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Dive into the research topics where Nicole Fiori is active.

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Featured researches published by Nicole Fiori.


Neuropsychologia | 2008

Impaired facial expression recognition in children with temporal lobe epilepsy: impact of early seizure onset on fear recognition.

Nathalie Golouboff; Nicole Fiori; Olivier Delalande; Martine Fohlen; Georges Dellatolas; Isabelle Jambaqué

The amygdala has been implicated in the recognition of facial emotions, especially fearful expressions, in adults with early-onset right temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE). The present study investigates the recognition of facial emotions in children and adolescents, 8-16 years old, with epilepsy. Twenty-nine subjects had TLE (13 right, 16 left) and eight had fronto-central epilepsy (FCE). Each was matched on age and gender with a control subject. Subjects were asked to label the emotions expressed in pictures of childrens faces miming five basic emotions (happiness, sadness, fear, disgust and anger) or neutrality (no emotion). All groups of children with epilepsy performed less well than controls. Patterns of impairment differed according to the topography of the epilepsy: the left-TLE (LTLE) group was impaired in recognizing fear and neutrality, the right-TLE (RTLE) group was impaired in recognizing disgust and, the FCE group was impaired in recognizing happiness. We clearly demonstrated that early seizure onset is associated with poor recognition of facial expression of emotion in TLE group, particularly for fear. Although right-TLE and left-TLE subjects were both impaired in the recognition of facial emotion, their psychosocial adjustment, as measured by the CBCL questionnaire [Achenbach, T. M. (1991). Manual for the Child Behavior Checklist and Youth Self-report. Burlington, VT: University of Vermont Department of Psychiatry], showed that poor recognition of fearful expressions was related to behavioral disorders only in children with right-TLE. Our study demonstrates for the first time that early-onset TLE can compromise the development of recognizing facial expressions of emotion in children and adolescents and suggests a link between impaired fear recognition and behavioral disorders.


Brain Research | 2009

The time course of repetition effects for familiar faces and objects: An ERP study

Cécile Guillaume; Bérengère Guillery-Girard; Laurence Chaby; Karine Lebreton; Laurent Hugueville; Francis Eustache; Nicole Fiori

Face and object priming has been extensively studied, but less is known about the repetition processes which are specific to each material and those which are common to both types of material. In order to track the time course of these repetition processes, EEG was recorded while 12 healthy young subjects performed a long-term perceptual repetition priming task using faces and object drawings. Item repetition induced early (N170) and late (P300 and 400-600 ms time-window) event-related potential (ERP) modulations. The N170 component was reduced in response to primed stimuli even with several hundred intervening items and this repetition effect was larger for objects than for faces. This early repetition effect may reflect the implicit retrieval of perceptual features. The late repetition effects showed enhanced positivity for primed items at centro-parietal, central and frontal sites. During this later time-window (400 and 600 ms at central and frontal sites), ERP repetition effects were more obvious at the left side for objects and at the right side for faces. ERP repetition effects were also larger for famous faces during this time-window. These later repetition effects may reflect deeper semantic processing and/or greater involvement of involuntary explicit retrieval processes for the famous faces. Taken together, these results suggest that among the implicit and explicit memory processes elicited by a perceptual priming task, some of them are modulated by the type of item which is repeated.


Neuroreport | 1999

Differential processing of part-to-whole and part-to-part face priming: an Erp study

Boutheina Jemel; Nathalie George; Laurence Chaby; Nicole Fiori; Bernard Renault

We provide electrophysiological evidence supporting the hypothesis that part and whole face processing involve distinct functional mechanisms. We used a congruency judgment task and studied part-to-whole and part-to-part priming effects. Neither part-to-whole nor part-to-part conditions elicited early congruency effects on face-specific ERP components, suggesting that activation of the internal representations should occur later on. However, these components showed differential responsiveness to whole faces and isolated eyes. In addition, although late ERP components were affected when the eye targets were not associated with the prime in both conditions, their temporal and topographical features depended on the latter. These differential effects suggest the existence of distributed neural networks in the inferior temporal cortex where part and whole facial representations may be stored.


Brain and Cognition | 2010

Sex differences in face processing: Are women less lateralized and faster than men?

Ornella Godard; Nicole Fiori

The aim of this study was to determine the influence of sex on hemispheric asymmetry and cooperation in a face recognition task. We used a masked priming paradigm in which the prime stimulus was centrally presented; it could be a bisymmetric face or a hemi-face in which facial information was presented in the left or the right visual field and projected to the right or the left hemisphere. The target stimulus was always a bisymmetric face presented centrally. Faces were selected from Minear and Parks (2004) database. Fifty-two right-handed students (26 men, 26 women) participated in this experiment, in which accuracy (percentage of correct responses) and reaction times (RTs in ms) were measured. Although accuracy data showed that the percentage of correct recognition- when prime and target matched- was equivalent in men and women, mens RTs were longer than womens in all conditions. Accuracy and RTs showed that men are more strongly lateralized than women, with right hemispheric dominance. These results suggest that men are as good at face recognition as women, but there are functional differences in the two sexes. The findings are discussed in terms of functional cerebral networks distributed over both hemispheres and of interhemispheric transmission.


Biological Psychology | 1988

Latencies of event related potentials as a tool for studying motor processing organization

Bernard Renault; Nicole Fiori; Sophie Giami

The aim of this experiment was to better define the relative organization of motor processing using both behavioral measures and ERPs. Using the additive factors method, three motor variables; (1) stimulus-response (S-R) compatibility, (2) movement extent, and (3) time uncertainty, were all manipulated in a visuo-bimanual, four-choice, pointing task. As expected, all three variables significantly lengthened RT without interaction. All three motor variables also affected ERP latencies. Both P300 and N200 latencies were lengthened by greater movement extent. Moreover, N200 and P300 latencies were differentially affected by S-R compatibility and time uncertainty. Finally, both RT-minus-N200 and RT-minus-P300 were significantly lengthened by S-R incompatibility and greater time uncertainty whereas movement extent had no effect. In sum, ERP results did not support the assumptions of the classical serial model but rather of a contingent-parallel model. Furthermore, the ERP data can be used to infer the relative order of the different stages in this model.


Neuroscience Letters | 2003

Age-related changes in brain responses to personally known faces: an event-related potential (ERP) study in humans.

Laurence Chaby; Nathalie George; Bernard Renault; Nicole Fiori

Midlife period has not been investigated so far regarding associations between brain responses and spared abilities for face processing. This study examines the effects of midlife aging on behavioural performance and event-related potentials (ERPs) during the perception of personally known faces. Ten middle-aged adults (aged 45-60) and 12 young adults (aged 20-30) performed a visual discrimination task based on the detection of modified eye colours. We found that this task was performed as accurately by middle-aged as by young adults. However, midlife aging is associated with specific ERP latency delays and important changes in scalp ERP distribution. These results -interpreted according to a compensation hypothesis- provide enlightening indications showing that, compared to young adults, the changes in brain activities observed in middle-aged adults may contribute to their maintained behavioural performance.


Journal of Affective Disorders | 2009

Behavioral measures and event-related potentials reveal different aspects of sentence processing and comprehension in patients with major depression

Galina Iakimova; C. Passerieux; M. Foynard; Nicole Fiori; C. Besche; Jean-Paul Laurent; Marie-Christine Hardy-Baylé

BACKGROUND We used the method of event-related potentials (ERPs) during standard semantic judgment task to explore the functional relationship between the deficit in semantic comprehension in women with depression and the potential dysfunction of brain processes mediating language comprehension. METHOD Eleven patients with major depression and 13 healthy participants were required to read congruous and incongruous sentences and to judge if they made sense. Accuracy and reaction times for semantic judgment were analyzed conjointly with the latency and the peak amplitudes of N100, P200, N400 and LPC components which were recorded at the final word of correctly judged sentences. RESULTS Patients were less accurate in semantic judgment in comparison to healthy participants. They exhibited slower reaction times and prolonged latency of the N400 and the LPC. A congruity effect was observed in both groups in P200, N400 and LPC interval. The peak amplitude of the ERP components did not differ between patients and healthy participants. In patients lower accuracy was correlated with more prolonged N400 latency and more negative N400 amplitude for congruous sentence endings. Age correlated with prolonged latency and amplitude reduction of the LPC component. LIMITATIONS Small number of participants, exclusively female patients. CONCLUSIONS Combined analyses of behavior and ERP measures of semantic processes in depression showed that semantic impairments, motor slowness and a delay in the timing of neural processes which mediate language comprehension might be functionally related and may be influenced by the age of the patients.


Biological Psychology | 1992

Effect of target position on the sequential organization of processing stages

Nicole Fiori; Richard Ragot; Bernard Renault

In order to study the organization of processing stages taking place in a choice reaction time (RT) situation, the three following experimental variables were manipulated: (1) S-R compatibility; (2) movement direction; and (3) time uncertainty, these variables being known to influence distinct information processing stages. Both behavioural (RT and movement time, MT) and electrophysiological (N200 and P300 latencies) indices of processing time were analysed. All three experimental variables showed significant, additive effects on RT. Only the preparatory period had a significant effect on N200 and on P300 latencies. These results support the construction of a serial model. Furthermore, the analysis of the time intervals between electrophysiological and behavioural indices allows one to infer the relative order of the different stages in this model, as follows: motor pre-initiation, motor pre-programming, response selection and programming, and motor initiation.


Neuroscience Research | 2013

Sex differences in interhemispheric communication during face identity encoding: Evidence from ERPs

Ornella Godard; Arnaud Leleu; Mohamed Rebaï; Nicole Fiori

Sex-related hemispheric lateralization and interhemispheric transmission times (IHTTs) were examined in twenty-four participants at the level of the first visual ERP components (P1 and N170) during face identity encoding in a divided visual-field paradigm. While no lateralization-related and sex-related differences were reflected in the P1 characteristics, these two factors modulated the N170. Indeed, N170 amplitudes indicated a right hemisphere (RH) dominance in men (and a more bilateral functioning in women). N170 latencies and the derived IHTTs confirmed the RH advantage in men but showed the reverse asymmetry in women. Altogether, the results of this study suggest a clear asymmetry in men and a more divided work between the hemispheres in women, with a tendency toward a left hemisphere (LH) advantage. Thus, by extending the pattern to the right-sided face processing, our results generalize previous findings from studies using other materials and indicating longer transfers from the specialized to the non-specialized hemisphere, especially in the male brain. Because asymmetries started from the N170 component, the first electrophysiological index of high-level perceptual processing on face representations, they also suggest a functional account for hemispheric lateralization and sex-related differences rather than a structural one.


Laterality | 2012

Sex and hemispheric differences in facial invariants extraction

Ornella Godard; Nicole Fiori

This present study investigates sex differences in hemispheric cooperation during a facial identity matching task. The method used was a divided visual field paradigm in which the probe face was neutral or expressive and the target face was always neutral. Probe and target faces were presented both unilaterally and sequentially. A total of 28 right-handed women and 32 right-handed men participated in this study. The results confirm the womens advantage in face recognition and reveal symmetrical interhemispheric cooperation in women only. In men, processing time was faster when the probe face appeared in the left visual field—and encoded by the right hemisphere—and the target in the right visual field—projected to the left hemisphere—compared to the reverse direction. Interestingly, the data also show that women were not influenced by the expression of the probe face when matching identity, whereas men were always faster when the probe face was neutral, like the target, than when it was expressive. These results are discussed in light of Bruce and Youngs (1986) model, and in terms of view-dependent and view-independent processes.

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Bernard Renault

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Laurence Chaby

Paris Descartes University

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Ornella Godard

Paris Descartes University

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C. Besche

University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne

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