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Featured researches published by M.S. Roudas.


Human Brain Mapping | 2000

Lateralized Automatic Auditory Processing of Phonetic Versus Musical Information: A PET Study

Mari Tervaniemi; S. V. Medvedev; Kimmo Alho; Pakhomov Sv; M.S. Roudas; T. L. van Zuijen; Risto Näätänen

Previous positron emission tomography (PET) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies show that during attentive listening, processing of phonetic information is associated with higher activity in the left auditory cortex than in the right auditory cortex while the opposite is true for musical information. The present PET study determined whether automatically activated neural mechanisms for phonetic and musical information are lateralized. To this end, subjects engaged in a visual word classification task were presented with phonetic sound sequences consisting of frequent (P = 0.8) and infrequent (P = 0.2) phonemes and with musical sound sequences consisting of frequent (P = 0.8) and infrequent (P = 0.2) chords. The phonemes and chords were matched in spectral complexity as well as in the magnitude of frequency difference between the frequent and infrequent sounds (/e/ vs. /o/; A major vs. A minor). In addition, control sequences, consisting of either frequent (/e/; A major) or infrequent sounds (/o/; A minor) were employed in separate blocks. When sound sequences consisted of intermixed frequent and infrequent sounds, automatic phonetic processing was lateralized to the left hemisphere and musical to the right hemisphere. This lateralization, however, did not occur in control blocks with one type of sound (frequent or infrequent). The data thus indicate that automatic activation of lateralized neuronal circuits requires sound comparison based on short‐term sound representations. Hum. Brain Mapping 10:74–79, 2000.


Cognitive Brain Research | 1999

Selective tuning of the left and right auditory cortices during spatially directed attention.

Kimmo Alho; Sviatoslav Medvedev; S.V. Pakhomov; M.S. Roudas; Mari Tervaniemi; Kalevi Reinikainen; Thomas Zeffiro; Risto Näätänen

Effects of spatially directed auditory attention on human brain activity, as indicated by changes in regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF), were measured with positron emission tomography (PET). Subjects attended to left-ear tones, right-ear tones, or foveal visual stimuli presented at rapid rates in three concurrent stimulus sequences. It was found that attending selectively to the right-ear input activated the auditory cortex predominantly in the left hemisphere and vice versa. This selective tuning of the left and right auditory cortices according to the direction of attention was presumably controlled by executive attention mechanisms of the frontal cortex, where enhanced activation during auditory attention was also observed.


Experimental Brain Research | 2005

Comparison of brain activation after sustained non-fatiguing and fatiguing muscle contraction: a positron emission tomography study

Alexander Korotkov; Sasa Radovanovic; Milos Ljubisavljevic; Eugene Lyskov; Galina Kataeva; M.S. Roudas; Pakhomov Sv; Johan Thunberg; Sviatoslav Medvedev; Håkan Johansson

The concept of fatigue refers to a class of acute effects that can impair motor performance, and not to a single mechanism. A great deal is known about the peripheral mechanisms underlying the process of fatigue, but our knowledge of the roles of the central structures in that process is still very limited. During fatigue, it has been shown that peripheral apparatus is capable of generating adequate force while central structures become insufficient/sub-optimal in driving them. This is known as central fatigue, and it can vary between muscles and different tasks. Fatigue induced by submaximal isometric contraction may have a greater central component than fatigue induced by prolonged maximal efforts. We studied the changes in regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) of brain structures after sustained isometric muscle contractions of different submaximal force levels and of different durations, and compared them with the conditions observed when the sustained muscle contraction becomes fatiguing. Changes in cortical activity, as indicated by changes in rCBF, were measured using positron emission tomography (PET). Twelve subjects were studied under four conditions: (1) rest condition; (2) contraction of the m. biceps brachii at 30% of MVC, sustained for 60 s; (3) contraction at 30% of MVC, sustained for 120 s, and; (4) contraction at 50% of MVC, sustained for 120 s. The level of rCBF in the activated cortical areas gradually increased with the level and duration of muscle contraction. The fatiguing condition was associated with predominantly contralateral activation of the primary motor (MI) and the primary and secondary somatosensory areas (SI and SII), the somatosensory association area (SAA), and the temporal areas AA and AI. The supplementary motor area (SMA) and the cingula were activated bilaterally. The results show increased cortical activation, confirming that increased effort aimed at maintaining force in muscle fatigue is associated with increased activation of cortical neurons. At the same time, the activation spread to several cortical areas and probably reflects changes in both excitatory and inhibitory cortical circuits. It is suggested that further studies aimed at controlling afferent input from the muscle during fatigue may allow a more precise examination of the roles of each particular region involved in the processing of muscle fatigue.


Cognitive Brain Research | 2003

Hemispheric lateralization of cerebral blood-flow changes during selective listening to dichotically presented continuous speech.

Kimmo Alho; Victor A. Vorobyev; S. V. Medvedev; Pakhomov Sv; M.S. Roudas; Mari Tervaniemi; Titia L. van Zuijen; Risto Näätänen

Regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) was measured with positron emission tomography (PET) while subjects were selectively listening to continuous speech delivered to one ear and ignoring concurrent speech delivered to the opposite ear, as well as concurrent text or letter strings running on a screen. rCBF patterns associated with selective listening either to the left-ear or right-ear speech message were compared with each other and with rCBF patterns in two visual-attention conditions in which the subjects ignored both speech messages and either read the text or discriminated the meaningless letter strings moving on the screen. Attention to either speech message was associated with enhanced activity in the superior temporal cortex of the language-dominant left hemisphere, as well as in the superior and middle temporal cortex of the right hemisphere suggesting enhanced processing of prosodic features in the attended speech. Moreover, enhanced activity during attention to either speech message was observed in the right parietal areas known to have an important role in directing spatial attention. Evidence was also found for attentional tuning of the left and right auditory cortices to select information from the contralateral auditory hemispace.


Experimental Brain Research | 2002

Comparison of brain activity during different types of proprioceptive inputs: a positron emission tomography study

Sasa Radovanovic; Alexander Korotkov; Milos Ljubisavljevic; Eugene Lyskov; Johan Thunberg; Galina Kataeva; S. G. Danko; M.S. Roudas; Pakhomov Sv; Sviatoslav Medvedev; Håkan Johansson


International Journal of Psychophysiology | 2004

PET study of brain maintenance of verbal creative activity

N.P. Bechtereva; Alexander Korotkov; Pakhomov Sv; M.S. Roudas; M. G. Starchenko; S. V. Medvedev


Cognitive Brain Research | 2004

Linguistic processing in visual and modality-nonspecific brain areas: PET recordings during selective attention

Victor A. Vorobyev; Kimmo Alho; S. V. Medvedev; Pakhomov Sv; M.S. Roudas; Julia M Rutkovskaya; Mari Tervaniemi; Titia L. van Zuijen; Risto Näätänen


Neuroscience Letters | 2002

Changes in human regional cerebral blood flow following hypertonic saline induced experimental muscle pain: a positron emission tomography study

Alexander Korotkov; Milos Ljubisavljevic; Johan Thunberg; Galina Kataeva; M.S. Roudas; Pakhomov Sv; Sasa Radovanovic; Eugene Lyskov; Sviatoslav Medvedev; Håkan Johansson


NeuroImage | 1996

Direction of auditory attention affects hemispheric distribution of brain activity: a PET study

M.S. Roudas; Kimmo Alho; S. V. Medvedev; Risto Näätänen; S.V. Pakhomov; K. Reinikainen; Mari Tervaniemi


NeuroImage | 1996

The study of the human brain processing of different characteristics of visually presented words by the position emission tomography

S. V. Medvedev; N.P. Bechtereva; V.A. Vorobyev; S.V. Pakhomov; M.S. Roudas

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Pakhomov Sv

Russian Academy of Sciences

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S. V. Medvedev

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Kimmo Alho

University of Helsinki

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Alexander Korotkov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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S.V. Pakhomov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Galina Kataeva

Russian Academy of Sciences

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