Pilot Study
pilot study
Brain and Behavior: Employing Frequency Tagging as a Tool for Measuring Cognitive Abilities
Frequency tagging based on fast periodic visual stimulation (FPVS) provides a window into ongoing visual and cognitive processing and can be leveraged to measure rule learning and high-level categorization. In this talk, I will present data demonstrating highly proficient categorization as living and non-living in preschool children, and characterize the development of this ability during infancy. In addition to associating cognitive functions with development, an intriguing question is whether frequency tagging also captures enduring individual differences, e.g. in general cognitive abilities. First studies indicate high psychometric quality of FPVS categorization responses (XU et al., Dzhelyova), providing a basis for research on individual differences. I will present results from a pilot study demonstrating high correlations between FPVS categorization responses and behavioral measures of processing speed and fluid intelligences. Drawing upon this first evidence, I will discuss the potential of frequency tagging for diagnosing cognitive functions across development.
Developing a test to assess the ability of Zurich’s police cadets to discriminate, learn and recognize voices
The goal of this pilot study is to develop a test through which people with extraordinary voice recognition and discrimination skills can be found (for forensic purposes). Since interest in this field has emerged, three studies have been published with the goal of finding people with potential super-recognition skills in voice processing. One of them is a discrimination test and two are recognition tests, but neither combines the two test scenarios and their test designs cannot be directly compared to a casework scenario in forensics phonetics. The pilot study at hand attempts to bridge this gap and analyses if the skills of voice discrimination and recognition correlate. The study is guided by a practical, forensic application, which further complicates the process of creating a viable test. The participants for the pilot consist of different classes of police cadets, which means the test can be redone and adjusted over time.
A comparison of the brain parameters from Alzheimer’s and non-Alzheimer’s dementia in Thais: A pilot study
FENS Forum 2024
The effect of moderate‐intensity balance training on the activity of antioxidant enzymes in people with Parkinson's disease: A pilot study
FENS Forum 2024
Effects of an online intervention based on pain neuroscience education for pregnant women with lumbar pain on pain, disability, and kinesiophobia: A quasi-experimental pilot study
FENS Forum 2024
Relationship between cortical excitability and inhibitory control performance in adolescents with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD): A pilot study
FENS Forum 2024
The subthalamic nucleus hyperdirect pathway neural dynamics during cocaine use and 'natural' reward seeking behavior – a pilot study
FENS Forum 2024