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Dive into the research topics where Muriel Boucart is active.

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Featured researches published by Muriel Boucart.


Journal of Neurology | 2010

REM sleep behaviour disorder and visuoperceptive dysfunction: a disorder of the ventral visual stream?

Ana Marques; Kathy Dujardin; Muriel Boucart; Delphine Pins; Marie Delliaux; Luc Defebvre; Philippe Derambure; Christelle Monaca

In idiopathic rapid eye movement sleep behaviour disorder (RBD), an association with visuoperceptive disorders has been described. However, such an association has not been clearly established in RBD secondary to Parkinson’s disease (PD). We compared visuoperceptive function in four groups of non-demented patients (parkinsonian patients with or without RBD, patients with idiopathic RBD and control participants) via a procedure enabling the analysis of the various components of visual information processing and in order to answer the following question: is RBD associated with visuoperceptive and/or attentional disorders in PD and, if so, where is the dysfunction located along the visual pathway? Sensorial aspects of visual information were evaluated using a contrast sensitivity test, perceptual aspects were assessed using a contour-based object identification test and visual attention was measured in an attentional capture paradigm. The diagnosis of RBD was confirmed by polysomnography. We observed a higher object identification threshold (OIT) (1) in PD patients with RBD compared with PD patients without RBD and with controls and (2) in idiopathic RBD patients compared with controls. There were no significant OIT differences between PD patients with RBD and idiopathic RBD patients or between PD patients without RBD and controls. We did not find any significant inter-group differences in any of the other visuoperceptive tests. RBD, idiopathic or secondary to PD, is associated with perceptual closure dysfunction. Our results suggest that this perceptual dysfunction is specifically associated with RBD and may be related to a non-dopaminergic impairment.


Visual Neuroscience | 2008

Does context or color improve object recognition in patients with low vision

Muriel Boucart; Pascal Despretz; Katrine Hladiuk; Thomas Desmettre

Most studies on people with age-related macular degeneration (AMD) have been focused on investigations of low-level processes with simple stimuli like gratings, letters, and in perception of isolated faces or objects. We investigated the ability of people with low vision to analyze more complex stimuli like photographs of natural scenes. Fifteen participants with AMD and low vision (acuity on the better eye <20/200) and 11 normally sighted age-matched controls took part in the study. They were presented with photographs of either colored or achromatic gray level scenes in one condition and with photographs of natural scenes versus isolated objects extracted from these scenes in another condition. The photographs were centrally displayed for 300 ms. In both conditions, observers were instructed to press a key when they saw a predefined target (a face or an animal). The target was present in half of the trials. Color facilitated performance in people with low vision, while equivalent performance was found for colored and achromatic pictures in normally sighted participants. Isolated objects were categorized more accurately than objects in scenes in people with low vision. No difference was found for normally sighted observers. The results suggest that spatial properties that facilitate image segmentation (e.g., color and reduced crowding) help object perception in people with low vision.


Visual Neuroscience | 2008

Recognition of facial emotion in low vision : A flexible usage of facial features

Muriel Boucart; JEAN-FRANCxOIS Dinon; Pascal Despretz; Thomas Desmettre; Katrine Hladiuk; Aude Oliva

Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is a major cause of visual impairment in people older than 50 years in Western countries, affecting essential tasks such as reading and face recognition. Here we investigated the mechanisms underlying the deficit in recognition of facial expressions in an AMD population with low vision. Pictures of faces displaying different emotions with the mouth open or closed were centrally displayed for 300 ms. Participants with AMD with low acuity (mean 20/200) and normally sighted age-matched controls performed one of two emotion tasks: detecting whether a face had an expression or not (expressive/non expressive (EXNEX) task) or categorizing the facial emotion as happy, angry, or neutral (categorization of expression (CATEX) task). Previous research has shown that healthy observers are mainly using high spatial frequencies in an EXNEX task while performance at a CATEX task was preferentially based on low spatial frequencies. Due to impaired processing of high spatial frequencies in central vision, we expected and observed that AMD participants failed at deciding whether a face was expressive or not but categorized normally the emotion of the face (e.g., happy, angry, neutral). Moreover, we observed that AMD participants mostly identified emotions using the lower part of the face (mouth). Accuracy did not differ between the two tasks for normally sighted observers. The results indicate that AMD participants are able to identify facial emotion but must base their decision mainly on the low spatial frequencies, as they lack the perception of finer details.


Behavioral Neuroscience | 2006

The ventral premotor cortex (vPM) and resistance to interference.

George A. Michael; Sophie Garcia; Damien Fernandez; François Sellal; Muriel Boucart

The authors tested a patient suffering from a circumscribed lesion of the right frontal operculum (FO) in 3 experiments of visual attention involving spatial orienting, maintenance of task-relevant priorities, and control of interference from new and old task-irrelevant items. The authors found that spatial orienting and active maintenance of priorities were intact, but there were difficulties in controlling interference from new and old irrelevant items. These results suggest that the FO is necessary for the direct control of interference, but its lesion alone is not enough to disturb spatial orienting processes or active maintenance of task priorities. The authors discuss the results in light of a hybrid cognitive model of attention.


Neuropsychologia | 2004

Neural correlates of implicit object identification

Delphine Pins; M.E Meyer; Jack Foucher; Glyn W. Humphreys; Muriel Boucart

The present study sought to assess neural correlates of implicit identification of objects by means of fMRI, using tasks that require matching of the physical properties of objects. Behavioural data suggests that there is automatic access to object identity when observers attend to a physical property of the form of an object (e.g. the objects orientation) and no evidence for semantic processing when subjects attend to colour. We evaluated whether, in addition to neural areas associated with decisions to specific perceptual properties, areas associated with access to semantic information were activated when tasks demanded processing of the global configuration of pictures. We used two perceptual matching tasks based on the global orientation or on the colour of line drawings. Our results confirmed behavioural data. Activations in the inferior occipital cortex, fusiform and inferior temporal gyri in both tasks (orientation and colour) account for perceptual and structural processing involved in each task. In contrast, activations in the posterior and medial parts of the fusiform gyrus, shown to be involved in explicit semantic judgements, were more pronounced in the orientation-matching task, suggesting that semantic information from the pictures is processed in an implicit way even when not required by the task. Thus, this study suggests that cortical regions usually involved in explicit semantic processing are also activated when implicit processing of objects occurs.


Neuroreport | 2001

The thalamus interrupts top-down attentional control for permitting exploratory shiftings to sensory signals.

George A. Michael; Muriel Boucart; Jean-FrancËois Degreef; Olivier Godefroy

When attention is involuntarily drawn in a direction different to that of the target, slower motor response times are observed (i.e. the meridian effect). Previous data suggested that the thalamus might participate in the generation of visual salience. What may be the role of the thalamus in the capture by luminance transients when attentional control is in action? A single experiment was administrated in a group of ten healthy volunteers as well as in a group of three patients with unilateral thalamic infarcts. Subjects participated in a task where attentional control was interrupted by a distractor. The meridian effect was present only in the performance of the healthy volunteers and when distractors occurred in the ipsilesional (intact) hemifield of the thalamic patients. These results suggest that when an important signal appears during attentional focalization, the thalamus interrupts current focalization and permits the compilation of an attentional program in the midbrain aiming at generating an orienting response towards the source of this signal.


Neuropsychologia | 2010

Patients with schizophrenia are biased toward low spatial frequency to decode facial expression at a glance.

Vincent Laprevote; Aude Oliva; Céline Delerue; Pierre Thomas; Muriel Boucart

Whereas patients with schizophrenia exhibit early visual processing impairments, their capacity at integrating visual information at various spatial scales, from low to high spatial frequencies, remains untested. This question is particularly acute given that, in ecological conditions of viewing, spatial frequency bands are naturally integrated to form a coherent percept. Here, 19 patients with schizophrenia and 16 healthy controls performed a rapid emotion recognition task with hybrid faces. Because these stimuli displayed in a single image two different facial expressions, in low (LSF) and high (HSF) spatial frequencies, the selected emotion probes which spatial scale is preferentially perceived. In a control experiment participants performed the same task with either low or high spatial frequency filtered faces. Results show that patients have a strong bias towards LSF with hybrid faces compared to healthy controls. However, both patients and healthy controls performed better with HSF filtered faces than with LSF filtered faces in the control experiment, demonstrating that the bias found with hybrid stimuli in patients was not due to an inability to process HSF. Whereas previous works found a LSF contrast deficit in schizophrenia, our results suggest a deficit in the normal time course of concurrently perceiving LSF and HSF. This early visual processing impairment is likely to contribute to the difficulties of patients with schizophrenia with facial processing and therefore social interaction.


Vision Research | 2001

Different effects of lorazepam and diazepam on perceptual integration

Tom Beckers; Johan Wagemans; Muriel Boucart; Anne Giersch

Recent research has established the detrimental effect of lorazepam, a benzodiazepine, on both implicit and explicit memory. Furthermore, lorazepam is known to affect perceptual integration. Diazepam, on the other hand, though being a benzodiazepine too, only impairs explicit memory, leaving implicit memory fairly intact. Little is known about the effect of diazepam on perceptual integration. The present study aimed at filling in this gap, by comparing the effects of lorazepam and diazepam on the detection of discontinuities in random-shaped outlines. In line with previous findings, the results in a lorazepam-treated group were quite different from the results in a placebo-treated group. The results in a diazepam-treated group were analogous to the results in the placebo-treated group and different from the results in the lorazepam-treated group. This shows that lorazepam and diazepam differ, not only with respect to their effect on implicit memory, but also with respect to their effect on perceptual integration. It is argued that this bears important consequences for memory research that makes use of a pharmacological dissociation rationale.


Visual Cognition | 2010

Implicit and explicit object recognition at very large visual eccentricities: No improvement after loss of central vision

Muriel Boucart; Fatima Naili; Pascal Despretz; Sabine Defoort-Dhellemmes; Michèle Fabre-Thorpe

Little is known about the ability of human observers to process objects in the far periphery of their visual field and nothing about its evolution in case of central vision loss. We investigated implicit and explicit recognition at two large visual eccentricities. Pictures of objects were centred at 30° or 50° eccentricity. Implicit recognition was tested through a priming paradigm. Participants (normally sighted observers and people with 10–20 years of central vision loss) categorized pictures as animal/transport both in a study phase (Block 1) and in a test phase (Block 2). In explicit recognition participants decided for each picture presented in Block 2 whether it had been displayed in Block 1 (“yes”/“no”). Both visual (identical) and conceptual/lexical (same-name) priming occurred at 30° and at 50°. Explicit recognition was observed only at 30°. In people with central vision loss testing was only performed at 50° eccentricity. The pattern of results was similar to that of normally sighted observers but global performance was lower. The results suggest that vision, at large eccentricity, is mainly based on nonconscious coarse representations. Moreover, after 10–20 years of central vision loss, no evidence was found for an increased ability to use peripheral information in object recognition.


Cognitive Neuropsychiatry | 2008

Attentional capture in schizophrenia and schizotypy: Effect of attentional load

Maria-Giovanna Ducato; Pierre Thomas; Jean-Louis Monestès; Pascal Despretz; Muriel Boucart

Introduction: We examined the effect of attentional load on attentional capture in schizophrenia. On the basis of the ‘‘resource limitations hypothesis’’ in schizophrenia, we propose that attentional capture by an irrelevant distractor will be differentially affected by the attentional load for patients and healthy controls. Method: 70 patients with schizophrenia, 15 schizotypals, and 54 controls were asked to attend to a central task while a lateral distractor moved. Participants were instructed either (i) to localise a black square (low-load condition), or (ii) to locate the larger number between two 1-digit numbers (medium-load condition), or (iii) to locate the larger number between two several-digit numbers (high-load condition). In the baseline condition, no distractor moved. Results: All groups showed attentional capture in the low-load condition. Patients and schizotypals resisted interference from the distractor in the medium and highload conditions. Controls resisted interference in the high-load condition. Conclusion: The results suggest that attentional modulation is impaired in schizophrenia and in the schizophrenia spectrum.

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Sébastien Szaffarczyk

Lille University of Science and Technology

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Quentin Lenoble

Lille University of Science and Technology

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Aude Oliva

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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