Marie Uhlig
Max Planck Society
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Marie Uhlig.
NeuroImage | 2013
Marie Uhlig; Merle T. Fairhurst; Peter E. Keller
In listening to multi-part music, auditory streams can be attended to either selectively or globally. More specifically, musicians rely on prioritized integrative attention which incorporates both stream segregation and integration to assess the relationship between concurrent parts. In this fMRI study, we used a piano duet to investigate which factors of a leader-follower relationship between parts grab the listeners attention and influence the perception of multi-part music. The factors considered included the structural relationship between melody and accompaniment as well as the temporal relationship (asynchronies) between parts. The structural relationship was manipulated by cueing subjects to the part of the duet that had to be prioritized. The temporal relationship was investigated by synthetically shifting the onset times of melody and accompaniment to either a consistent melody or accompaniment lead. The relative importance of these relationship factors for segregation and integration as attentional mechanisms was of interest. Participants were required to listen to the cued part and then globally assess if the prioritized stream was leading or following compared to the second stream. Results show that the melody is judged as more leading when it is globally temporally ahead whereas the accompaniment is not judged as leading when it is ahead. This bias may be a result of the interaction of salience of both leader-follower relationship factors. Interestingly, the corresponding interaction effect in the fMRI-data yields an inverse bias for melody in a fronto-parietal attention network. Corresponding parameter estimates within the dlPFC and right IPS show higher neural activity for attending to melody when listening to a performance without a temporal leader, pointing to an interaction of salience of both factors in listening to music. Both frontal and parietal activation implicate segregation and integration mechanisms and a top-down influence of salience on attention and the perception of leader-follower relations in music.
Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2018
Yoon Ju Bae; Janis Reinelt; Jeffrey Netto; Marie Uhlig; Anja Willenberg; Uta Ceglarek; Arno Villringer; Joachim Thiery; Michael Gaebler; Juergen Kratzsch
BACKGROUND Stress activates the central nervous, the autonomic nervous, and the endocrine system. This study aimed to (1) test the usability of salivary cortisone in a standardized psychosocial stressor, (2) create a comprehensive profile of hormonal responses to determine laboratory parameters with high discriminatory power, and (3) analyze their association with psychometric and autonomic stress measures. METHODS Healthy young men (18-35 years) completed either the Trier Social Stress Test (TSST) (n = 33) or a Placebo-TSST (n = 34). Blood and saliva were collected at 14 time points along with state-anxiety (STAI) and heart rate. Serum steroids (cortisol*, cortisone*, dehydroepiandrosterone-sulfate, androstenedione*, progesterone*, 17-hydroxyprogesterone*, testosterone, estradiol*, aldosterone*), salivary cortisol* and cortisone*, copeptin*, adrenocorticoptropic hormone*, corticosteroid-binding globulin, and salivary alpha-amylase* were analyzed. We used mixed-design ANOVAs to test group differences, receiver operator characteristic (ROC) curve analyses to assess the discriminatory power of each measure, and Spearman correlation analyses to probe the association between measures. RESULTS The largest area under the ROC curve was observed in salivary cortisone at 20 min after the end of the TSST (AUC = 0.909 ± 0.044, p < 0.0001). Significant time-by-group interactions were found in the parameters marked with * above, indicating stress-induced increases. The peak response of salivary cortisone was significantly associated with those of STAI (rho = 0.477, p = 0.016) and heart rate (rho = 0.699, p < 0.0001) in the TSST group. CONCLUSION Our study found salivary cortisone to be a stress biomarker with high discriminatory power and significant correlations with subjective and autonomic stress measures. Our results can inform future stress studies of sampling time for different laboratory parameters.
NeuroImage | 2018
Deniz Kumral; Herma Lina Schaare; Frauke Beyer; Janis Reinelt; Marie Uhlig; Franziskus Liem; Leonie Lampe; Anahit Babayan; Andrea Reiter; Miray Erbey; Josefin Roebbig; Markus Loeffler; Michael Schroeter; D. Husser; Anja Veronica Witte; Arno Villringer; Michael Gaebler
&NA; Resting heart rate variability (HRV), an index of parasympathetic cardioregulation and an individual trait marker related to mental and physical health, decreases with age. Previous studies have associated resting HRV with structural and functional properties of the brain – mainly in cortical midline and limbic structures. We hypothesized that aging affects the relationship between resting HRV and brain structure and function. In 388 healthy subjects of three age groups (140 younger: 26.0 ± 4.2 years, 119 middle‐aged: 46.3 ± 6.2 years, 129 older: 66.9 ± 4.7 years), gray matter volume (GMV, voxel‐based morphometry) and resting state functional connectivity (eigenvector centrality mapping and exploratory seed‐based functional connectivity) were related to resting HRV, measured as the root mean square of successive differences (RMSSD). Confirming previous findings, resting HRV decreased with age. For HRV‐related GMV, there were no statistically significant differences between the age groups, nor similarities across all age groups. In whole‐brain functional connectivity analyses, we found an age‐dependent association between resting HRV and eigenvector centrality in the bilateral ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC), driven by the younger adults. Across all age groups, HRV was positively correlated with network centrality in the bilateral posterior cingulate cortex. Seed‐based functional connectivity analysis using the vmPFC cluster revealed an HRV‐related cortico‐cerebellar network in younger but not in middle‐aged or older adults. Our results indicate that the decrease of HRV with age is accompanied by changes in functional connectivity along the cortical midline. This extends our knowledge of brain‐body interactions and their changes over the lifespan.
bioRxiv | 2017
Natacha Mendes; Sabine Oligschlaeger; Mark E. Lauckner; Johannes Golchert; Julia M. Huntenburg; Marcel Falkiewicz; Melissa Ellamil; Sarah Krause; Blazej M. Baczkowski; Roberto Cozatl; Anastasia Osoianu; Deniz Kumral; Jared Pool; Laura Golz; Maria Dreyer; Philipp Haueis; Rebecca Jost; Yelyzaveta Kramarenko; Haakon G. Engen; Katharina Ohrnberger; Krzysztof J. Gorgolewski; Nicolas Farrugia; Anahit Babayan; Andrea Reiter; H. Lina Schaare; Janis Reinelt; Josefin Roebbig; Marie Uhlig; Miray Erbey; Michael Gaebler
The dataset enables exploration of higher-order cognitive faculties, self-generated mental experience, and personality features in relation to the intrinsic functional architecture of the brain. We provide multimodal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data and a broad set of state and trait phenotypic assessments: mind-wandering, personality traits, and cognitive abilities. Specifically, 194 healthy participants (between 20 and 75 years of age) filled out 31 questionnaires, performed 7 tasks, and reported 4 probes of in-scanner mind-wandering. The scanning session included four 15.5-min resting-state functional MRI runs using a multiband EPI sequence and a high-resolution structural scan using a 3D MP2RAGE sequence. This dataset constitutes one part of the MPI-Leipzig Mind-Brain-Body database.
bioRxiv | 2017
H. Lina Schaare; Shahrzad Kharabian Masouleh; Frauke Beyer; Deniz Kumral; Marie Uhlig; Janis Reinelt; Andrea Reiter; Leonie Lampe; Anahit Babayan; Miray Erbey; Josefin Roebbig; Matthias L. Schroeter; Hadas Okon-Singer; Karsten Mueller; Natacha Mendes; Daniel S. Margulies; A. Veronica Witte; Michael Gaebler; Arno Villringer
Objective To test whether elevated blood pressure (BP) relates to grey matter volume (GMV) changes in young adults who had not previously been diagnosed as hypertensive (systolic BP (SBP)/diastolic BP (DBP)≥140/90 mmHg). Methods We associated BP with GMV from structural 3 Tesla T1-weighted MRI of 423 healthy adults between 19-40 years (mean age=27.7±5.3 years, 177 women, SBP/DBP=123.2/73.4±12.2/8.5 mmHg). Data originated from four previously unpublished cross-sectional studies conducted in Leipzig, Germany. We performed voxel-based morphometry on each study separately and combined results in image-based meta-analyses (IBMA) to assess cumulative effects across studies. Resting BP was assigned to one of four categories: (1) SBP<120 and DBP<80 mmHg, (2) SBP 120-129 or DBP 80-84 mmHg, (3) SBP 130-139 or DBP 85-89 mmHg, (4) SBP≥140 or DBP≥90 mmHg. Results IBMA yielded: (a) lower regional GMV was correlated with higher peripheral BP; (b) lower GMV with higher BP when comparing individuals in sub-hypertensive categories 3 and 2, respectively, to those in category 1; (c) lower BP-related GMV was found in regions including hippocampus, amygdala, thalamus, frontal and parietal structures (e.g. precuneus). Conclusions BP≥120/80 mmHg was associated with lower GMV in regions that have previously been related to GM decline in older individuals with manifest hypertension. Our study shows that BP-associated GM alterations emerge continuously across the range of BP and earlier in adulthood than previously assumed. This suggests that treating hypertension or maintaining lower BP in early adulthood might be essential for preventing the pathophysiological cascade of asymptomatic cerebrovascular disease to symptomatic end-organ damage, such as stroke or dementia.
18th Annual Meeting of the Organization for Human Brain Mapping | 2012
Marie Uhlig; Merle T. Fairhurst; Peter E. Keller
12th International Conference on Music Perception and Cognition | 2012
Marie Uhlig; Tim Schroeder; Peter E. Keller
The Neurosciences and Music IV: Learning and Memory | 2011
Marie Uhlig; Peter E. Keller
Society for Neuroscience, Annual Meeting 2011 | 2011
Marie Uhlig; Merle T. Fairhurst; Peter E. Keller
IMPRS Neurocom Summer School | 2011
Marie Uhlig; Peter E. Keller