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Dive into the research topics where Manuel Martín-Loeches is active.

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Featured researches published by Manuel Martín-Loeches.


Human Brain Mapping | 2004

Automatic attention to emotional stimuli: Neural correlates

Luis Carretié; José A. Hinojosa; Manuel Martín-Loeches; Francisco Mercado; Manuel Tapia

We investigated the capability of emotional and nonemotional visual stimulation to capture automatic attention, an aspect of the interaction between cognitive and emotional processes that has received scant attention from researchers. Event‐related potentials were recorded from 37 subjects using a 60‐electrode array, and were submitted to temporal and spatial principal component analyses to detect and quantify the main components, and to source localization software (LORETA) to determine their spatial origin. Stimuli capturing automatic attention were of three types: emotionally positive, emotionally negative, and nonemotional pictures. Results suggest that initially (P1: 105 msec after stimulus), automatic attention is captured by negative pictures, and not by positive or nonemotional ones. Later (P2: 180 msec), automatic attention remains captured by negative pictures, but also by positive ones. Finally (N2: 240 msec), attention is captured only by positive and nonemotional stimuli. Anatomically, this sequence is characterized by decreasing activation of the visual association cortex (VAC) and by the growing involvement, from dorsal to ventral areas, of the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC). Analyses suggest that the ACC and not the VAC is responsible for experimental effects described above. Intensity, latency, and location of neural activity related to automatic attention thus depend clearly on the stimulus emotional content and on its associated biological importance. Hum. Brain Mapp. 22:290–299, 2004.


Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience | 2001

Emotion and Attention Interaction Studied through Event-Related Potentials

Luis Carretié; Manuel Martín-Loeches; José A. Hinojosa; Francisco Mercado

Several studies on hemodynamic brain activity indicate that emotional visual stimuli elicit greater activation than neutral stimuli in attention-related areas such as the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and the visual association cortex (VAC). In order to explore the temporo-spatial characteristics of the interaction between attention and emotion, two processes characterized by involving short and rapid phases, event-related potentials (ERPs) were measured in 29 subjects using a 60-electrode array and the LORETA source localization software. A cue/target paradigm was employed in order to investigate both expectancy-related and input processing related attention. Four categories of stimuli were presented to subjects: positive arousing, negative arousing, relaxing, and neutral. Three attention-related components were finally analyzed: N280pre (from pretarget ERPs), P200post and P340post (both from posttarget ERPs). N280pre had a prefrontal focus (ACC and/or medial prefrontal cortex) and presented significantly lower amplitudes in response to cues announcing negative targets. This result suggests a greater capacity of nonaversive stimuli to generate expectancy-related attention. P200post and P340post were both elicited in the VAC, and showed their highest amplitudes in response to negative- and to positive-arousing stimuli, respectively. The origin of P200post appears to be located dorsally with respect to the clear ventral-stream origin of P340post. The conjunction of temporal and spatial characteristics of P200post and P340post leads to the deduction that input processing-related attention associated with emotional visual stimulation involves an initial, rapid, and brief early attentional response oriented to rapid motor action, being more prominent towards negative stimulation. This is followed by a slower but longer late attentional response oriented to deeper processing, elicited to a greater extent by appetitive stimulation.


Brain and Language | 1999

The Recognition Potential: An ERP Index of Lexical Access ☆

Manuel Martín-Loeches; José A. Hinojosa; Gregorio Gómez-Jarabo; Francisco J. Rubia

Recognition potential (RP) is a brain electrical response that appears when a subject views recognizable images of words. However, it has yet to be determined whether the processes reflected by RP are related to orthographic or to semantic analysis. This study aimed to resolve this question by studying the RP evoked by orthographically correct stimuli that were devoid of meaning. Results showed RP not only to this type of stimuli, but also to others achieving lower levels in the reading process. Strikingly, however, the RP amplitude significantly differed in parallel with the levels of the reading processes attained by the stimuli, the amplitude of the RP progressively increasing as the level approached the semantic one, which showed the highest amplitude. These results not only confirm the replicability of RP, but also its promise of potential usefulness in the study and assessment of language perception.


Brain Research | 2006

Semantics prevalence over syntax during sentence processing: A brain potential study of noun–adjective agreement in Spanish

Manuel Martín-Loeches; Roland Nigbur; Pilar Casado; Annette Hohlfeld; Werner Sommer

A review of the literature about the interplay of syntax and semantics, using event-related brain potentials (ERPs), revealed that the results are highly heterogeneous, owing to several possible variables. An experiment was conducted with Spanish sentences that factorially combined syntactic and semantic violations in the same sentence-intermediate adjective and controlled for working memory demands, variables that in previous studies have rarely been taken into consideration. Violations consisted in noun-adjective number or gender disagreements (syntactic violation), noun-adjective semantic incompatibility (semantic violation), or both (combined violation). The N400 to semantic violations was unaffected by additional syntactic violations. The P600/SPS component, considered to reflect syntactic processes, was elicited by both single syntactic and semantic violations but seemed to be diminished in combined violations relative to single syntactic violations. These results suggest that under the conditions of the present experiment semantic information may have a prevailing role over syntactic information.


Brain and Language | 2001

Event-Related Potentials and Semantics: An Overview and an Integrative Proposal ☆

José A. Hinojosa; Manuel Martín-Loeches; Francisco J. Rubia

Event-related potentials have shown to be a valuable tool when studying language processing. In this review we focus on the literature that deals with semantic processing. Thus, we review studies concerning the classic semantic-related ERP component, the N400, those concerning the recently described recognition potential (RP), and studies that have attempted to identify brain activations related to semantic processing without focusing on specific ERP components. From the available data we provide an integrative proposal. According to this proposal, ERPs are clear indexes of the three subprocesses presumably involved in semantic comprehension. ERPs would provide, additionally, information about the time course of such subprocesses.


Neuropsychologia | 2001

Functional differences in the semantic processing of concrete and abstract words

Manuel Martín-Loeches; José A. Hinojosa; Carlos Fernández-Frı́as; Francisco J. Rubia

There is considerable debate as to whether the semantic system is a unitary one in which meanings are available in a peculiar, perceptual-free format, or whether it is functionally segregated into anatomically discrete, modality-specific but semantic regions. In the former case, concrete and abstract words should not differ in the amount of activation of semantic areas. Neuroimaging studies in this field are, however, far from conclusive, and one reason for this may be that the degree of imageability of the stimuli - probably a crucial variable - has not been considered. Recognition Potential (RP) reflects semantic processing and appears to originate in basal extrastriate regions involved in semantic processing. In this study, we compared the RP of concrete and abstract words that actually differ in their degree of imageability. Results indicate that the semantic processing areas in which the RP originates display a higher activation for concrete (more imageable) material, but that abstract material also evokes a notably larger RP component compared with pseudowords or unpronounceable letter strings. Accordingly, the study appears to suggest that there is no full functional segregation of the semantic systems. Rather, our data support the existence of a semantic system that is specialised in concrete, imageable material, and that is also activated, though to a lower extent, by abstract material.


Journal of Anatomy | 2010

Human midsagittal brain shape variation: patterns, allometry and integration

Emiliano Bruner; Manuel Martín-Loeches; Roberto Colom

Midsagittal cerebral morphology provides a homologous geometrical reference for brain shape and cortical vs. subcortical spatial relationships. In this study, midsagittal brain shape variation is investigated in a sample of 102 humans, in order to describe and quantify the major patterns of correlation between morphological features, the effect of size and sex on general anatomy, and the degree of integration between different cortical and subcortical areas. The only evident pattern of covariation was associated with fronto‐parietal cortical bulging. The allometric component was weak for the cortical profile, but more robust for the posterior subcortical areas. Apparent sex differences were evidenced in size but not in brain shape. Cortical and subcortical elements displayed scarcely integrated changes, suggesting a modular separation between these two areas. However, a certain correlation was found between posterior subcortical and parietal cortical variations. These results should be directly integrated with information ranging from functional craniology to wiring organization, and with hypotheses linking brain shape and the mechanical properties of neurons during morphogenesis.


NeuroImage | 2008

Brain activation in discourse comprehension: a 3t fMRI study.

Manuel Martín-Loeches; Pilar Casado; Juan Antonio Hernández-Tamames; Juan Álvarez-Linera

To date a very small number of functional neuroimaging studies have specifically examined the effects of story coherence on brain activation using long narratives, a procedure fundamental to the study of global coherence. These studies, however, not only yielded notably divergent results, but also featured a number of caveats. It is the purpose of the present study to try to overcome some of these limitations. A left precuneus/posterior cingulate activation related to global coherence comprehension was in consonance with a part of previous literature. However, our most important results corresponded to left parietal regions (angular gyrus, BA 39), this diverging from the previous studies. Recent developments of the situational models of narrative comprehension could explain all these apparently inconsistent results. According to these, different situation models would be created as a function of the content of the narratives, which would yield in turn different patterns of brain activity. Our data also suggest that the same content might also give place to different situation models as a function of the degree of global coherence achieved by the reader or listener.


Schizophrenia Research | 2001

P300 amplitude as a possible correlate of frontal degeneration in schizophrenia

Manuel Martín-Loeches; Vicente Molina; Francisco Muñoz; José A. Hinojosa; Santiago Reig; Manuel Desco; Carlos Benito; Javier Sanz; Ainhoa Gabiri; Fernando Sarramea; Andrés Santos; Tomás Palomo

The existence of neurodegeneration is a debated issue in schizophrenia research. The P300 component of event-related electrical potentials (ERP) has been related to the different degree of damage to gray and white matter. This study explores the possible relationship between P300 amplitude and/or latency and the existence of degenerative processes in schizophrenia, by assessing its correlation with volume of sulcal CSF and duration of illness, as transversal indicators of neurodegeneration. Nineteen patients (14 males, 5 females) and 13 controls (6 males, 7 females) were studied with MRI and electrophysiological records (P300). The possible influence of sex and age at the time of the exploration was statistically controlled in both groups. The results show a significant negative correlation between P300 amplitude and prefrontal CSF volume in the patient group. A lower though still significant correlation was also found between P300 amplitude and duration of illness, whereas no correlation was found in the control group. These results support the hypothesis that P300 amplitude may be interpreted as a marker of neurodegeneration in schizophrenia.


Brain and Language | 2004

Electrophysiological Evidence of Automatic Early Semantic Processing.

José A. Hinojosa; Manuel Martín-Loeches; Francisco Muñoz; Pilar Casado; Miguel A. Pozo

This study investigates the automatic-controlled nature of early semantic processing by means of the Recognition Potential (RP), an event-related potential response that reflects lexical selection processes. For this purpose tasks differing in their processing requirements were used. Half of the participants performed a physical task involving a lower-upper case discrimination judgement (shallow processing requirements), whereas the other half carried out a semantic task, consisting in detecting animal names (deep processing requirements). Stimuli were identical in the two tasks. Reaction time measures revealed that the physical task was easier to perform than the semantic task. However, RP effects elicited by the physical and semantic tasks did not differ in either latency, amplitude, or topographic distribution. Thus, the results from the present study suggest that early semantic processing is automatically triggered whenever a linguistic stimulus enters the language processor.

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Dive into the Manuel Martín-Loeches's collaboration.

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Pilar Casado

Complutense University of Madrid

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José A. Hinojosa

Complutense University of Madrid

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Francisco Muñoz

Complutense University of Madrid

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Francisco J. Rubia

Complutense University of Madrid

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Werner Sommer

Humboldt University of Berlin

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Vicente Molina

University of Valladolid

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Carlos Fernández-Frı́as

Complutense University of Madrid

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Miguel A. Pozo

Complutense University of Madrid

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Gregorio Gómez-Jarabo

Autonomous University of Madrid

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