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Dive into the research topics where R. E. Roberts is active.

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Featured researches published by R. E. Roberts.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2010

Expert cognitive control and individual differences associated with frontal and parietal white matter microstructure

R. E. Roberts; Elaine J. Anderson; Masud Husain

Although many functional imaging studies have reported frontal activity associated with “cognitive control” tasks, little is understood about factors underlying individual differences in performance. Here we compared the behavior and brain structure of healthy controls with fighter pilots, an expert group trained to make precision choices at speed in the presence of conflicting cues. Two different behavioral paradigms—Eriksen Flanker and change of plan tasks—were used to assess the influence of distractors and the ability to update ongoing action plans. Fighter pilots demonstrated superior cognitive control as indexed by accuracy and postconflict adaptation on the Flanker task, but also showed increased sensitivity to irrelevant, distracting choices. By contrast, when pilots were examined on their ability to inhibit a current action plan in favor of an alternative response, their performance was no better than the control group. Diffusion weighted imaging revealed differences in white matter radial diffusivity between pilots and controls not only in the right dorsomedial frontal region but also in the right parietal lobe. Moreover, analysis of individual differences in reaction time costs for conflict trials on the Flanker task demonstrated significant correlations with radial diffusivity at these locations, but in different directions. Postconflict adaptation effects, however, were confined to the dorsomedial frontal locus. The findings demonstrate that in humans expert cognitive control may surprisingly be mediated by enhanced response gain to both relevant and irrelevant stimuli, and is accompanied by structural alterations in the white matter of the frontal and parietal lobe.


Otology & Neurotology | 2016

Chronic symptoms after vestibular neuritis and the high velocity vestibulo-ocular reflex

M. Patel; Qadeer Arshad; R. E. Roberts; Hena Ahmad; Adolfo M. Bronstein

Hypothesis: As the anterior and posterior semicircular canals are vital to the regulation of gaze stability, particularly during locomotion or vehicular travel, we tested whether the high-velocity vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) of the three ipsilesional semicircular canals elicited by the modified Head Impulse Test would correlate with subjective dizziness or vertigo scores after vestibular neuritis (VN). Background: Recovery after acute VN varies with around half reporting persistent symptoms long after the acute episode. However, an unanswered question is whether chronic symptoms are associated with impairment of the high-velocity VOR of the anterior or posterior canals. Methods: Twenty patients who had experienced an acute episode of VN at least 3 months earlier were included in this study. Participants were assessed with the video head impulse test (vHIT) of all six canals, bithermal caloric irrigation, the Dizziness Handicap Inventory (DHI), and the Vertigo Symptoms Scale short-form (VSS). Results: Of these 20 patients, 12 thought that they had recovered from the initial episode whereas 8 did not and reported elevated DHI and VSS scores. However, we found no correlation between DHI or VSS scores and the ipsilesional single or combined vHIT gain, vHIT gain asymmetry orcaloric paresis. The high-velocity VOR was not different between patients who thought they had recovered and patients who thought they had not. Conclusion: Our findings suggest that chronic symptoms of dizziness after VN are not associated with the high-velocity VOR of the single or combined ipsilesional horizontal, anterior, or posterior semicircular canals.


Cerebral Cortex | 2016

Bidirectional Modulation of Numerical Magnitude

Qadeer Arshad; Yuliya Nigmatullina; Ramil Nigmatullin; Paladd Asavarut; Usman Goga; Sarah Khan; Kaija Sander; Shuaib Siddiqui; R. E. Roberts; Roi Cohen Kadosh; Adolfo M. Bronstein; Paresh Malhotra

Numerical cognition is critical for modern life; however, the precise neural mechanisms underpinning numerical magnitude allocation in humans remain obscure. Based upon previous reports demonstrating the close behavioral and neuro-anatomical relationship between number allocation and spatial attention, we hypothesized that these systems would be subject to similar control mechanisms, namely dynamic interhemispheric competition. We employed a physiological paradigm, combining visual and vestibular stimulation, to induce interhemispheric conflict and subsequent unihemispheric inhibition, as confirmed by transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS). This allowed us to demonstrate the first systematic bidirectional modulation of numerical magnitude toward either higher or lower numbers, independently of either eye movements or spatial attention mediated biases. We incorporated both our findings and those from the most widely accepted theoretical framework for numerical cognition to present a novel unifying computational model that describes how numerical magnitude allocation is subject to dynamic interhemispheric competition. That is, numerical allocation is continually updated in a contextual manner based upon relative magnitude, with the right hemisphere responsible for smaller magnitudes and the left hemisphere for larger magnitudes.


Neuroscience | 2015

Right hemisphere dominance directly predicts both baseline V1 cortical excitability and the degree of top-down modulation exerted over low-level brain structures

Qadeer Arshad; Shuaib Siddiqui; U. Goga; A. Bonsu; M. Patel; R. E. Roberts; Yuliya Nigmatullina; Paresh Malhotra; Adolfo M. Bronstein

Highlights • Line bisection predicts V1 excitability.• Line bisection predicts degree of VOR modulation.• Line bisection correlates with tDCS-mediated vestibular-nystagmus suppression.• Degree of nystagmus suppression is a bio-marker of right hemisphere dominance.


Brain Structure & Function | 2017

Functional neuroimaging of visuo-vestibular interaction.

R. E. Roberts; Hena Ahmad; Qadeer Arshad; Mehool Patel; Danai Dima; Robert Leech; Barry M. Seemungal; David J. Sharp; Adolfo M. Bronstein

The brain combines visual, vestibular and proprioceptive information to distinguish between self- and world motion. Often these signals are complementary and indicate that the individual is moving or stationary with respect to the surroundings. However, conflicting visual motion and vestibular cues can lead to ambiguous or false sensations of motion. In this study, we used functional magnetic resonance imaging to explore human brain activation when visual and vestibular cues were either complementary or in conflict. We combined a horizontally moving optokinetic stimulus with caloric irrigation of the right ear to produce conditions where the vestibular activation and visual motion indicated the same (congruent) or opposite directions of self-motion (incongruent). Visuo-vestibular conflict was associated with increased activation in a network of brain regions including posterior insular and transverse temporal areas, cerebellar tonsil, cingulate and medial frontal gyri. In the congruent condition, there was increased activation in primary and secondary visual cortex. These findings suggest that when sensory information regarding self-motion is contradictory, there is preferential activation of multisensory vestibular areas to resolve this ambiguity. When cues are congruent, there is a bias towards visual cortical activation. The data support the view that a network of brain areas including the posterior insular cortex may play an important role in integrating and disambiguating visual and vestibular cues.


Cortex | 2015

A dissociation between stopping and switching actions following a lesion of the pre-supplementary motor area.

R. E. Roberts; Masud Husain

Introduction Although the pre-supplementary motor area (pre-SMA) is one of the most frequently reported areas of activation in functional imaging studies, the role of this brain region in cognition is still a matter of intense debate. Here we present a patient with a focal lesion of caudal pre-SMA who displays a selective deficit in updating a response plan to switch actions, but shows no impairment when required to withhold a response – stopping. Materials & methods The patient and a control group underwent three tasks designed to measure different aspects of cognitive control and executive function. Results The pre-SMA patient displayed no impairment when responding in the face of distracting stimuli (Eriksen flanker paradigm), or when required to halt an on-going response (STOP task). However, a specific deficit was observed when she was required to rapidly switch between response plans (CHANGE task). Conclusions These findings suggest that the caudal pre-SMA may have a particularly important role in a network of brain regions required for rapidly updating and implementing response plans. The lack of any significant impairment on other measures of cognitive control suggests that this is not likely due to a global deficit in cognitive control. We discuss the implications of these results in the context of current theories of pre-SMA function.


Journal of Vestibular Research-equilibrium & Orientation | 2014

Applications of neuromodulation to explore vestibular cortical processing; new insights into the effects of direct current cortical modulation upon pursuit, VOR and VOR suppression

Hena Ahmad; Qadeer Arshad; Shuaib Siddiqui; Yuliya Nigmatullina; M. Patel; Adolfo M. Bronstein; R. E. Roberts

Functional imaging, lesion studies and behavioural observations suggest that vestibular processing is lateralised to the non-dominant hemisphere. Moreover, disruption of interhemispheric balance via inhibition of left parietal cortex using transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) has been associated with an asymmetric suppression of the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR). However, the mechanism by which the VOR was modulated remains unknown. In this paper we review the literature on non-invasive brain stimulation techniques which have been used to probe vestibular function over the last decade. In addition, we investigate the mechanisms whereby tDCS may modulate VOR, e.g. by acting upon pursuit, VOR suppression mechanisms or direct VOR modulation. We applied bi-hemispheric parietal tDCS in 11 healthy subjects and only observed significant effects on VOR gain (tdcs * condition p=0.041) - namely a trend for VOR gain increase with right anodal/left cathodal stimulation, and a decrease with right cathodal/left anodal stimulation. Hence, we suggest that the modulation of the VOR observed both here and in previous reports, is directly caused by top-down cortical control of the VOR as a result of disruption to interhemispheric balance, likely parietal.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2016

Perceived state of self during motion can differentially modulate numerical magnitude allocation.

Qadeer Arshad; Yuliya Nigmatullina; R. E. Roberts; U. Goga; M. Pikovsky; Sarah Khan; Rhannon Lobo; A.‐S. Flury; Vito Enrico Pettorossi; R. Cohen‐Kadosh; Paresh Malhotra; Adolfo M. Bronstein

Although a direct relationship between numerical allocation and spatial attention has been proposed, recent research suggests that these processes are not directly coupled. In keeping with this, spatial attention shifts induced either via visual or vestibular motion can modulate numerical allocation in some circumstances but not in others. In addition to shifting spatial attention, visual or vestibular motion paradigms also (i) elicit compensatory eye movements which themselves can influence numerical processing and (ii) alter the perceptual state of ‘self’, inducing changes in bodily self‐consciousness impacting upon cognitive mechanisms. Thus, the precise mechanism by which motion modulates numerical allocation remains unknown. We sought to investigate the influence that different perceptual experiences of motion have upon numerical magnitude allocation while controlling for both eye movements and task‐related effects. We first used optokinetic visual motion stimulation (OKS) to elicit the perceptual experience of either ‘visual world’ or ‘self’‐motion during which eye movements were identical. In a second experiment, we used a vestibular protocol examining the effects of perceived and subliminal angular rotations in darkness, which also provoked identical eye movements. We observed that during the perceptual experience of ‘visual world’ motion, rightward OKS‐biased judgments towards smaller numbers, whereas leftward OKS‐biased judgments towards larger numbers. During the perceptual experience of ‘self‐motion’, judgments were biased towards larger numbers irrespective of the OKS direction. Contrastingly, vestibular motion perception was found not to modulate numerical magnitude allocation, nor was there any differential modulation when comparing ‘perceived’ vs. ‘subliminal’ rotations. We provide a novel demonstration that numerical magnitude allocation can be differentially modulated by the perceptual state of self during visual but not vestibular mediated motion.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2008

Diffusion tensor imaging: implications for brain disease

R. E. Roberts; Masud Husain

One thing we have learned about brain disorders is that they do not usually respect boundaries between the cortex and underlying white matter. Damage to one has knock-on effects on the other, even in conditions which may preferentially affect white matter, such as multiple sclerosis. But what are the implications of white matter damage? Could it be responsible for cognitive syndromes that are traditionally considered to result from cortical damage? The paper by Urbanski and colleagues1 in this issue of J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry examines the possibility that disconnecting distributed cortical networks might play a critical role in the syndrome of unilateral neglect following stroke (see page 598) . These authors used diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), a new imaging method which …


Journal of Neurophysiology | 2017

Influence of biases in numerical magnitude allocation on human prosocial decision making

Qadeer Arshad; Yuliya Nigmatullina; Shuaib Siddiqui; Mustafa Franka; Saniya Mediratta; Sanjeev Ramachandaran; Rhannon Lobo; Paresh Malhotra; R. E. Roberts; Adolfo M. Bronstein

Over the past decade neuroscientific research has attempted to probe the neurobiological underpinnings of human prosocial decision making. Such research has almost ubiquitously employed tasks such as the dictator game or similar variations (i.e., ultimatum game). Considering the explicit numerical nature of such tasks, it is surprising that the influence of numerical cognition on decision making during task performance remains unknown. While performing these tasks, participants typically tend to anchor on a 50:50 split that necessitates an explicit numerical judgement (i.e., number-pair bisection). Accordingly, we hypothesize that the decision-making process during the dictator game recruits overlapping cognitive processes to those known to be engaged during number-pair bisection. We observed that biases in numerical magnitude allocation correlated with the formulation of decisions during the dictator game. That is, intrinsic biases toward smaller numerical magnitudes were associated with the formulation of less favorable decisions, whereas biases toward larger magnitudes were associated with more favorable choices. We proceeded to corroborate this relationship by subliminally and systematically inducing biases in numerical magnitude toward either higher or lower numbers using a visuo-vestibular stimulation paradigm. Such subliminal alterations in numerical magnitude allocation led to proportional and corresponding changes to an individuals decision making during the dictator game. Critically, no relationship was observed between neither intrinsic nor induced biases in numerical magnitude on decision making when assessed using a nonnumerical-based prosocial questionnaire. Our findings demonstrate numerical influences on decisions formulated during the dictator game and highlight the necessity to control for confounds associated with numerical cognition in human decision-making paradigms.NEW & NOTEWORTHY We demonstrate that intrinsic biases in numerical magnitude can directly predict the amount of money donated by an individual to an anonymous stranger during the dictator game. Furthermore, subliminally inducing perceptual biases in numerical-magnitude allocation can actively drive prosocial choices in the corresponding direction. Our findings provide evidence for numerical influences on decision making during performance of the dictator game. Accordingly, without the implementation of an adequate control for numerical influences, the dictator game and other tasks with an inherent numerical component (i.e., ultimatum game) should be employed with caution in the assessment of human behavior.

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Hena Ahmad

Imperial College London

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M. Patel

Imperial College London

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