Search or filter publications

Filter by type:

Filter by publication type

Filter by year:

to

Results

  • Showing results for:
  • Reset all filters

Search results

  • Journal article
    Keshavarzi M, Kegler M, Kadir S, Reichenbach Jet al., 2020,

    Transcranial alternating current stimulation in the theta band but not in the delta band modulates the comprehension of naturalistic speech in noise

    , NeuroImage, Vol: 210, ISSN: 1053-8119

    Auditory cortical activity entrains to speech rhythms and has been proposed as a mechanism for online speech processing. In particular, neural activity in the theta frequency band (4–8 ​Hz) tracks the onset of syllables which may aid the parsing of a speech stream. Similarly, cortical activity in the delta band (1–4 ​Hz) entrains to the onset of words in natural speech and has been found to encode both syntactic as well as semantic information. Such neural entrainment to speech rhythms is not merely an epiphenomenon of other neural processes, but plays a functional role in speech processing: modulating the neural entrainment through transcranial alternating current stimulation influences the speech-related neural activity and modulates the comprehension of degraded speech. However, the distinct functional contributions of the delta- and of the theta-band entrainment to the modulation of speech comprehension have not yet been investigated. Here we use transcranial alternating current stimulation with waveforms derived from the speech envelope and filtered in the delta and theta frequency bands to alter cortical entrainment in both bands separately. We find that transcranial alternating current stimulation in the theta band but not in the delta band impacts speech comprehension. Moreover, we find that transcranial alternating current stimulation with the theta-band portion of the speech envelope can improve speech-in-noise comprehension beyond sham stimulation. Our results show a distinct contribution of the theta- but not of the delta-band stimulation to the modulation of speech comprehension. In addition, our findings open up a potential avenue of enhancing the comprehension of speech in noise.

  • Journal article
    Hopkins M, Vaidyanathan R, McGregor AH, 2020,

    Examination of the performance characteristics of velostat as an in-socket pressure sensor

    , IEEE Sensors Journal, Vol: 20, Pages: 6992-7000, ISSN: 1530-437X

    Velostat is a low-cost, low-profile electrical bagging material with piezoresistive properties, making it an attractive option for in-socket pressure sensing. The focus of this research was to explore the suitability of a Velostat-based system for providing real-time socket pressure profiles. The prototype system performance was explored through a series of bench tests to determine properties including accuracy, repeatability and hysteresis responses, and through participant testing with a single subject. The fabricated sensors demonstrated mean accuracy errors of 110 kPa and significant cyclical and thermal drift effects of up to 0.00715 V/cycle and leading to up to a 67% difference in voltage range respectively. Despite these errors the system was able to capture data within a prosthetic socket, aligning to expected contact and loading patterns for the socket and amputation type. Distinct pressure maps were obtained for standing and walking tasks displaying loading patterns indicative of posture and gait phase. The system demonstrated utility for assessing contact and movement patterns within a prosthetic socket, potentially useful for improvement of socket fit, in a low cost, low profile and adaptable format. However, Velostat requires significant improvement in its electrical properties before proving suitable for accurate pressure measurement tools in lower limb prosthetics.

  • Journal article
    Nguyen TT, Carpanen D, Stinner D, Rankin I, Ramasamy A, Breeze J, Proud W, Clasper J, Masouros Set al., 2020,

    The risk of fracture to the tibia from a fragment simulating projectile

    , Journal of The Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials, Vol: 102, ISSN: 1751-6161

    Penetrating injuries due to fragments energised by an explosive event are life threatening and are associated with poor clinical and functional outcomes. The tibia is the long bone most affected in survivors of explosive events, yet the risk of penetrating injury to it has not been quantified. In this study, an injury-risk assessment of penetrating injury to the tibia was conducted using a gas-gun system with a 0.78-g cylindrical fragment simulating projectile. An ovine tibia model was used to generate the injury-risk curves and human cadaveric tests were conducted to validate and scale the results of the ovine model. The impact velocity at 50% risk (±95% confidence intervals) for EF1+, EF2+, EF3+, and EF4+ fractures to the human tibia – using the modified Winquist-Hansen classification – was 271 ± 30, 363 ± 46, 459 ± 102, and 936 ± 182 m/s, respectively. The scaling factor for the impact velocity from cadaveric ovine to human was 2.5. These findings define the protection thresholds to improve the injury outcomes for fragment penetrating injury to the tibia.

  • Journal article
    Stewart S, Darwood A, Masouros S, Higgins C, Ramasamy Aet al., 2020,

    Mechanotransduction in osteogenesis

    , Bone and Joint Research, Vol: 9, Pages: 1-14, ISSN: 2046-3758

    Bone is one of the most highly adaptive tissues in the body, possessing the capability to alter its morphology and function in response to stimuli in its surrounding environment. The ability of bone to sense and convert external mechanical stimuli into a biochemical response, which ultimately alters the phenotype and function of the cell, is described as mechanotransduction. This review aims to describe the fundamental physiology and biomechanisms that occur to induce osteogenic adaptation of a cell following application of a physical stimulus. Considerable developments have been made in recent years in our understanding of how cells orchestrate this complex interplay of processes, and have become the focus of research in osteogenesis. We will discuss current areas of preclinical and clinical research exploring the harnessing of mechanotransductive properties of cells and applying them therapeutically, both in the context of fracture healing and de novo bone formation in situations such as nonunion.

  • Journal article
    Yu X, Ghajari M, 2019,

    An assessment of blast modelling techniques for injury biomechanics research

    , International Journal for Numerical Methods in Biomedical Engineering, Vol: 35, Pages: 1-15, ISSN: 1069-8299

    Blast-induced Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) has been affecting combatants and civilians. The blast pressure wave is thought to have a significant contribution to blast related TBI. Due to the limitations and difficulties of conducting blast tests on surrogates, computational modelling has been used as a key method for exploring this field. However, the blast wave modelling methods reported in current literature have drawbacks. They either cannot generate the desirable blast pressure wave history, or they are unable to accurately simulate the blast wave/structure interaction. In addition, boundary conditions, which can have significant effects on model predictions, have not been described adequately. Here, we critically assess the commonly used methods for simulating blast wave propagation in air (open-field blast) and its interaction with the human body. We investigate the predicted blast wave time history, blast wave transmission and the effects of various boundary conditions in 3 dimensional (3D) models of blast prediction. We propose a suitable meshing topology, which enables accurate prediction of blast wave propagation and interaction with the human head and significantly decreases the computational cost in 3D simulations. Finally, we predict strain and strain rate in the human brain during blast wave exposure and show the influence of the blast wave modelling methods on the brain response. The findings presented here can serve as guidelines for accurately modelling blast wave generation and interaction with the human body for injury biomechanics studies and design of prevention systems.

  • Journal article
    Koziakova M, Harris K, Edge C, Franks N, White I, Dickinson Ret al., 2019,

    Noble gas neuroprotection: Xenon and argon protect against hypoxic-ischaemic injury in rat hippocampus in vitro via distinct mechanisms

    , British Journal of Anaesthesia, Vol: 123, Pages: 601-609, ISSN: 1471-6771

    BackgroundNoble gases may provide novel treatments for neurological injuries such as ischaemic and traumatic brain injury. Few studies have evaluated the complete series of noble gases under identical conditions in the same model.MethodsWe used an in vitro model of hypoxia–ischaemia to evaluate the neuroprotective properties of the series of noble gases, helium, neon, argon, krypton, and xenon. Organotypic hippocampal brain slices from mice were subjected to oxygen-glucose deprivation, and injury was quantified using propidium iodide fluorescence.ResultsBoth xenon and argon were equally effective neuroprotectants, with 0.5 atm of xenon or argon reducing injury by 96% (P<0.0001), whereas helium, neon, and krypton were devoid of any protective effect. Neuroprotection by xenon, but not argon, was reversed by elevated glycine.ConclusionsXenon and argon are equally effective as neuroprotectants against hypoxia–ischaemia in vitro, with both gases preventing injury development. Although xenon's neuroprotective effect may be mediated by inhibition of the N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor at the glycine site, argon acts via a different mechanism. These findings may have important implications for their clinical use as neuroprotectants.

  • Journal article
    Rankin IA, Thuy-Tien N, Carpanen D, Clasper JC, Masouros SDet al., 2019,

    Restricting lower limb flail is key to preventing fatal pelvic blast injury

    , Annals of Biomedical Engineering, Vol: 47, Pages: 2232-2240, ISSN: 0090-6964

    Pelvic vascular injury in the casualty of an explosive insult is a principal risk factor for increased mortality. The mechanism of injury has not previously been investigated in a physical model. In this study, a small-animal model of pelvic blast injury with a shock-tube mediated blast wave was utilised and showed that lower limb flail is necessary for an unstable pelvic fracture with vascular injury to occur. One hundred and seventy-three cadaveric mice underwent shock-tube blast testing and subsequent injury analysis. Increasingly displaced pelvic fractures and an increase in the incidence of pelvic vascular injury were seen with increasing lower limb flail; the 50% risk of vascular injury was 66° of lower limb flail out from the midline (95% confidence intervals 59°–75°). Pre-blast surgical amputation at the hip or knee showed the thigh was essential to result in pelvic displacement whilst the leg was not. These findings, corroborated by clinical data, bring a paradigm shift in our understanding of the mechanism of blast injury. Restriction of lower limb flail in the human, through personal protective equipment, has the potential to mitigate the effects of pelvic blast injury.

  • Journal article
    Etard O, Kegler M, Braiman C, Forte AE, Reichenbach Tet al., 2019,

    Decoding of selective attention to continuous speech from the human auditory brainstem response

    , NeuroImage, Vol: 200, Pages: 1-11, ISSN: 1053-8119

    Humans are highly skilled at analysing complex acoustic scenes. The segregation of different acoustic streams and the formation of corresponding neural representations is mostly attributed to the auditory cortex. Decoding of selective attention from neuroimaging has therefore focussed on cortical responses to sound. However, the auditory brainstem response to speech is modulated by selective attention as well, as recently shown through measuring the brainstem's response to running speech. Although the response of the auditory brainstem has a smaller magnitude than that of the auditory cortex, it occurs at much higher frequencies and therefore has a higher information rate. Here we develop statistical models for extracting the brainstem response from multi-channel scalp recordings and for analysing the attentional modulation according to the focus of attention. We demonstrate that the attentional modulation of the brainstem response to speech can be employed to decode the attentional focus of a listener from short measurements of 10 s or less in duration. The decoding remains accurate when obtained from three EEG channels only. We further show how out-of-the-box decoding that employs subject-independent models, as well as decoding that is independent of the specific attended speaker is capable of achieving similar accuracy. These results open up new avenues for investigating the neural mechanisms for selective attention in the brainstem and for developing efficient auditory brain-computer interfaces.

  • Conference paper
    Campos-Pires R, Mohamed-Ali N, Balaet M, Aldhoun J, Abelleira-Hervas L, Aitken P, Edge C, Franks N, Dickinson Ret al., 2019,

    Xenon prevents early neuronal loss and neuroinflammation in a rat model of traumatic brain injury

    , BJA Research Forum / Anaesthetic Research Society, Publisher: Elsevier, Pages: e508-e509, ISSN: 0007-0912
  • Journal article
    Etard O, Reichenbach J, 2019,

    Neural speech tracking in the theta and in the delta frequency band differentially encode clarity and comprehension of speech in noise

    , Journal of Neuroscience, Vol: 39, Pages: 5750-5759, ISSN: 0270-6474

    Humans excel at understanding speech even in adverse conditions such as background noise. Speech processing may be aided by cortical activity in the delta and theta frequency bands that has been found to track the speech envelope. However, the rhythm of non-speech sounds is tracked by cortical activity as well. It therefore remains unclear which aspects of neural speech tracking represent the processing of acoustic features, related to the clarity of speech, and which aspects reflect higher-level linguistic processing related to speech comprehension. Here we disambiguate the roles of cortical tracking for speech clarity and comprehension through recording EEG responses to native and foreign language in different levels of background noise, for which clarity and comprehension vary independently. We then use a both a decoding and an encoding approach to relate clarity and comprehension to the neural responses. We find that cortical tracking in the theta frequency band is mainly correlated to clarity, while the delta band contributes most to speech comprehension. Moreover, we uncover an early neural component in the delta band that informs on comprehension and that may reflect a predictive mechanism for language processing. Our results disentangle the functional contributions of cortical speech tracking in the delta and theta bands to speech processing. They also show that both speech clarity and comprehension can be accurately decoded from relatively short segments of EEG recordings, which may have applications in future mind-controlled auditory prosthesis.

  • Conference paper
    Campos-Pires R, Yonis A, Pau A, Macdonald W, Harris K, Franks N, Edge C, Dickinson Ret al., 2019,

    Delayed xenon treatment prevents injury development following blast-neurotrauma in vitro

    , 37th Annual National Neurotrauma Symposium, Publisher: Mary Ann Liebert, Pages: A40-A41, ISSN: 0897-7151
  • Conference paper
    Campos-Pires R, Hirnet T, Valeo F, Ong BE, Radyushkin K, Aldhoun J, Saville J, Edge CJ, Franks NP, Thal SC, Dickinson Ret al., 2019,

    XENON PREVENTS NEURODEGENERATION AND LATE-ONSET COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT, AND IMPROVES SURVIVAL AFTER TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY IN MICE

    , 37th Annual National Neurotrauma Symposium, Publisher: MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC, Pages: A47-A47, ISSN: 0897-7151
  • Conference paper
    Campos-Pires R, Mohamed-Ali N, Balaet M, Aldhoun J, Abelleira-Hervas L, Aitken P, Edge CJ, Franks NP, Dickinson Ret al., 2019,

    XENON REDUCES SECONDARY INJURY, PREVENTS NEURONAL LOSS AND NEUROINFLAMMATION IN A RAT MODEL OF TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY

    , 37th Annual National Neurotrauma Symposium, Publisher: MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC, Pages: A116-A116, ISSN: 0897-7151
  • Journal article
    Campos-Pires R, Hirnet T, Valeo F, Ong BE, Radyushkin K, Aldhoun J, Saville J, Edge CJ, Franks NP, Thal SC, Dickinson Ret al., 2019,

    Xenon improves long-term cognitive function, reduces neuronal loss and chronic neuroinflammation, and improves survival after traumatic brain injury in mice

    , British Journal of Anaesthesia, Vol: 123, Pages: 60-73, ISSN: 0007-0912
  • Conference paper
    Nguyen TT, Masouros S, 2019,

    Penetration of Blast Fragments to the Thorax

    , International Research Council On Biomechanics Of Injury
  • Conference paper
    Nguyen TT, Masouros S, 2019,

    Penetration of Blast Fragments to the Thorax

    , International Research Council On Biomechanics Of Injury 2019
  • Conference paper
    Nguyen TT, Meek G, Masouros S, 2019,

    Blast Fragment Protection for The Extremities

    , Light Weight Armour for Defense & Security 2019
  • Conference paper
    Campos-Pires R, Yonis A, Pau A, Macdonald W, Harris K, Edge C, Franks N, Dickinson Ret al., 2019,

    The Noble Gas Xenon Prevents Injury Development Following Blast-Traumatic Brain Injury In Vitro

    , 13th World Conference on Brain Injury, Pages: 218-218, ISSN: 0269-9052
  • Conference paper
    Campos-Pires R, Hirnet T, Valeo F, Ong BE, Saville J, Radyushkin K, Edge C, Franks N, Thal S, Dickinson Ret al., 2019,

    Xenon Treatment Prevents Late Onset Cognitive Impairment and Improves Survival Following Traumatic Brain Injury in Mice

    , 13th World Conference on Brain Injury, Pages: 220-220, ISSN: 0269-9052
  • Conference paper
    Campos-Pires R, Mohamed-Ali N, Balaet M, Aldhoun J, Abelleira-Hervas L, Aitken P, Edge C, Franks N, Dickinson Ret al., 2019,

    Xenon Treatment Reduces Secondary Injury Development and Prevents Neuronal Loss and Microglial Proliferation in a Rat Model of Traumatic Brain Injury

    , 13th World Conference on Brain injury, Pages: 222-222, ISSN: 0269-9052

This data is extracted from the Web of Science and reproduced under a licence from Thomson Reuters. You may not copy or re-distribute this data in whole or in part without the written consent of the Science business of Thomson Reuters.

Request URL: http://www.imperial.ac.uk:80/respub/WEB-INF/jsp/search-t4-html.jsp Request URI: /respub/WEB-INF/jsp/search-t4-html.jsp Query String: id=566&limit=20&page=2&respub-action=search.html Current Millis: 1732207522172 Current Time: Thu Nov 21 16:45:22 GMT 2024