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Dive into the research topics where Ronald Ranvaud is active.

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Featured researches published by Ronald Ranvaud.


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2010

Applying a new version of the Brazilian-Portuguese UPSIT smell test in Brazil.

Laura Silveira-Moriyama; Adriana Medeiros Sales de Azevedo; Ronald Ranvaud; Egberto Reis Barbosa; Richard L. Doty; Andrew J. Lees

Standardized olfactory tests are now available to quantitatively assess disorders of olfaction. A Brazilian-Portuguese version of the University of Pennsylvania Smell Identification Test (UPSIT) is currently being developed specifically for the Brazilian population. The most recent Brazilian-Portuguese version of the UPSIT (UPSIT-Br2) was administered to 88 Brazilian subjects who had no history of neurological or otorhinolaryngological disease. UPSIT-Br2 scores decreased with age, were lower in men than in women, and were lower in subjects with lower income. The degree to which the poorer performance of subjects with lower socio-economic status reflects lack of familiarity with test items is not known. Although this version of the UPSIT provides a sensitive and useful test of smell function for the Brazilian population, a revision of some test items is needed to achieve comparable norms to those found using the North American UPSIT in the United States.


Human & Experimental Toxicology | 2007

Effects of acute alcohol intoxication on visuospatial attention

Lh Canto-Pereira; Isabel de Paula Antunes David; Walter Machado-Pinheiro; Ronald Ranvaud

The aim of the present study was to examine the effects of acute alcohol intoxication on the spatial distribution of visual attention measured with simple reaction times (RTs) to targets presented over an extended region of the visual field. Control (n =10) and alcohol groups (n =14) were tested with the same protocol. Participants were tested in two different conditions; in Experiment I, participants were instructed to direct their visual attention to the centre, while in Experiment II they were asked to orient their attention covertly to both right and left, but not to the centre. Throughout participants were required to fixate a small cross in the centre of the computer screen. In the alcohol group, participants received an alcohol dose of 0.4 g/kg so as to produce a blood alcohol concentration (BAC) in the range of 0.08% during the experiments. The spatial distribution of RTs was analysed graphically with geostatistical methods and statistically through analysis of variance of particular regions of the visual field. Results showed that controls were able to direct their attention tightly towards the centre (Expt I) and also to divide attention (Expt II) to the right and left. Participants in the alcohol group fixed their attention more diffusely in the centre (Expt I) and were unable to disengage attention from the centre in Experiment II. We conclude that acute alcohol intoxication impairs the ability to dissociate attention from gaze. Human & Experimental Toxicology (2007) 26, 311-319


Australian & New Zealand Journal of Statistics | 2000

Analysis of Circular Longitudinal Data Based on Generalized Estimating Equations

Rinaldo Artes; Gilberto A. Paula; Ronald Ranvaud

This paper derives estimating equations for modelling circular data with longitudinal structure for a family of circular distributions with two parameters. Estimating equations for modelling the circular mean and the resultant length are given separately. Estimating equations are then derived for a mixed model. This paper shows that the estimators that follow from these equations are consistent and asymptotically normal. The results are illustrated by an example about the direction taken by homing pigeons.


Movement Disorders | 2004

Chediak‐Higashi syndrome with parkinsonism

Laura Silveira-Moriyama; Tais S. Moriyama; Tatiana Villas Boas Gabbi; Ronald Ranvaud; Egberto Reis Barbosa

Chediak‐Higashi syndrome (CHS), typically presents with partial albinism and severe hematological abnormalities. About 10% of the patients have a mild adult form associated with various neurological manifestations. We describe the case of a 24‐year‐old woman with parkinsonism that responded well to antiparkinsonian drugs.


Journal of Sports Sciences | 2013

The mere presence of a goalkeeper affects the accuracy of penalty kicks

Martina Navarro; John van der Kamp; Ronald Ranvaud; G.J.P. Savelsbergh

Abstract The keeper-independent strategy, in which a football penalty kicker selects a target location in advance and ignores the goalkeepers actions during the run-up, has been suggested to be the preferable strategy for taking a penalty kick. The current in-field experiment investigated the question of whether the goalkeeper can indeed be ignored. Ten intermediate-level football players were instructed to adopt a goalkeeper-independent strategy and to perform penalty kicks directed at one of two targets located in the upper corners of the goal under three conditions: without a goalkeeper, in the presence of a goalkeeper (who tried to save the ball), and in the presence of a goalkeeper who was informed by the penalty kickers where they intended to direct the ball. The mere presence of a goalkeeper impaired shot accuracy. The shots were more centralised, that is, biased toward the goalkeeper. The effects were enhanced for the condition in which the penalty kicker knew the goalkeeper was knowledgeable about ball direction. The findings were consistent with the response activation model that holds that aiming at a target can be biased toward salient visual non-targets. The implications for adopting and practising goalkeeper-independent strategies are discussed.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2014

Timing skills and expertise: discrete and continuous timed movements among musicians and athletes

Thenille Braun Janzen; William Forde Thompson; Paolo Ammirante; Ronald Ranvaud

Introduction: Movement-based expertise relies on precise timing of movements and the capacity to predict the timing of events. Music performance involves discrete rhythmic actions that adhere to regular cycles of timed events, whereas many sports involve continuous movements that are not timed in a cyclical manner. It has been proposed that the precision of discrete movements relies on event timing (clock mechanism), whereas continuous movements are controlled by emergent timing. We examined whether movement-based expertise influences the timing mode adopted to maintain precise rhythmic actions. Materials and Method: Timing precision was evaluated in musicians, athletes and control participants. Discrete and continuous movements were assessed using finger-tapping and circle-drawing tasks, respectively, based on the synchronization-continuation paradigm. In Experiment 1, no auditory feedback was provided in the continuation phase of the trials, whereas in Experiment 2 every action triggered a feedback tone. Results: Analysis of precision in the continuation phase indicated that athletes performed significantly better than musicians and controls in the circle-drawing task, whereas musicians were more precise than controls in the finger tapping task. Interestingly, musicians were also more precise than controls in the circle-drawing task. Results also showed that the timing mode adopted was dependent on expertise and the presence of auditory feedback. Discussion: Results showed that movement-based expertise is associated with enhanced timing, but these effects depend on the nature of the training. Expertise was found to influence the timing strategy adopted to maintain precise rhythmic movements, suggesting that event and emergent timing mechanisms are not strictly tied to specific tasks, but can both be adopted to achieve precise timing.


Frontiers in Human Neuroscience | 2014

A developmental study of the effect of music training on timed movements.

Thenille Braun Janzen; William Forde Thompson; Ronald Ranvaud

When people clap to music, sing, play a musical instrument, or dance, they engage in temporal entrainment. We examined the effect of music training on the precision of temporal entrainment in 57 children aged 10–14 years (31 musicians, 26 non-musicians). Performance was examined for two tasks: self-paced finger tapping (discrete movements) and circle drawing (continuous movements). For each task, participants synchronized their movements with a steady pacing signal and then continued the movement at the same rate in the absence of the pacing signal. Analysis of movements during the continuation phase revealed that musicians were more accurate than non-musicians at finger tapping and, to a lesser extent, circle drawing. Performance on the finger-tapping task was positively associated with the number of years of formal music training, whereas performance on the circle-drawing task was positively associated with the age of participants. These results indicate that music training and maturation of the motor system reinforce distinct skills of timed movement.


Revista Brasileira de Educação Física e Esporte | 2008

Análise do sistema de validação de pontos no "Taekwondo"

Martina Navarro; Nelson Miyamoto; Ronald Ranvaud

Olympic Sport since Sidney-2000, Taekwondo is a contact sport determined by a fight between two athletes through techniques of blows with the feet and the hands. The result of the fight depends entirely on the evaluation of three referees that attribute points to the athletes pressing one of four buttons every time that a referee judges that an athlete hit the other with a valid technique. To be a valid point, attributed to an athlete, at least two referees must press equivalent buttons in a 3 sec time interval. The objective of this study was to analyze the refereeing system of Taekwondo to verify its robustness against plausible changes in the rules. We quantified the number of markings under reasonable criteria and calculated the percentage of occasions in which the result would be inverted. During three official competitions, we collected the raw scores of 141 fights, in which 5418 markings had been entered, and 3725 officialized as points, with an average of 12 markings per judge per fight, of which 8.5 (70%) became valid points. On average there were 17% inversions (official results that would be inverse according to point validation criterion), considering scores as general (grand total) markings, individual or in pairs. The results indicate a significant number of fights inversions. We conclude that is necessary trying to minimize the influence of a given referee, as the WTF attempted recently by modifying the rules and adding a fourth referee to judge the punctuation of the athletes


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2001

The speed of pitch resolution in a musical context

Ronald Ranvaud; William Forde Thompson; L. Silveira-Moriyama; Laura-Lee Balkwill

In five experiments, we investigated the speed of pitch resolution in a musical context. In experiments 1-3, listeners were presented an incomplete scale (doh, re, mi, fa, sol, la, ti) and then a probe tone. Listeners were instructed to make a rapid key-press response to probe tones that were relatively proximal in pitch to the last note of the scale (valid trials), and to ignore other probe tones (invalid trials). Reaction times were slower if the pitch of the probe tone was dissonant with the expected pitch (i.e., the completion of the scale, or doh) or if the probe tone was nondiatonic to the key implied by the scale. In experiments 4 and 5, listeners were presented a two-octave incomplete arpeggio, and then a probe tone. In this case, listeners were asked to make a rapid key-press response to probe tones that were relatively distant in pitch from the last note of the arpeggio. Under these conditions, registral direction and pitch proximity were the dominant influences on reaction time. Results are discussed in view of research on auditory attention and models of musical pitch.


Attention Perception & Psychophysics | 2015

A mathematical model of saccadic reaction time as a function of the fixation point brightness gain.

Antonio Diaz-Tula; Carlos Hitoshi Morimoto; Ronald Ranvaud

The gap effect refers to a reduction in saccadic reaction time (SRT) to an eccentric target, when the fixation point is removed before the target onset. Though it is known that the gap effect peaks when the fixation point is offset about 200 ms before the onset of the eccentric target, it is unknown how this effect is modulated by stimulus variations. In this paper, we propose and investigate a model of saccadic reaction time as a function of the fixation point brightness gain. The brightness gain is defined as the ratio of the final and initial intensities of the stimulus. We have conducted a typical gap effect experiment with 15 participants, where the brightness of the fixation point was manipulated under four conditions and two gap intervals, at the same time and 200 ms before the onset of the eccentric target. The conditions included removing the fixation point (offset), leaving it with constant brightness (overlap), reducing, and increasing its brightness (lower and higher brightness conditions). Experimental data showed a significant gap effect in the offset and lower brightness conditions when compared to the overlap condition. On the other hand, the SRT was significantly longer for the higher brightness condition than the SRT for the overlap condition. Linear regression analysis using ten values of brightness gain shows that our model fits the data well for the 0- and 200-ms gap, with a coefficient of determination of .89 and .94, respectively.

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Edgard Morya

University of São Paulo

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