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Dive into the research topics where Martine Van Puyvelde is active.

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Featured researches published by Martine Van Puyvelde.


Tradition | 2014

Shall we dance? Music as a port of entrance to maternal-infant intersubjectivity in a context of postnatal depression.

Martine Van Puyvelde; Helena Rodrigues; Gerrit Loots; Lotta De Coster; Kevin Du Ville; Liesbeth Matthijs; David C. Simcock; Nathalie Pattyn

The present study introduces the concept of a mother-infant group therapy that makes use of music, singing, and moving to establish maternal-infant intersubjectivity. It was conducted in a residential mother-baby unit for mothers with postnatal depression and their infants over a 5-week period. Maternal-infant intersubjectivity of four dyads in relation to the group dynamics were microanalyzed for Sessions 1 and 5. We made within-session (i.e., beginning-middle-end) and between-session (Session 1 vs. Session 5) comparisons for the number of intersubjectivity moments (ISMs), total time of intersubjectivity (IST), and the mean duration of ISMs on a dyadic (i.e., own mother/infant involved) and a nondyadic level (i.e., own mother/infant not involved). In addition, three ISM levels (degree of group contribution) were distinguished. The results indicated a significant increase of ISMs/IST from Session 1 to Session 5. Within-session analyses showed that ISMs/IST significantly decreased through Session 1 and remained stable throughout Session 5. Intersubjectivity occurred mainly on ISM Level 1 during Session 1 and on ISM Level 3 during Session 5, suggesting increased dyadic autonomy and self-efficacy. The results are discussed in relation to the musical characteristics of mother-infant dyads, music improvisation techniques, group processes, and intersubjective development.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Do You Hear the Same? Cardiorespiratory Responses between Mothers and Infants during Tonal and Atonal Music

Martine Van Puyvelde; Gerrit Loots; Pol Vanfleteren; Joris Meys; David C. Simcock; Nathalie Pattyn

This study examined the effects of tonal and atonal music on respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) in 40 mothers and their 3-month-old infants. The tonal music fragment was composed using the structure of a harmonic series that corresponds with the pitch ratio characteristics of mother–infant vocal dialogues. The atonal fragment did not correspond with a tonal structure. Mother–infant ECG and respiration were registered along with simultaneous video recordings. RR-interval, respiration rate, and RSA were calculated. RSA was corrected for any confounding respiratory and motor activities. The results showed that the infants’ and the mothers’ RSA-responses to the tonal and atonal music differed. The infants showed significantly higher RSA-levels during the tonal fragment than during the atonal fragment and baseline, suggesting increased vagal activity during tonal music. The mothers showed RSA-responses that were equal to their infants only when the infants were lying close to their bodies and when they heard the difference between the two fragments, preferring the tonal above the atonal fragment. The results are discussed with regard to music-related topics, psychophysiological integration and mother-infant vocal interaction processes.


Sleep Medicine Reviews | 2018

From the midnight sun to the longest night: Sleep in Antarctica

Nathalie Pattyn; Martine Van Puyvelde; Helio Fernandez-Tellez; Bart Roelands; Olivier Mairesse

Sleep disturbances are the main health complaints from personnel deployed in Antarctica. The current paper presents a systematic review of research findings on sleep disturbances in Antarctica. The available sources were divided in three categories: results based on questionnaire surveys or sleep logs, studies using actigraphy, and data from polysomnography results. Other areas relevant to the issue were also examined. These included chronobiology, since the changes in photoperiod have been known to affect circadian rhythms, mood disturbances, exercise, sleep and hypoxia, countermeasure investigations in Antarctica, and other locations lacking a normal photoperiod. Based on the combination of our reviewed sources and data outside the field of sleep studies, or from other geographical locations, we defined hypotheses to be confirmed or infirmed, which allowed to summarize a research agenda. Despite the scarcity of sleep research on the Antarctic continent, the present review pinpointed some consistent changes in sleep during the Antarctic winter, the common denominators being a circadian phase delay, poor subjective sleep quality, an increased sleep fragmentation, as well as a decrease in slow wave sleep. Similar changes, albeit less pronounced, were observed during summer. Additional multidisciplinary research is needed to elucidate the mechanisms behind these changes in sleep architecture, and to investigate interventions to improve the sleep quality of the men and women deployed in the Antarctic.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2018

Voice stress analysis: a new framework for voice and effort in human performance.

Martine Van Puyvelde; Xavier Neyt; Francis McGlone; Nathalie Pattyn

People rely on speech for communication, both in a personal and professional context, and often under different conditions of physical, cognitive and/or emotional load. Since vocalization is entirely integrated within both our central (CNS) and autonomic nervous system (ANS), a mounting number of studies have examined the relationship between voice output and the impact of stress. In the current paper, we will outline the different stages of voice output, i.e., breathing, phonation and resonance in relation to a neurovisceral integrated perspective on stress and human performance. In reviewing the function of these three stages of voice output, we will give an overview of the voice parameters encountered in studies on voice stress analysis (VSA) and review the impact of the different types of physiological, cognitive and/or emotional load. In the section “Discussion,” with regard to physical load, a competition for ventilation processes required to speak and those to meet metabolic demand of exercised muscles is described. With regard to cognitive and emotional load, we will present the “Model for Voice and Effort” (MoVE) that comprises the integration of ongoing top-down and bottom-up activity under different types of load and combined patterns of voice output. In the MoVE, it is proposed that the fundamental frequency (F0) values as well as jitter give insight in bottom-up/arousal activity and the effort a subject is capable to generate but that its range and variance are related to ongoing top-down processes and the amount of control a subject can maintain. Within the MoVE, a key-role is given to the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) which is known to be involved in both the equilibration between bottom-up arousal and top-down regulation and vocal activity. Moreover, the connectivity between the ACC and the nervus vagus (NV) is underlined as an indication of the importance of respiration. Since respiration is the driving force of both stress and voice production, it is hypothesized to be the missing-link in our understanding of the underlying mechanisms of the dynamic between speech and stress.


Infant Behavior & Development | 2010

Tonal synchrony in mother-infant interaction based on harmonic and pentatonic series

Martine Van Puyvelde; Paul Vanfleteren; Gerrit Loots; Sara Deschuyffeleer; Bart Vinck; Wolfgang Jacquet; Werner Verhelst


Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education | 2012

First Information Parents Receive After UNHS Detection of Their Baby’s Hearing Loss

Liesbeth Matthijs; Gerrit Loots; Kimberley Mouvet; Mieke Van Herreweghe; Stefan Hardonk; Geert Van Hove; Martine Van Puyvelde; Greg Leigh


Infancy | 2013

The Interplay Between Tonal Synchrony and Social Engagement in Mother–Infant Interaction

Martine Van Puyvelde; Gerrit Loots; Bart Vinck; Lotta De Coster; Liesbeth Matthijs; Kimberley Mouvet; Nathalie Pattyn


Biological Psychology | 2015

Whose clock makes yours tick? How maternal cardiorespiratory physiology influences newborns' heart rate variability.

Martine Van Puyvelde; Gerrit Loots; Joris Meys; Xavier Neyt; Olivier Mairesse; David C. Simcock; Nathalie Pattyn


Infant Behavior & Development | 2015

A cross-cultural comparison of tonal synchrony and pitch imitation in the vocal dialogs of Belgian Flemish-speaking and Mexican Spanish-speaking mother-infant dyads.

Martine Van Puyvelde; Gerrit Loots; Lobcke Gillisjans; Nathalie Pattyn; Carmen Quintana


Journal of Cognitive Enhancement | 2018

Cognitive Performance Enhancement: Do Biofeedback and Neurofeedback Work?

Emilie Dessy; Martine Van Puyvelde; Olivier Mairesse; Xavier Neyt; Nathalie Pattyn

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Nathalie Pattyn

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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Liesbeth Matthijs

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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Xavier Neyt

Royal Military Academy

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Olivier Mairesse

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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Bart Vinck

Hogeschool-Universiteit Brussel

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