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Shadowing and reading aloud both involve multiple complex cognitive processes, and both are considered effective methods for second-language learning. The working memory system, particularly the phonological loop, has been suggested to be involved in shadowing and reading aloud. The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of a 4-week intensive adaptive training including shadowing and reading aloud of second language on working-memory capacity, regional gray matter volume (rGMV), and functional activation related to the n-back working-memory task in young adults. The results showed that compared with the training groups without speaking (listening to compressed speech and active control involving the second language), the training groups with speaking (shadowing and reading aloud) showed a tendency for greater test-retest increases in digit-span scores, and significantly greater test-retest decreases in N-back task reaction time (increase in working memory performance). Imaging analyses revealed compared with the active control group, shadowing group exhibited decreases in rGMV and brain activity during the working memory task (2-back task), in the left cerebellum and reading group exhibited decreases in them in the right anterior insula. These regions are parts of the phonological loop, suggesting the presence of training-induced neural plasticity in these neurocognitive mechanisms.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11682-020-00324-4 | DOI Listing |
Am J Surg
July 2025
Orthopaedic and Traumatologic Surgery Unit, CHU Cavale Blanche, Boulevard Tanguy Prigent, 29200, Brest, France.
This article examines the long-standing claim that French surgery was an exclusively male profession from the Middle Ages to the nineteenth century. It maps the social, economic, and legal mechanisms that gradually erased women practitioners between the twelfth and eighteenth centuries by analyzing four interlocking source sets: tax registers and guild rolls that record occupational identities; royal ordinances, apprenticeship contracts, and hospital regulations that define professional boundaries; iconographic and epigraphic material that visualizes or names women at work; and contemporary medical treatises that reveal shifting gendered vocabularies. Combining quantitative prosopography with close reading of normative texts, the study traces how craft professionalization, linguistic masculinization, and institutional reforms narrowed women's access to surgical labor.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Acad Orthop Surg
July 2025
From the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick, NJ.
Introduction: Early exposure to surgical specialties markedly affects medical students' career interests and preparedness. This study evaluates the effectiveness of a novel Orthopaedic Surgery Summer Immersion Program in fostering interest, enhancing knowledge, and building mentorship connections among medical students.
Methods: The program targeted rising 2nd-year medical students and provided surgical and clinical shadowing, academic lectures, hands-on workshops, and mentorship opportunities.
Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci
July 2025
Retinal Disorders and Ophthalmic Genetics Division, Jules Stein Eye Institute, David Geffen School of Medicine-UCLA, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, United States.
Purpose: To detect and differentiate the various subtypes of drusen and subretinal drusenoid deposits (SDDs) using single-capture en face spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT) imaging.
Methods: This study was a retrospective case series. Sixty-six eyes of 37 patients with evidence of soft, cuticular, and calcified drusen and SDDs were analyzed.
Psychol Res
July 2025
Developmental and Cognitive Neuroscience Lab, Department of General Psychology, University of Padua, Padua, Italy.
Developmental dyslexia (DD) is the most frequent neurodevelopmental disorder among school-age children. Traditional remediation programs for DD are rarely controlled for the placebo effect, raising the hypothesis that positive expectations might explain their efficacy. Wearing expensive flickering glasses has been associated with extraordinary improvements in reading skills.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Noninvasive Electrocardiol
January 2025
Cardiovascular Analytics Group, Islamabad, Pakistan.
Radiofrequency ablation (RFA) is a safe and effective treatment for patients experiencing ventricular and atrial tachyarrhythmias. While complications after RFA are generally rare, the occurrence of coronary artery (CA) injury, albeit infrequent, can have significant clinical implications. Given the proximity of CAs to common ablation sites, understanding the interplay between RFA and CA perfusion pathophysiology is paramount.
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