbances are present in this syndrome.


Entertainment Computing | 2013

Evaluating mental workload while interacting with computer-generated artificial environments

Leandro L. Di Stasi; Adoración Antolí; José J. Cañas

Abstract The need to evaluate user behaviour and cognitive efforts when interacting with complex simulations plays a crucial role in many information and communications technologies. The aim of this paper is to propose the use of eye-related measures as indices of mental workload in complex tasks. An experiment was conducted using the FireChief® microworld in which user mental workload was manipulated by changing the interaction strategy required to perform a common task. There were significant effects of the attentional state of users on visual scanning behavior. Longer fixations were found for the more demanding strategy, slower saccades were found as the time-on-task increased, and pupil diameter decreased when an environmental change was introduced. Questionnaire and performance data converged with the psychophysiological ones. These results provide additional empirical support for the ability of some eye-related indices to discriminate variations in the attentional state of the user in visual–dynamic complex tasks and show their potential diagnostic capacity in the field of applied ergonomics.


Psychophysiology | 2015

Task complexity modulates pilot electroencephalographic activity during real flights

Leandro L. Di Stasi; Carolina Diaz-Piedra; Juan Suárez; Michael B. McCamy; Susana Martinez-Conde; Joaquín Roca-Dorda; Andrés Catena

Most research connecting task performance and neural activity to date has been conducted in laboratory conditions. Thus, field studies remain scarce, especially in extreme conditions such as during real flights. Here, we investigated the effects of flight procedures of varied complexity on the in-flight EEG activity of military helicopter pilots. Flight procedural complexity modulated the EEG power spectrum: highly demanding procedures (i.e., takeoff and landing) were associated with higher EEG power in the higher frequency bands, whereas less demanding procedures (i.e., flight exercises) were associated with lower EEG power over the same frequency bands. These results suggest that EEG recordings may help to evaluate an operators cognitive performance in challenging real-life scenarios, and thus could aid in the prevention of catastrophic events.


Chronobiology International | 2014

Chronotype-dependent circadian rhythmicity of driving safety

Carlos Del Rio-Bermudez; Carolina Diaz-Piedra; Andrés Catena; Gualberto Buela-Casal; Leandro L. Di Stasi

Among the factors associated with driving safety, sleep-related variables constitute a leading cause of road accidents. Circadian fluctuations of driver’s somnolence has been previously linked to road safety. However, the role of chronotype in this relationship has been poorly investigated. Thus, the aim of the present work was to address whether driving performance is influenced by circadian patterns, in turn modulated by the driver’s chronotype and the time of day (i.e. synchrony effect). We assessed 47 healthy young adults with specific chronotypes in several simulated driving sessions, both in the morning and in the evening. We collected driving performance data, along with self-reported levels of activation prior to each driving session and other sleep-related variables. Participants drove less safely when testing times took place outside their optimal time of day, as determined by their chronotype and confirmed by self-reported levels of activation. These differences were more pronounced in the morning, when morning types shown a better driving performance. Our results suggest that chronotype plays an important role as a modulator of the relationship between the time of day and driving safety. Therefore, it is necessary to acknowledge this variable in theoretical models of driving behavior, and for the improvement of occupational accidents prevention programs.


Traffic Injury Prevention | 2011

Effect of directional speech warnings on road hazard detection

Jesús Serrano; Leandro L. Di Stasi; Alberto Megías; Andrés Catena

Background: In the last 2 decades, cognitive science and the transportation psychology field have dedicated a lot of effort to designing advanced driver support systems. Verbal warning systems are increasingly being implemented in modern automobiles in an effort to increase road safety. Objective: The study presented here investigated the impact of directional speech alert messages on the participants’ speed to judge whether or not naturalistic road scenes depicted a situation of impending danger. Method: Thirty-eight volunteers performed a computer-based key-press reaction time task. Results: Findings indicated that semantic content of verbal warning signals can be used for increasing driving safety and improving hazard detection. Furthermore, the classical result regarding signal accuracy is confirmed: directional informative speech messages lead to faster hazard detection compared to drivers who received a high rate of false alarms. Conclusion: Notwithstanding some study limitations (lack of driver experience and low ecological validity), this evidence could provide important information for the specification of future Human-Machine-interaction (HMI) design guidelines.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Abnormal Capillary Vasodynamics Contribute to Ictal Neurodegeneration in Epilepsy

Rocío Leal-Campanario; Luis Alarcon-Martinez; Hector Rieiro; Susana Martinez-Conde; Tugba Alarcon-Martinez; Xiuli Zhao; Jonathan LaMee; Pamela J. Osborn Popp; Michael E. Calhoun; Juan Ignacio Arribas; Alexander Schlegel; Leandro L. Di Stasi; Jong M. Rho; Landon Inge; Jorge Otero-Millan; David M. Treiman; Stephen L. Macknik

Seizure-driven brain damage in epilepsy accumulates over time, especially in the hippocampus, which can lead to sclerosis, cognitive decline, and death. Excitotoxicity is the prevalent model to explain ictal neurodegeneration. Current labeling technologies cannot distinguish between excitotoxicity and hypoxia, however, because they share common molecular mechanisms. This leaves open the possibility that undetected ischemic hypoxia, due to ictal blood flow restriction, could contribute to neurodegeneration previously ascribed to excitotoxicity. We tested this possibility with Confocal Laser Endomicroscopy (CLE) and novel stereological analyses in several models of epileptic mice. We found a higher number and magnitude of NG2+ mural-cell mediated capillary constrictions in the hippocampus of epileptic mice than in that of normal mice, in addition to spatial coupling between capillary constrictions and oxidative stressed neurons and neurodegeneration. These results reveal a role for hypoxia driven by capillary blood flow restriction in ictal neurodegeneration.

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Susana Martinez-Conde

SUNY Downstate Medical Center

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Stephen L. Macknik

Barrow Neurological Institute

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Michael B. McCamy

Barrow Neurological Institute

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