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Dive into the research topics where Olivier Després is active.

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Featured researches published by Olivier Després.


Epilepsia | 2006

Remote Memory in Temporal Lobe Epilepsy

Virginie Voltzenlogel; Olivier Després; Jean-Pierre Vignal; Bernhard J. Steinhoff; Pierre Kehrli; Lilianne Manning

Summary:  Purpose: The present study aims at characterizing remote memory in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE); it also considers the impact of its most important variables (lateralization of the lesion, duration of epilepsy, age at onset, and seizure frequency) on remote memory.


Experimental Brain Research | 2005

Enhanced sensitivity to echo cues in blind subjects

André Dufour; Olivier Després; Victor Candas

Many studies have reported that blind people compensate for their visual deficit by sharpening auditory processes. Here we compare the sensitivity to echo cues between blind and sighted subjects. In the first experiment, the blind subjects were more accurate than the sighted subjects in localizing an object on the basis of echo cues. To ensure that enhanced echolocalization abilities were not only due to the fact that blind individuals are more used to consciously paying attention to echo cues and are more familiar with this kind of tasks than sighted subjects, we tested both groups of subjects in a simple azimuthal localization task of auditory stimuli. In this second experiment, we evaluated the influence of irrelevant echo signals on auditory localization by placing the subjects and the sound sources at different positions in a sound reverberant room. Results revealed that blind subjects exhibit a higher sensitivity to echo signals than sighted subjects.


Ageing Research Reviews | 2015

Episodic memory in normal aging and Alzheimer disease: Insights from imaging and behavioral studies.

Delphine Tromp; André Dufour; Ségolène Lithfous; Thierry Pebayle; Olivier Després

Age-related cognitive changes often include difficulties in retrieving memories, particularly those that rely on personal experiences within their temporal and spatial contexts (i.e., episodic memories). This decline may vary depending on the studied phase (i.e., encoding, storage or retrieval), according to inter-individual differences, and whether we are talking about normal or pathological (e.g., Alzheimer disease; AD) aging. Such cognitive changes are associated with different structural and functional alterations in the human neural network that underpins episodic memory. The prefrontal cortex is the first structure to be affected by age, followed by the medial temporal lobe (MTL), the parietal cortex and the cerebellum. In AD, however, the modifications occur mainly in the MTL (hippocampus and adjacent structures) before spreading to the neocortex. In this review, we will present results that attempt to characterize normal and pathological cognitive aging at multiple levels by integrating structural, behavioral, inter-individual and neuroimaging measures of episodic memory.


Ageing Research Reviews | 2013

Sustained attention in the elderly: what do we know and what does it tell us about cognitive aging?

Bérengère Staub; Nadège Doignon-Camus; Olivier Després; Anne Bonnefond

The ability to achieve and maintain the focus of cognitive activity on a given stimulation source or task, in other words to sustain attention or vigilance, is a fundamental component of human cognition. Given the omnipresent need for sustained attention in peoples daily lives, a precise knowledge of the effects of normal aging on sustained attention is crucial. Findings in this topic are currently not consistent since they highlight either alteration or preservation or even the two, depending on the experimental approach used. Actually, the two existing approaches do not involve bottom-up and top-down processes at the same extent, which may in part account for this inconclusiveness. This review presents and attempts to explain these results by putting them into perspective with our current knowledge on cognitive aging and the two competing vigilance decrement theories, and discusses how they could inform us on our problems with sustaining attention over time.


Consciousness and Cognition | 2008

Visual motion disambiguation by a subliminal sound

André Dufour; Pascale Touzalin; Michèle Moessinger; Renaud Brochard; Olivier Després

There is growing interest in the effect of sound on visual motion perception. One model involves the illusion created when two identical objects moving towards each other on a two-dimensional visual display can be seen to either bounce off or stream through each other. Previous studies show that the large bias normally seen toward the streaming percept can be modulated by the presentation of an auditory event at the moment of coincidence. However, no reports to date provide sufficient evidence to indicate whether the sound bounce-inducing effect is due to a perceptual binding process or merely to an explicit inference resulting from the transient auditory stimulus resembling a physical collision of two objects. In the present study, we used a novel experimental design in which a subliminal sound was presented either 150 ms before, at, or 150 ms after the moment of coincidence of two disks moving towards each other. The results showed that there was an increased perception of bouncing (rather than streaming) when the subliminal sound was presented at or 150 ms after the moment of coincidence compared to when no sound was presented. These findings provide the first empirical demonstration that activation of the human auditory system without reaching consciousness affects the perception of an ambiguous visual motion display.


Brain Research | 2005

Auditory compensation in myopic humans: involvement of binaural, monaural, or echo cues?

Olivier Després; V. Candas; André Dufour

The purpose of this paper is to investigate the involvement of various auditory localization mechanisms in the improvement of auditory spatial sensitivity in the case of partial visual deprivation. We compared sensitivity to binaural, monaural, and echo cues between normal-sighted and myopic subjects. In an auditory task, which depended solely upon binaural processing, myopic and normal-sighted subjects showed an almost equal localization performance. We also found that myopic subjects were no more disturbed than normal-sighted subjects when spectral shape cues were removed. On the other hand, near-sighted subjects exhibited better echolocation skills and a higher sensitivity to echo cues than normal-sighted subjects. We can therefore conclude that an improved auditory spatial sensitivity in myopic subjects may result from the increased use of echo information.


Brain Research | 2008

Evidence of beat perception via purely tactile stimulation

Renaud Brochard; Pascale Touzalin; Olivier Després; André Dufour

Humans can easily tap in synchrony with an auditory beat but not with an equivalent visual rhythmic sequence, suggesting that the sensation of meter (i.e. of an underlying regular pulse) may be inherently auditory. We assessed whether the perception of meter could also be felt with tactile sensory inputs. We found that, when participants were presented with identical rhythmic sequences filled with either short tones or hand stimulations, they could more efficiently tap in synchrony with strongly rather than weakly metric sequences. These observations suggest that non-musician adults can extract the metric structure of purely tactile rhythms and use it to tap regularly with the beat induced by such sequences. This finding represents a challenge for present models of rhythm processing.


Epilepsia | 2007

One-Year Postoperative Autobiographical Memory Following Unilateral Temporal Lobectomy for Control of Intractable Epilepsy

Virginie Voltzenlogel; Olivier Després; Jean-Paul Vignal; Pierre Kehrli; Lilianne Manning

Summary:  Purpose: To examine the effects of temporal lobectomy (TL), particularly concerning its lateralization.


PLOS ONE | 2012

MRI-based volumetry correlates of autobiographical memory in Alzheimer's disease.

Nathalie Philippi; Vincent Noblet; Anne Botzung; Olivier Després; Félix Renard; Giorgos Sfikas; Benjamin Cretin; Stéphane Kremer; Lilianne Manning; Frédéric Blanc

The aim of the present volumetric study was to explore the neuro-anatomical correlates of autobiographical memory loss in Alzheimers patients and healthy elderly, in terms of the delay of retention, with a particular interest in the medial temporal lobe structures. Fifteen patients in early stages of the disease and 11 matched control subjects were included in the study. To assess autobiographical memory and the effect of the retention delay, a modified version of the Crovitz test was used according to five periods of life. Autobiographical memory deficits were correlated to local atrophy via structural MRI using Voxel Based Morphometry. We used a ‘lateralized index’ to compare the relative contribution of hippocampal sub-regions (anterior vs posterior, left vs right) according to the different periods of life. Our results confirm the involvement of the hippocampus proper in autobiographical memory retrieval for both recent and very remote encoding periods, with larger aspect for the very remote period on the left side. Contrary to the prominent left-sided involvement for the young adulthood period, the implication of the right hippocampus prevails for the more recent periods and decreases with the remotness of the memories, which might be associated with the visuo-spatial processing of the memories. Finally, we suggest the existence of a rostrocaudal gradient depending on the retention duration, with left anterior aspects specifically related to retrieval deficits of remote memories from the young adulthood period, whereas posterior aspects would result of simultaneous encoding and/or consolidation and retrieval deficit of more recent memories.


European Journal of Pain | 2014

Differences in age‐related effects on myelinated and unmyelinated peripheral fibres: A sensitivity and evoked potentials study

J. Kemp; Olivier Després; Thierry Pebayle; André Dufour

Experimental data regarding age effects on sensitivity and pain thresholds are not always consistent, with the type of stimulus being a major source of variability. This could suggest that some types of peripheral sensory fibres undergo more important modifications with age than others. We investigated whether ageing affects differently myelinated and unmyelinated fibres.

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André Dufour

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Thierry Pebayle

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Victor Candas

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Anne Botzung

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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