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Dive into the research topics where Pierre Fonlupt is active.

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Featured researches published by Pierre Fonlupt.


NeuroImage | 2001

Does Perception of Biological Motion Rely on Specific Brain Regions

Julie Grèzes; Pierre Fonlupt; Bennett Bertenthal; Chantal Delon-Martin; Christoph Segebarth; Jean Decety

Perception of biological motions plays a major adaptive role in identifying, interpreting, and predicting the actions of others. It may therefore be hypothesized that the perception of biological motions is subserved by a specific neural network. Here we used fMRI to verify this hypothesis. In a group of 10 healthy volunteers, we explored the hemodynamic responses to seven types of visual motion displays: drifting random dots, random dot cube, random dot cube with masking elements, upright point-light walker, inverted point-light walker, upright point-light walker display with masking elements, and inverted point-light walker display with masking elements. A gradient in activation was observed in the occipitotemporal junction. The responses to rigid motion were localized posteriorly to those responses elicited by nonrigid motions. Our results demonstrate that in addition to the posterior portion of superior temporal sulcus, the left intraparietal cortex is involved in the perception of nonrigid biological motions.


Human Brain Mapping | 2007

Relationship between task‐related gamma oscillations and BOLD signal: New insights from combined fMRI and intracranial EEG

Jean-Philippe Lachaux; Pierre Fonlupt; Philippe Kahane; Lorella Minotti; Dominique Hoffmann; Olivier Bertrand; Monica Baciu

Cognitive neuroscience relies on two sets of techniques to map the neural networks underlying cognition in humans: recordings of either regional metabolic changes (fMRI or PET) or fluctuations in the neural electromagnetic fields (EEG and MEG). Despite major advances in the last few years, an explicit linkage between the two is still missing and the neuroimaging community faces two complementary but unrelated sets of functional descriptions of the human brain. Such an explicit framework, linking the two approaches in potentially complex cognitive tasks and in a variety of brain regions would permit to combine them into fine spatio‐temporally‐grained human brain mapping procedures. We combined fMRI and intra‐cranial EEG recordings of the same epileptic patients during a semantic decision task and found a close spatial correspondence between regions of fMRI activations and recording sites showing EEG energy modulations in the gamma range (>40 Hz). Our findings further support previous findings that gamma band modulations co‐localize with BOLD variations and also indicate that fMRI may be used as a constraint to improve source reconstruction of gamma band EEG responses. Hum Brain Mapp, 2007.


Neuroreport | 2000

New aspects of motion perception: selective neural encoding of apparent human movements.

Jennifer A. Stevens; Pierre Fonlupt; Maggie Shiffrar; Jean Decety

Perception of apparent motion operates somewhat differently for objects and human figures. Depending on the interstimulus interval, the latter d may give rise to either perception of a direct path (i.e. biologically impossible) or indirect path (i.e. biologically possible). Here, PET was used to investigate whether a change in brain activity accompanies this perceptual shift. We found neural encoding of apparent motion to be a function of the intrinsic properties of the stimulus presented (object vs human) as well as the kind of human movement path perceived (biomechanically possible vs impossible). Motor and parietal cortex were only involved for possible motion which suggests that these regions are selectively activated to process actions which conform to the capabilities of the observer.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2006

Listening in Silence Activates Auditory Areas: A Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study

Julien Voisin; Aurélie Bidet-Caulet; Olivier Bertrand; Pierre Fonlupt

Directing attention to some acoustic features of a sound has been shown repeatedly to modulate the stimulus-induced neural responses. On the contrary, little is known about the neurophysiological impact of auditory attention when the auditory scene remains empty. We performed an experiment in which subjects had to detect a sound emerging from silence (the sound was detectable after different durations of silence). Two frontal activations (right dorsolateral prefrontal and inferior frontal) were found, regardless of the side where sound was searched for, consistent with the well established role of these regions in attentional control. The main result was that the superior temporal cortex showed activations contralateral to the side where sound was expected to be present. The area extended from the vicinity of Heschls gyrus to the surrounding areas (planum temporale/anterior lateral areas). The effect consisted of both an increase in the response to a sound delivered after attention was directed to detect its emergence and a baseline shift during the silent period. Thus, in absence of any acoustic stimulus, the search for an auditory input was found to activate the auditory cortex.


NeuroImage | 2005

Listening to a walking human activates the temporal biological motion area.

Aurélie Bidet-Caulet; Julien Voisin; Olivier Bertrand; Pierre Fonlupt

A vivid perception of a moving human can be evoked when viewing a few point-lights on the joints of an invisible walker. This special visual ability for biological motion perception has been found to involve the posterior superior temporal sulcus (STSp). However, in everyday life, human motion can also be recognized using acoustic cues. In the present study, we investigated the neural substrate of human motion perception when listening to footsteps, by means of a sparse sampling functional MRI design. We first showed an auditory attentional network that shares frontal and parietal areas previously found in visual attention paradigms. Second, an activation was observed in the auditory cortex (Heschls gyrus and planum temporale), likely to be related to low-level sound processing. Most strikingly, another activation was evidenced in a STSp region overlapping the temporal biological motion area previously reported using visual input. We thus propose that a part of the STSp region might be a supramodal area involved in human motion recognition, irrespective of the sensory modality input.


Neuroreport | 2001

How the brain perceives causality: an event-related fMRI study.

Sarah-Jayne Blakemore; Pierre Fonlupt; Mathilde Pachot-Clouard; CeÂline Darmon; Pascal Boyer; Andrew N. Meltzoff; Christoph Segebarth; Jean Decety

Detection of the causal relationships between events is fundamental for understanding the world around us. We report an event-related fMRI study designed to investigate how the human brain processes the perception of mechanical causality. Subjects were presented with mechanically causal events (in which a ball collides with and causes movement of another ball) and non-causal events (in which no contact is made between the balls). There was a significantly higher level of activation of V5/MT/MST bilaterally, the superior temporal sulcus bilaterally and the left intraparietal sulcus to causal relative to non-causal events. Directing attention to the causal nature of the stimuli had no significant effect on the neural processing of the causal events. These results support theories of causality suggesting that the perception of elementary mechanical causality events is automatically processed by the visual system.


Thrombosis Research | 1991

12-Hete inhibits the binding of PGH2/TXA2 receptor ligands in human platelets

Pierre Fonlupt; Martine Croset; Michel Lagarde

12(S)-hydroxy-5,8,10,14-eicosatetraenoic acid (12-HETE), the end-lipoxygenase product of arachidonic acid in platelets has been previously shown to prevent PGH2/TxA2-induced aggregation. From the present study, we show that 12-HETE inhibits the binding of [125I]-PTA-OH, a thromboxane antagonist, to platelet membranes with an IC50 of 8 microM. This value is in accordance with previously reported 12-HETE concentrations required to prevent the aggregation induced by TxA2 mimetics, the methano analogues of PGH2, U44069 and U46619. When [3H]-U44069 was used as a thromboxane agonist to label intact platelets, 12-HETE also inhibited its binding. We conclude that part of the inhibitory effect of 12-HETE on PGH2/TxA2-induced aggregation might be the result of interacting with PGH2/TxA2 receptor sites.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2003

Changes of effective connectivity between the lateral and medial parts of the prefrontal cortex during a visual task.

Thierry Chaminade; Pierre Fonlupt

Structural equation modelling was used to study the change of connectivity during a visual task with continuous variation of the attention load. The model was based on areas defined by the haemodynamic responses described elsewhere [Mazoyer, P., Wicker, B. & Fonlupt, P. (2002) A neural network elicited by parametric manipulation of the attention load. Neuroreport, 13, 2331–2334], including occipitotemporal, parietal, temporal and prefrontal (lateral and medial areas) cortices. We have studied stationary‐ (which does not depend on the attentional load) and attention‐related coupling between areas. This allowed the segregation of two subsystems. The first could reflect a system performing the integration step of the visual signal and the second a system participating in response selection. The major finding is the mutual negative influence between the lateral and medial parts of the prefrontal cortex. This negative influence between these two brain regions increased with the attention load. This is interpreted as a modification of the balance between integration and decision processes that are needed for the task to be efficiently completed.


Endocrinology | 1999

Susceptibility of Differentiated Thyrocytes in Primary Culture to Undergo Apoptosis after Exposure to Hydrogen Peroxide: Relation with the Level of Expression of Apoptosis Regulatory Proteins, Bcl-2 and Bax1

Catherine Riou; Hélène Tonoli; Françoise Bernier-Valentin; Rachida Rabilloud; Pierre Fonlupt; Bernard Rousset

Thyrocytes, that generate and use hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) to synthesize thyroid hormones, undergo apoptosis, as do most cell types, when exposed in vitro to H2O2. We have studied 1) the kinetics and the amplitude of the apoptotic response to H2O2 and 2) the relationship between the extent of the apoptosis-inducing effect of H2O2, the H2O2 degradation activity, and the level of expression of apoptosis regulatory proteins, Bcl-2 and Bax, in pig thyrocytes in primary culture. Cells were seeded at high density to obtain confluent monolayers and were cultured in the presence of TSH to maintain the expression of differentiation. H2O2 (10–300 μm) induced the appearance of cells with fragmented DNA (terminal transferase deoxy-UTP-fluorescein isothiocyanate nick end labeling-positive cells) at a maximum of 3–4 h after H2O2 addition and then the detachment of apoptotic cells from the cell monolayer. The proportion of detached cells increased with H2O2 concentration and amounted to up to 30% of the initial cell num...


Frontiers in Human Neuroscience | 2011

True and False Recognition Memories of Odors Induce Distinct Neural Signatures

Jean-Pierre Royet; Léri Morin-Audebrand; Barbara Cerf-Ducastel; Lori Haase; Sylvie Issanchou; Claire Murphy; Pierre Fonlupt; Claire Sulmont-Rossé; Jane Plailly

Neural bases of human olfactory memory are poorly understood. Very few studies have examined neural substrates associated with correct odor recognition, and none has tackled neural networks associated with incorrect odor recognition. We investigated the neural basis of task performance during a yes–no odor recognition memory paradigm in young and elderly subjects using event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging. We explored four response categories: correct (Hit) and incorrect false alarm (FA) recognition, as well as correct (CR) and incorrect (Miss) rejection, and we characterized corresponding brain responses using multivariate analysis and linear regression analysis. We hypothesized that areas of the medial temporal lobe were differentially involved depending on the accuracy of odor recognition. In young adults, we found that significant activity in the hippocampus and the parahippocampal gyrus was associated with correct (true) recognition of odors, whereas the perirhinal cortex was associated with FAs and Misses. These findings are consistent with literature regarding hypothetical functional organization for memory processing. We also found that for correct recognition and rejection responses, the involvement of the hippocampus decreased when memory performances improved. In contrast to young individuals, elderly subjects were more prone to false memories and exhibited less specific activation patterns for the four response categories. Activation in the hippocampus and the parahippocampal gyrus was positively correlated with response bias scores for true and false recognition, demonstrating that conservative subjects produced an additional search effort leading to more activation of these two medial temporal lobe regions. These findings demonstrate that correct and incorrect recognition and rejection induce distinct neural signatures.

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Christine Benistant

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Henri Pacheco

Institut national des sciences Appliquées de Lyon

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Bruno Wicker

Aix-Marseille University

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Lucien Cronenberger

Institut national des sciences Appliquées de Lyon

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Maurice Roche

Institut national des sciences appliquées

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Julie Grèzes

École Normale Supérieure

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Max Perrin-Fayolle

Institut national des sciences appliquées

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