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Dive into the research topics where Nicolas Poirel is active.

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Featured researches published by Nicolas Poirel.


Emotion | 2012

Positive Emotional Context Eliminates the Framing Effect in Decision-Making

Mathieu Cassotti; Marianne Habib; Nicolas Poirel; Ania Aïte; Olivier Houdé; Sylvain Moutier

Dual-process theories have suggested that emotion plays a key role in the framing effect in decision-making. However, little is known about the potential impact of a specific positive or negative emotional context on this bias. We investigated this question with adult participants using an emotional priming paradigm. First, participants were presented with positive or negative affective pictures (i.e., pleasant vs. unpleasant photographs). Afterward, participants had to perform a financial decision-making task that was unrelated to the pictures previously presented. The results revealed that the presentation framed in terms of gain or loss no longer affected subjects decision-making following specific exposure to emotionally pleasant pictures. Interestingly, a positive emotional context did not globally influence risk-taking behavior but specifically decreased the risk propensity in the loss frame. This finding confirmed that a positive emotional context can reduce loss aversion, and it strongly reinforced the dual-process view that the framing effect stems from an affective heuristic belonging to intuitive System 1.


Neuropsychologia | 2011

ERP evidence of a meaningfulness impact on visual global/local processing: When meaning captures attention

Virginie Beaucousin; Mathieu Cassotti; Grégory Simon; Arlette Pineau; Milena Kostova; Olivier Houdé; Nicolas Poirel

Event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded to investigate whether the meaningfulness of experimental stimuli impacted performances during global/local visual tasks. Participants were presented with compound stimuli, based on either meaningful letters, meaningful objects, or meaningless non-objects. The ERP recordings displayed typical early components, P1 and N1, evoked by task-related processes that affected global and local processes differently according to the meaningfulness of the stimuli. The effect of meaningfulness of the stimuli during global processing showed that P1 amplitudes were larger in response to objects and non-objects compared to letters, while letters and objects elicited larger N1 amplitudes than non-objects. Second, during local processing, the mean amplitudes of the ERPs recorded for object and letter stimuli were systematically smaller than the amplitudes recorded for non-object stimuli for both P1 and N1 components. In addition, object and letter stimuli elicited comparable mean ERP responses during local processing. These results are discussed in terms of the influences of both attentional and top-down identification processes. Taken together, these findings suggested that looking for meaning is crucial in the perception of visual scenes and that the meaningfulness nature of the stimuli should be taken into account in future studies.


Experimental Psychology | 2011

Evidence of Different Developmental Trajectories for Length Estimation According to Egocentric and Allocentric Viewpoints in Children and Adults

Nicolas Poirel; Manuel Vidal; Arlette Pineau; Céline Lanoë; Gaëlle Leroux; Amélie Lubin; Marie-Renée Turbelin; Alain Berthoz; Olivier Houdé

This study investigated the influence of egocentric and allocentric viewpoints on a comparison task of length estimation in children and adults. A total of 100 participants ranging in age from 5 years to adulthood were presented with virtual scenes representing a park landscape with two paths, one straight and one serpentine. Scenes were presented either from an egocentric or allocentric viewpoint. Results showed that when the two paths had the same length, participants always overestimated the length of the straight line for allocentric trials, whereas a development from a systematic overestimation in children to an underestimation of the straight line length in adults was found for egocentric trials. We discuss these findings in terms of the influences of both bias-inhibition processes and school acquisitions.


Neuropsychologia | 2010

Meaningfulness and global–local processing in schizophrenia

Nicolas Poirel; Perrine Brazo; Marie-Renée Turbelin; Laurent Lecardeur; Grégory Simon; Olivier Houdé; Arlette Pineau; Sonia Dollfus

The present work aimed to study the influence of the meaningfulness of stimuli during global-local processing in schizophrenia. Study participants were asked to determine whether pairs of compound stimuli (global forms composed of local forms) were identical or not. Both global and local forms represented either objects or non-objects. Results indicated that when identification processes were useful for performing the task, similar global-local response patterns were observed in patients and controls. However, patients were more affected than controls when an object was present at a distractor level, particularly when this information came from the local level. These results are discussed in terms of the conjunction of executive and visuospatial deficits and underscore the importance of meaningful identification in the visual perception of schizophrenia patients, given its central role in day-to-day situations.


Experimental Psychology | 2010

Pedagogical Effect of Action on Arithmetic Performances in Wynn-Like Tasks Solved by 2-Year-Olds

Amélie Lubin; Nicolas Poirel; Sandrine Rossi; Céline Lanoë; Arlette Pineau; Olivier Houdé

Previous studies have provided evidence of interference due to a language-default mode (i.e., the singular/plural opposition) in 2-year-old children when solving arithmetic problems using a traditional onlooker method. However, an action-based method could help to bypass this language bias. In particular, when an arithmetic problem is presented to the children by the experimenter (onlooker mode) or realized by the children themselves (actor mode), performances are better with the latter. Thus, an experimental procedure based on math in action allows a brain-and-mind shift from a global language-bias (singular/plural) strategy to an exact numerical strategy. In this framework, we examined whether the exact numerical strategy induced by the actor method remains operational when children had to subsequently solve the same arithmetic problem using the traditional onlooker method. Results from 112 children suggest that this pedagogical effect of action bypasses the interference from language in onlooker mode after an initial confrontation of the problem in actor mode. This enduring embodiment effect has important implications for cognitive and preschool assessment in toddlers.


Journal of Experimental Child Psychology | 2009

Math in actions: Actor mode reveals the true arithmetic abilities of French-speaking 2-year-olds in a magic task

Amélie Lubin; Nicolas Poirel; Sandrine Rossi; Arlette Pineau; Olivier Houdé

Our previous studies provide some evidence of between-language effects on arithmetic performance in 2-year-olds. French-speaking children were especially biased by the use of the word un as a cardinal value and as an article in the singular/plural opposition (1 vs. the set 2, 3, ...). Here we evaluated the ability of a new action-based assessment method to avoid this bias. A total of 80 French-speaking 2- and 3-year-olds were confronted with impossible (1+1=1 or 1+1=3) and possible (1+1=2) addition problems that triggered the bias. The problems were either presented to the children by the experimenter (onlooker mode) or realized by themselves (actor mode). The 2-year-olds performed better in the actor mode than in the onlooker mode. A subtraction control with no language ambiguity (2-1=2 or 1) was conducted with 80 other children; both modes elicited comparable performances regardless of age. These data indicate that the actor mode is effective for assessing arithmetic ability in French-speaking 2-year-olds.


eNeuro | 2018

Sulcal Polymorphisms of the IFC and ACC Contribute to Inhibitory Control Variability in Children and Adults

Cloélia Tissier; Adriano Linzarini; Geneviève Allaire-Duquette; Katell Mevel; Nicolas Poirel; Sonia Dollfus; Olivier Etard; François Orliac; Carole Peyrin; Sylvain Charron; Armin Raznahan; Olivier Houdé; Grégoire Borst; Arnaud Cachia

Abstract Inhibitory control (IC) is a core executive function that enables humans to resist habits, temptations, or distractions. IC efficiency in childhood is a strong predictor of academic and professional success later in life. Based on analysis of the sulcal pattern, a qualitative feature of cortex anatomy determined during fetal life and stable during development, we searched for evidence that interindividual differences in IC partly trace back to prenatal processes. Using anatomical magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), we analyzed the sulcal pattern of two key regions of the IC neural network, the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and the inferior frontal cortex (IFC), which limits the inferior frontal gyrus. We found that the sulcal pattern asymmetry of both the ACC and IFC contributes to IC (Stroop score) in children and adults: participants with asymmetrical ACC or IFC sulcal patterns had better IC efficiency than participants with symmetrical ACC or IFC sulcal patterns. Such additive effects of IFC and ACC sulcal patterns on IC efficiency suggest that distinct early neurodevelopmental mechanisms targeting different brain regions likely contribute to IC efficiency. This view shares some analogies with the “common variant–small effect” model in genetics, which states that frequent genetic polymorphisms have small effects but collectively account for a large portion of the variance. Similarly, each sulcal polymorphism has a small but additive effect: IFC and ACC sulcal patterns, respectively, explained 3% and 14% of the variance of the Stroop interference scores.


Acta Psychologica | 2008

What does the nature of the stimuli tell us about the Global Precedence Effect

Nicolas Poirel; Arlette Pineau; Emmanuel Mellet


Archive | 2010

Neural bases of topographical representation in humans: Contribution of neuroimaging studies

Nicolas Poirel; Laure Zago; Laurent Petit; Emmanuel Mellet


NeuroImage | 2009

FMRI study of Piagetian cognitive stages in human development: A neo-Piagetian approach

Olivier Houdé; Arlette Pineau; Gaëlle Leroux; Guy Perchey; Amélie Lubin; Céline Lanoë; M-R. Turbelin; Sandrine Rossi; Nicolas Poirel; N. Delcroix; Marc Joliot; F Lamberton; Nathalie Tzourio-Mazoyer; Mathieu Vigneau; Emmanuel Mellet; Bernard Mazoyer

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Olivier Houdé

Paris Descartes University

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Arlette Pineau

Paris Descartes University

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Amélie Lubin

Paris Descartes University

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Céline Lanoë

Paris Descartes University

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Mathieu Cassotti

Paris Descartes University

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Sandrine Rossi

Paris Descartes University

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Emmanuel Mellet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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