16TH WORLD CONGRESS OF THE INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION OF PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY SEPTEMBER 13�17, 2012 PISA, ITALY Polo Dida�co Porta Nuova 1 Comune di Pisa Università di Pisa e Facoltà di Medicina e Chirurgia Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitaria Pisana Istituto per la Riabilitazione e l’Inserimento Sociale INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION OF PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY BOARD OF DIRECTORS President: Giuseppe A. Chiarenza (Rho, Milan, Italy) Vice-President: Risto Näätänen (Helsinki, Finland) Secretary: Hiroshi Nittono (Hiroshima, Japan) Treasurer: Robert J. Barry (Wollongong, NSW, Australia) CONGRESS COMMITTEE PRESIDENT, 16TH WORLD CONGRESS OF IOP Pietro Pietrini, Laboratory of Clinical Biochemistry and Molecular Biology and Clinical Psychology Branch, University of Pisa, Italy CHAIRMAN, LOCAL ORGANIZING COMMITTEE Angelo Gemignani, Department of Physiological Sciences, University of Pisa, Italy SCIENTIFIC COORDINATOR OF ABSTRACTS Emiliano Ricciardi, Laboratory of Clinical Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Pisa, Italy LOCAL ORGANIZING COMMITTEE Claudio Babiloni, Foggia Carlo Alberto Marzi, Verona Fiorella Battaglia, Pisa Gabriele Masi, Pisa Giovanni Cioni, Pisa Luciano Montaldi, Milano Giancarlo Comi, Milano Aldo Ragazzoni, Firenze Vilfredo De Pascalis, Roma Emiliano Ricciardi, Pisa Luciano Fadiga, Ferrara Bruno Rossi, Pisa Francesco Fattapposta, Roma Giuseppe Sartori, Padova Brigida Fierro, Palermo Ferdinando Sartucci, Pisa Angelo Gemignani, Pisa Svetla Velikova, Milano Claudio Gentili, Pisa INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZING COMMITTEE Andrey Anokhin, USA Robert J. Barry, Australia Catherine Barthelemy, France Erol Başar, Turkey Luis F.H. Basile, Brazil Gershon Ben-Shakhar, Israel Shlomo Bentin †, Israel Edward M. Bernat, USA Nicole Bruneau, France Kenneth Campbell, Canada Marco Congedo, France Hugo Crichley, UK Valéria Csépe, Hungary István Czigler, Hungary Nina Danilova, Russia Connie C. Duncan, USA Monica Fabiani, USA Judith Ford, USA Mats Fredrikson, Sweden 2 Guido H.E. Gendolla, Switzerland Thalía Harmony, Mexico Oscar H. Hernández Vázquez, Mexico Christoph S. Herrmann, Germany Robert Isenhart, USA Alexey Ivanitsky, Russia Stuart Johnstone, Australia Jochen Kaiser, Germany Sirel Karakaş, Turkey Jurgen Kayser, USA Heikki Lyytinen, Finland Joëlle Martineau, France Svyatoslav Medvedev, Russia Márk Molnár, Hungary Risto Näätänen, Finland Hiroshi Nittono, Japan Murat Özgören , Turkey Gert Pfurtscheller, Austria Jordan Pop-Jordanov, Republic of Macedonia Nadica Pop-Jordanova, Republic of Macedonia John W. Rohrbaugh, USA J. Peter Rosenfeld, USA Henrique Sequeira, France David Shucard, USA Janet Shucard, USA Wolfgang Skrandies, Germany Stuart Steinhauer, USA Elyse S. Sussman, USA Joseph J. Tecce, USA Juanita Todd, Australia Pedro A. Valdés-Sosa, Cuba Maurits Van Der Molen, The Netherlands Scott Vrana, USA Roeljan Wiersema, Belgium István Winkler, Hungary Juliana Yordanova, Bulgaria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– 5.15 p.m. Plenary Session Room 1 OPENING CEREMONY 5.15 – 6.15 p.m. Plenary Session Room 1 Invited lecture: Wolf Singer (Germany) What binds it all together? Temporal coordination of neuronal responses in normal and pathological cognition 6.15 – 9.30 p.m. Welcome Reception Congress Venue FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14TH, 2012 8.00 – 9.45 a.m. Room 1 Symposium A: Disturbances of some neurophysiological and genetic mechanisms in mental pathology (I part) Symposium Chair: Valeria B. Strelets (Russia) Psychophysiological correlates of treatment efficacy of late age depressions A.F. Iznak, E.V. Iznak, O.B. Yakovleva, T.P. Safarova, V.V. Kornilov (Russia) Neurophysiological features of perception of emotional stimuli and their relationship to the genetic factor in schizophrenia A. Arkhipov, Zh.V. Garakh (Russia) Genes and auditory event-related potentials in schizophrenia V.E. Golimbet, I.S. Lebedeva, G.I. Korovaitseva, S.A. Borozdina, K.E. Anikeyeva, L.I. Abramova (Russia) The study of relationships between three neurophysiological endophenotypes in unmedicated schizophrenic patients A.V. Kirenskaya, Z.I.Storozheva, V.Ju.Novototsky-Vlasov, V.V.Myamlin, D.V.Samylkin (Russia) 8.00 – 9.45 a.m. Room 2 Symposium B: Understanding ADHD with advanced neuroimaging and neuromapping techniques Symposium Chair: Sirel Karakaş (Turkey), Robert J. Barry (Australia) The neuropsychological profile of ADHD and relation to Wechsler intelligence scale performance E.E. Bakar, A.Ş. Soysal, Y.I. Taner, S. Karakaş (Turkey) Time-frequency responses in ADHD to neurocognitive tasks analyzed by time-frequency hermite-gaussian atomizer technique S. Karakaş, E.D. Dinçer, A.Ö. Ceylan, Y.K. Alp, O. Arıkan (Turkey) Is there more to the lower performance IQ in ADHD: Preliminary findings from functional magnetic resonance imaging H.M. Karakas, S. Karakaş (Turkey) Resting state EEG and symptoms of ADHD R.J. Barry, A.R. Clarke (Australia) 4 8.00 – 9.45 a.m. Room 3 Symposium C: Brain entrainment Symposium Chair: Christoph S. Herrmann, Daniel Strüber (Germany) Criteria for the identification of entrainment: Theory and application J. Gross, G. Thut (UK) Physiology of tACS W. Paulus (Germany) Transcranial alternating current stimulation modulates the perception of bistable apparent motion D. Strüber, S. Rach, S.A. Trautmann-Lengsfeld, A.K. Engel, C.S. Herrmann (Germany) Evidence for entrainment of perceptually relevant brain rhythms by rhythmic TMS G. Thut, J. Gross (UK) 8.00 – 9.45 a.m. Room 5 Symposium D: Psychophysiology of sports Symposium Chair: Letizia Leocani, Francesco Di Russo (Italy) Sport effects on the age-related over-recruitment of the prefrontal cortex F. Di Russo (Italy) Is there a neural efficiency in the athlete’s brain? F. Vecchio, C. Del Percio, C. Babiloni (Italy) EEG connectivity in high-performance fencers S. Velikova, J. Gonzales-Rosa, C. Castellani, M. Rossi, A. Tettamanti, R. Gatti, G. Comi, L. Leocani (Italy) Psychomotor and executive functions in elite soccer players L. Leocani, A. Nuara, M. Cursi, J. Gonzalez-Rosa, F. Combi, G. Comi (Italy) 9.45 – 10.15 a.m. Coffee Break 10.15 – 11.15 a.m. Plenary Session Room 1 Invited lecture: Leslie Prichep (USA) The evolution of quantitative EEG and source localization: Toward optimization of treatment of neuropsychiatric disorders 11.15 a.m. – 1.00 p.m. Room 1 Symposium A: Cortical visual information processing in autism spectrum disorders Symposium Chair: Nicole Bruneau (France) Neural and behavioral correlates of middle vision in ASD: Texture, contours and crowding S. Baldassi, F. Pei (Italy) VEP contrast sensitivity responses reveal reduced functional segregration of visual processing channels in autism B. Jemel, D. Mimeault, D. Saint-Amour, L. Mottron (Canada) Visual gain control abnormalities in autism spectrum disorders F. Pei, S. Baldassi, A. Norcia (USA) Automatic visual change perception through typical development and in autism: An electrophysiological study H. Cléry, N. Bruneau, S. Roux, E. Houy-Durand, F. Bonnet-Brilhault, M. Gomot (France) 5 Latent alterations in intra- and interhemispheric functional connectivities in childhood autism detected by EEG photic driving coherence V.V. Lazarev, A. Pontes, L.C. deAzevedo (Brazil) 11.15 a.m. – 1.00 p.m. Room 2 Symposium B: Disturbances of some neurophysiological and genetic mechanisms in mental pathology (II part) Symposium Chair: Valeria B. Strelets (Russia) Differences in perception of music harmony in schizophrenia A. Maslennikova (Russia) Schizophrenia and comorbid deviant sexual behavior – The study of potential neurophysiological and neurochemical markers Z.I. Storozheva, A.V. Kirenskaya, K.Yu. Telesheva, V.Yu. Novototski-Vlasov, D.V. Samylkin, A.A. Tkachenko (Russia) Timing of early verbal processing in normal and schizophrenic patients with positive and negative symptoms V.B. Strelets, Zh.V. Garakh, Yu.S. Zaytseva, I.Ya. Gurovich (Russia) Searching for electrophysiological endophenotypes of antisocial personality disorder: ERP and ERBP traits in visual Go/No Go and auditory oddball tasks A. Varlamov, C. Duggan, V.B. Strelets, A. Kravchenko, R. Howard, P. Liddle (Russia) 11.15 a.m. – 1.00 p.m. Room 3 Symposium C: Advanced EEG analysis and multi-methodological approaches in psychophysiological and clinical research Symposium Chair: Luis F.H. Basile (Brazil) What do the ERP components add to behavioral data? S. Karakaş, E.D. Dinçer, A.Ö. Ceylan (Turkey) Abnormal brain oscillation as revealed by EEG rhythms in Alzheimer disease: Validation of EEG markers in the European DECIDE project F. Vecchio, R. Lizio, P.M. Rossini, C. Babiloni (Italy) Lack of systematic topographic difference between attention and reasoning beta correlates L.F.H. Basile, M.Y. Alvarenga,, N. Henrique Jr., H.A. Pasquini, W. Alfenas (Brazil) Phase space methods for the analysis of rapid cortical dynamics underlying human cognition G. Baggio, A. Fonseca (Italy) 11.15 a.m. – 1.00 p.m. Room 5 Symposium D: The how and why of trying harder: New perspectives on the psychophysiology of effort Symposium Chair: Guido H.E. Gendolla (Switzerland) When fatigue promotes striving: Cognitive resource depletion and success importance as determinants of effortrelated cardiovascular response R.A. Wright (USA) Implicit affect influences effort-related cardiac response: Sadness vs. anger G.H.E. Gendolla (Switzerland) Integration of cardiovascular function with mental effort: Neuroimaging evidence from studies of cognition, motivation and emotional processing H.D. Critchley (UK) Psychophysiology of perceived effort during physical tasks S. Marcora (UK) Task difficulty effects on exerted force in an isometric hand-grip task: Mixed evidence for energy conservation M. Richter (Switzerland) 6 1.00 – 2.00 p.m. Lunch Break 2.00 – 3.30 p.m. POSTER SESSION 3.30 – 4.30 p.m. Plenary Session Room 1 Invited lecture: Paolo Maria Rossini (Italy) Neurophysiological techniques for cortical connectivity 4.30 – 5.00 pm. Coffee Break 5.00 – 6.45 p.m. Room 1 Symposium A: Neuroimaging of deception Symposium Chair: Svyatoslav Medvedev (Russia) The possible role of an error detection mechanism in brain processing of deception M. Kireev, A. Korotkov, S. Medvedev (Russia) Conceptual and methodological considerations in current research on (psychophysiological) detection of deception G. Ben-Shakhar, E. Meijer (Israel) Countermeasure mechanisms in the complex trial protocol M.R. Winograd, J.P. Rosenfeld (USA) Neuroimaging of deception: Promises and perils G. Ganis (UK) 5.00 – 6.45 p.m. Room 2 Symposium B: Oscillatory systems of the brain, their role in the management of mental processes, behavior, and individual differences Symposium Chair: Vilfredo De Pascalis, Nina Danilova (Russia) Oscillatory systems and mental processes: Identification of target stimulus in experiments with working memory N.N. Danilova (Russia) Can training change individual differences in ability? N. Jaušovec, K. Jaušovec (Slovenia) The relation of EEG-alpha asymmetry, BIS/BAS, and positive orientation on the trait level V. De Pascalis, G. Cozzuto, G.V. Caprara (Italy) 5.00 – 6.45 p.m. Room 3 Symposium C: Application-oriented psychophysiology: Product design, computer games, and emotions Symposium Chair: Hiroshi Nittono (Japan) Event-related potential responses to the attractive appearance of everyday objects H. Nittono, S. Sugimoto (Japan) 7 Autonomic activities during various types of video game tasks Y. Nagano (Japan) Psychological effects of human interaction in mahjong: A heart-rate study K. Miyaji, K. Kasuga, F. Takahashi (Japan) An apology suppresses the approach motivation but not the emotional component of physiological and psychological anger K. Kubo, K. Okanoya, N. Kawai (Japan) Do positive moods broaden the focus of visual attention? An electrophysiological study H. Moriya, H. Nittono (Japan) 5.00 – 6.45 p.m. Room 5 Symposium D: Brain plasticity and neurodevelopmental disorders Symposium Chair: Giovanni Cioni (Italy) Development of a rodent model of perinatal stroke: Focus on motor recovery M. Gennaro, L. Gherardini, S. Fiori, A. Guzzetta, N. Berardi, T. Pizzorusso, G. Cioni (Italy) Synaptic alterations in a mouse model of Rett Syndrome T. Pizzorusso, E.M. Boggio, G. Lonetti, E. Putignano, M. Giustetto (Italy) Environmental therapy for cognitive and sensory impairment in a mouse model of Down Syndrome T. Begenisic, L. Baroncelli, C. Braschi, M. Spolidoro, M. Milanese, G. Bonanno, G. Cioni, L. Maffei, A. Sale (Italy) Brain plasticity and early intervention in preterm infants G. Cioni, A. Guzzetta, G. D’Acunto (Italy) 6.45 – 7.30 p.m. Plenary Session Room 1 Didactic lecture: Erol Başar (Turkey) Is research on brain oscillations in a new “Take off-state” in integrative brain function? 8 SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 15TH, 2012 8.00 – 9.45 a.m. Room 1 Symposium A: Psychophysiology from a distance: Advanced camera- and laser-based methods Symposium Chair: John W. Rohrbaugh (USA) Thermal imaging of psychophysiological activity T.E. Brown (USA) Non-contact physiological recording of ocular parameters F.M. Marchak (USA) Non-contact, laser-based monitoring of physiological activity L. Scalise (Italy) Non-contact measurement of facial actions using laser doppler vibrometry J.W. Rohrbaugh, E.J. Sirevaag (USA) 8.00 – 9.45 a.m. Room 2 Symposium B: Combined EEG-fMRI imaging in psychophysiology Symposium Chair: Ferdinando Sartucci, Aldo Ragazzoni (Italy) EEG-FMR investigation of paroxistic electroencephalographic abnormalities related to involuntary eye blinks R. Vetrugno, I. Pesaresi, S. Fabbri, P. Cecchi, M. Santucci, M. Mascalchi, M. Cosottini, F. Sartucci (Italy) Effect of afferent input on BOLD activity on different neurological diseases P. Manganotti (Italy) Neural underpinnings of human cognitive-motor processes as revealed by the combination of high resolution EEG, fMRI and TMS F. Vecchio, P.M. Rossini, C. Del Percio, P. Capotosto, C. Babiloni (Italy) 8.00 – 9.45 a.m. Room 3 Symposium C: Cortical correlates of the orienting reflex Symposium Chair: Robert J. Barry (Australia) What’s special about the P300 response to deviance? J.A. Rushby, R.J. Barry (Australia) LPC subcomponents in a long-ISI dishabituation task G.Z. Steiner, R.J. Barry, F.M. De Blasio (Australia) Trials effects in single-trial ERP components and autonomic responses at very long ISIs B. MacDonald, R.J. Barry (Australia) Cortical measures in preliminary process theory of the orienting reflex R.J. Barry (Australia) 8.00 – 9.45 a.m. Room 5 Symposium D: Context effects on probabilistic inference Symposium Chair: Juanita Todd (Australia) Knowing “what next” without knowing “when”? Temporal regularity is required for automatic higher-order predictive modeling in audition A. Tavano, A. Widmann, A. Bendixen, E. Schroger (Germany) When learning gets stuck: An automatic bias that alters probability sampling in the unattended auditory environment J. Todd, D. Mullens, J. Woodley, L. Whitson, A. Provost, G. Cooper, A. Heathcote (Australia) 9 Competing predictive regularity representations in an abstract model of auditory stream segregation (CHAINS) T.M. Bohm, R.W. Mill, A. Bendixen, I. Winkler, S.L. Denham (Hungary) Computational modeling of perceptual inference: A hierarchical Bayesian approach that allows for individual and contextual differences in weighting of input C. Mathys, J. Daunizeau, S. Iglesias, A.O. Diaconescu, L.A.E. Weber, K.J. Friston, K.E. Stephan (Switzerland) 9.45 – 10.15 a.m. Coffee Break 10.15 – 11.15 a.m. Plenary Session Room 1 Invited lecture: Giacomo Rizzolatti (Italy) The mirror mechanism: A mechanism for understanding others 11.15 a.m. – 1.00 p.m. Room 1 Symposium A: Perception-action mirror systems in humans Symposium Chair: Shlomo Bentin † (Israel), Giacomo Rizzolatti (Italy) Motor mirroring meets motor performance L. Cattaneo (Italy) Training induced mirroring properties in motor and sensory cortex R. Mukamel (Israel) Influence of the sight of monkey’s own acting hand on the motor discharge of ventral premotor mirror neurons L. Bonini, M. Maranesi, A. Livi, L. Fogassi, G. Rizzolatti (Italy) How are observed actions understood? J. Kilner (UK) 11.15 a.m. – 1.00 p.m. Room 2 Symposium B: Psychophysiological correlates of empathy in severe traumatic brain injury, Asperger’s and obsessive-compulsive disorder Symposium Chair: Jacqueline A. Rushby (Australia) Amygdala volume predicts arousal and empathy deficits after severe traumatic brain injury J.A. Rushby, S. McDonald, N. Parks, J. Iredale, R. Randall, O. Piguet (Australia) Facial mimicry and arousal to repetitions of affective movie clips E. Trimmer, J.A. Rushby, S. McDonald, R. Randall, A. de Sousa (Australia) Arousal and empathy in adults with Asperger’s D. Mathersul, S. McDonald, J.A. Rushby (Australia) Hoarding, excessive responsibility and pathological guilt: Symptoms of empathy in overdrive? A. Whitton, J.D. Henry, J.R. Grisham, P.G. Rendell (Australia) 11.15 a.m. – 1.00 p.m. Room 3 Symposium C: The complexity of reading shown by neuroscientific methods Symposium Chair: Valéria Csépe, Ferenc Honbolygó (Hungary) The neural prerequisites of reading V. Csépe, F. Honbolygó, H.T. Paavo, P.H.T. Leppänen, ProRead and Neurodys teams (Hungary) Language-specific effects on auditory brain responses in children with dyslexia in four European countries P.H.T. Leppänen, K. Lohvansuu, J. Bartling, J. Bruder, F. Honbolygó, J.A. Hämäläinen, S. Iannuzzi, R. Nenert, J.F. Demonet, G. Schulte-Körne, V. Csépe (Finland) 10 EEG correlates of clinical subtypes of developmental dyslexia: Independent component analysis study S. Velikova, G. Chiarenza (Italy) General and specific factors of reading development D. Tóth, V. Csépe (Hungary) 11.15 a.m. – 1.00 p.m. Room 5 Symposium D: Detection of regularity and irregularity of non-attended visual events Symposium Chair: István Czigler (Hungary), Gábor Stefanics (Switzerland) Directions of the visual mismatch response research I. Czigler (Hungary) Event related potential manifestations of the oblique effect L. Balázs, I. Barkaszi, I. Czigler, I. Sulykos, E. Takács (Hungary) Violation of a probability-based hand-identity rule G. Stefanics (Switzerland) Perceptual expertise affects pre-attentive change detection of visual features L. Zhao (China) Visual mismatch negativity in psychiatric disorders T. Maekawa, T. Onitsuka, S. Tobimatsu (Japan) 1.00 – 2.00 p.m. Lunch Break 2.00 – 3.30 p.m. POSTER SESSION 3.30 – 4.30 p.m. Plenary Session Room 1 Invited lecture: Andrew Papanicolaou (USA) Forty years of MEG 4.30 – 5.00 pm. Coffee Break 5.00 – 6.45 p.m. Room 1 Symposium A: Psychophysiological detection of memory and deception Symposium Chair: Hiroshi Nittono (Japan), J. Peter Rosenfeld (USA) Skin conductance, respiration, heart rate, and P300 in the Concealed Information Test: A meta analysis G. Ben-Shakhar, E. Meijer (Israel) Central and autonomic responses that reflect the intention to conceal in a concealed information test I. Matsuda, H. Nittono, T. Ogawa (Japan) Face and voice as social stimuli enhance differential physiological responding in a Concealed Information Test W. Ambach (Germany) FMRI-based concealed information tests and their vulnerability to countermeasures G. Ganis (UK) Enhancements to the complex trial protocol J.P. Rosenfeld, X. Hu, E. Labkovsky (USA) 11 The autobiographical IAT for detecting memories and intentions: A review S. Agosta, G. Sartori (Italy) 5.00 – 6.45 p.m. Room 2 Symposium B: Advanced studies in children with language and learning disorders Symposium Chair: Thalía Harmony (Mexico) Early detection of language deficits T. Harmony (Mexico) EEG source signatures of learning disability subtypes uncovered by smooth-lasso discriminant analysis P.A. Valdés-Sosa (Cuba) Brain plasticity in dyslexia after phonological rehabilitation C. Spironelli, B. Penolazzi, A. Angrilli (Italy) Optimization of the neurofeedback protocol for learning disabled not otherwise specified children and a lag in their EEG maturation T. Fernández (Mexico) 5.00 – 6.45 p.m. Room 3 Symposium C: Semantic representations in the language of the blind: Linguistic and neurocognitive studies Symposium Chair: Pietro Pietrini, Giovanna Marotta (Italy) A new project for studying the language of the blind: Linguistic and neurocognitive evidence G. Marotta (Italy) Semantic feature norms for congenital blind subjects M. Baroni, A. Lenci (Italy) Spatial language in blind and sighted subjects L. Meini, M. Donati (Italy) Brain modeling of noun representations in sighted and blind individuals G. Handjaras, E. Ricciardi, A. Lenci, A. Leo, L. Cecchetti, G. Marotta, P. Pietrini (Italy) 5.00 – 6.45 p.m. Room 5 Symposium D: Electrophysiological bases of perceptual awareness Symposium Chair: Carlo A. Marzi (Italy) Event-related potentials distinguish between distinct sources of semantic activation in the attentional blink R. Dell’Acqua, F. Peressotti, F. Pesciarelli (Italy) Implicit vision effects on ERPs T. Poscoliero, C.A. Marzi, M. Girelli (Italy) Motor preparation and awareness D. Spinelli, C. Bozzacchi, F. Di Russo, M.A. Giusti, S. Pitzalis (Italy) Is that a tool? ERP indexes of perceived affordance and object perceptual awareness A.M. Proverbio, R. Azzari, R. Adorni (Italy) 8.00 – 11.30 p.m. Social Dinner 12 Stazione Leopolda SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 16TH, 2012 8.00 – 9.45 a.m. Room 1 Symposium A: Theoretical aspects and neural correlates of consciousness Symposium Chair: Bruno Rossi (Italy) Blink-related broad-band EEG oscillations at rest, precuneus and consciousness L. Bonfiglio, M.C. Carboncini, A. Frisoli, A. Piarulli, B. Rossi (Italy) Consciousness in the biosemiotic perspective F. Giorgi (Italy) Consciousness and epilepsy A. Cavanna (UK) Sleep unconsciousness and the fragmentation of the global workspace P. Allegrini, P. Paradisi, M. Laurino, D. Menicucci, A. Piarulli, A. Gemignani (Italy) 8.00 – 9.45 a.m. Room 2 Symposium B: Brain oscillations in cognition and cognitive impairment Symposium Chair: Erol Başar, Bahar Güntekin (Turkey) Changes in brain oscillations and connectivity deficit in bipolar disorder B. Güntekin, M.İ. Atagün, A. Özerdem, E. Başar (Turkey) Auditory evoked alpha oscillations imply increased posterior amplitudes in schizophrenia C. Basar-Eroglu, B. Mathes, C. Schmiedt-Fehr (Germany) Brain oscillatory dynamics in Alzheimer’s disease and mild cognitive impairment G.G. Yener, P. Kurt, B. Güntekin, E. Başar (Turkey) 8.00 – 9.45 a.m. Room 3 Symposium C: The psychophysiology of ocular phenomena Symposium Chair: Joseph J. Tecce (USA), Sanja Mancevska (Macedonia) The relationship between blink activities and temporal-spatial attention K. Fukuda (Japan) Blink measures of malintent F.M. Marchak, T.L. Keil (USA) Blinks not associated with eye movements: Their ontogeny and phylogeny H. Tada, Y. Omori (Japan) The functional significance of eyeblinks J.J. Tecce (USA) 8.00 – 9.45 a.m. Room 5 Symposium D: Language and neural networks Symposium Chair: Svetla Velikova (Italy), Wolfgang Skrandies (Germany) The development of language neural networks D. Perani (Italy) EEG connectivity properties in developmental dyslexia subtypes S. Velikova, G. Chiarenza (Italy) 13 An electrophysiological investigation of the linguistic nature of developmental dyslexia C. Cantiani, M.L. Lorusso, M.T. Guasti, C. Männel, M. Molteni (Italy) Topographical changes of ERPs related to human semantic learning W. Skrandies, H. Shinoda (Germany) 9.45 – 10.15 a.m. Coffee Break 10.15 – 11.15 a.m. Plenary Session Room 1 Invited lecture: Lamberto Maffei (Italy) Environmental enrichment and neural plasticity 11.15 a.m. – 1.00 p.m. Room 1 Symposium A: From mind to body and return: Psychopathological, psychophysiological and neurobiological correlates of emotional (dys)regulation in psychopathology Symposium Chair: Claudio Gentili (Italy) Emotional dysregulation in non-clinical and clinical subjects C. Maffei, A. Fossati, M.G. Strepparava, S. Borroni (Italy) Blood phobia: When attentional requirement meets dysregulated psychophysiological dispositions D. Palomba, G. Buodo (Italy) Emotional responses and emotion regulation in persistent insomnia C. Lombardo, G. Battagliese, C. Violani (Italy) Emotional dysregulation in social anxiety insights from an fMRI resting-state study C. Gentili, N. Vanello, I. Cristea, E. Ricciardi, D. David, P. Pietrini, M. Guazzelli † (Italy) Cognitive reappraisal and acceptance distinctively impact heart rate variability in socially anxious individuals I.A. Cristea, G. Valenza, C. Gentili, A. Szentagotai Tatar, E.P. Scilingo, D. David (Romania) 11.15 a.m. – 1.00 p.m. Room 2 Symposium B: Human auditory processing: Where are we now? Symposium Chair: Elyse S. Sussman (USA) Auditory scene perception in child development E.S. Sussman (USA) Development and disorders of auditory processing in children D.R. Moore (UK) An approach to auditory scene analysis based on stochastic stimuli T.D. Griffiths (UK) Phonemic representation in human auditory cortex examined via intracranial recordings M. Steinschneider (USA) Relating human and monkey brain function for communication C.I. Petkov (UK) 11.15 a.m. – 1.00 p.m. Room 3 Symposium C: Separating theta and delta ERP processes using Cohen’s Class time-frequency transforms: Cognitive, developmental, and individual differences applications Symposium Chair: Edward M. Bernat (USA) 14 Time-frequency Theta and Delta measures index separable components of feedback processing E.M. Bernat, L. Nelson, A. Baskin-Sommers (USA) Reward positivity, but not feedback negativity, is sensitive to reward context in a gambling task S. Kothur, M. Cartebuke, S. Brewer, P. Collins, E. Bernat (USA) Similarities in time-frequency structure of ERPs from preadolescence to early adulthood S.M. Malone, E.M. Bernat, W.G. Iacono (USA) Development of response inhibition in early adolescence: A longitudinal study of time-frequency theta and delta components K. Klein, J. Harper, E.M. Bernat, A. Anokhin (USA) Functional integration between medial and lateral prefrontal cortices (MPFC-LPFC) during action monitoring and response inhibition: A time-frequency power and phase-synchrony analysis of Theta activity J. Harper, S. Aviyente, S.M. Malone, E.M. Bernat (USA) 11.15 a.m. – 1.00 p.m. Room 5 Symposium D: Neurofeedback: Achievements and perspectives (I Part) Symposium Chair: Olga M. Bazanova (Russia), Robert J. Barry (Australia) Individual alpha EEG indices for neurofeedback use O.M. Bazanova (Russia) Scalp EEG markers in subjects with cognitive impairment and Alzheimer’s disease D.V. Moretti (Italy) Ovulation-related changes in EEG alpha and cognitive performance efficiency in healthy women K.B. Muravleva, S.V. Petrova, O.M. Bazanova (Russia) Neurofeedback systems and emotions monitoring O. Sourina (Republic of Singapore) Neurofeedback training for young athletes A.V. Kovaleva, A.V. Kvitchastyy, K. Bochaver, V.N. Kasatkin (Russia) 1.00 – 2.00 p.m. Lunch Break 2.00 – 3.30 p.m. POSTER SESSION 3.30 – 4.30 p.m. Plenary Session Room 1 Didactic lecture: Thomas F. Collura (USA) A tribute to Mario Guazzelli Individualized assessment and treatment using advanced EEG and dynamic localization techniques with live sLORETA 4.30 – 5.00 p.m. Coffee Break 5.00 – 6.45 p.m. Room 1 Symposium A: Time and frequency domain identification of interacting neural structures Symposium Chair: Pedro A. Valdés-Sosa (Cuba), Wael El-Deredy (UK) 15 A high precision method to estimate effective connectivity networks at the group and individual levels P.C.M. Molenaar, K.M. Gates (USA) A Bayesian model of EEG/MEG source dynamics and effective connectivity W. El-Deredy, I. Olier, N. Trujillo-Barreto (UK) Resting state EEG connectivity by frequency domain tomographic ICA P.A. Valdés-Sosa, M.L. Bringa-Vega, J. Bosch-Bayard, J.M. Sanchez-Bornot, T. Koenig, T. Harmony (Cuba) Localizing interacting brain activity from EEG and MEG data G. Nolte, F. Shahbazi Avarvand, A. Ewald (Germany) 5.00 – 6.45 p.m. Room 2 Symposium B: Autism: Looking for autonomic markers Symposium Chair: Joëlle Martineau, Henrique Sequeira (France) Autonomic reactivity: Overview and perspectives H. Sequeira, F. D’Hondt, J. Honoré (France) Respiratory sinus arrhythmia as a predictor of language outcomes in children with autism L.R. Watson, J.E. Roberts, G.T. Baranek, P. Yoder (USA) Heart activity and autistic behavior in infants with fragile X Syndrome J.E. Roberts, B.L. Tonnsen, A. Robinson, S. Shinkareva (USA) Pupil size and pupil reactivity to faces and avatars in children with autism spectrum disorders N. Hernandez, L. Roché, F. Bonnet-Brilhault, J. Martineau (France) Social interactions explorations: Ocular responses in autism spectrum disorders J. Martineau, L. Roché, N. Hernandez, F. Andersson, F. Bonnet-Brilhault (France) 5.00 – 6.45 p.m. Room 3 Symposium C: Neurofeedback: Achievements and perspectives (II Part) Symposium Chair: Olga M. Bazanova (Russia), Robert J. Barry (Australia) Personalizing alpha neurofeedback training influence on cognition and heart rate variability M.V. Skoraya, N.V. Balioz, K.B. Muravleva, D. Vernon, O.M. Bazanova (Russia) The influence of self-regulation technique on the efficiency of voluntary increasing alpha power training O.Y. Lazareva, K.B. Muravleva, M.V. Skoraya, E.G.Verevkin, O.M. Bazanova (Russia) Alpha-wave frequency indices in the patients with chronic tension headache and its modification during biofeedback training O.S. Shubina, M.Y. Melnikov (Russia) Personalizing neurofeedback training with EMG control in ADHD children E.A. Sapina (Russia) 5.00 – 6.45 p.m. Room 5 Symposium D: A Guide to Journal Publishing Shamus O’Reilly (UK) 6.45 – 7.30 p.m. Didactic lecture: Risto Näätänen (Finland) A tribute to Costantine A. Mangina Plenary Session Room 1 The mismatch negativity (MMN) - A unique objective index of cognition and cognitive decline in health and disease 16 MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 17TH, 2012 9.00 – 10.45 a.m. Room 1 Symposium A: Psychological detachment in stress related psychiatric disorders Symposium Chair: Cristina Ottaviani (Italy), Karl-Jürgen Bär (Germany) An integrative model for the prediction of perseverative cognition in daily life: Comparisons between existing theories C. Ottaviani, A. Couyoumdjian (Italy) Self-referential processing influences functional activation during cognitive control G. Wagner, K. Koch, C. Schatzabel, C. Schulz, R. Schlösser (Germany) Heartbeat evoked potentials mirror altered body perception in depressed patients K.J. Bär, J. Terhaar, F. Campos Viola, S. Debener (Germany) Stress and the expression of dissociative symptoms in neurodevelopmental and neuropsychiatric disorders H. Critchley, S. Garfinkel, Y. Nagai, N. Medford (UK) 9.00 – 10.45 a.m. Room 2 Symposium B: The music of language: Neural basis of prosody perception Symposium Chair: Valéria Csépe (Hungary), Claudia Männel (Germany) Are superfluous prosodic breaks harder to process than missing ones? ERP data on auditory sentence comprehension S. Bögels, H. Schriefers, W. Vonk, D. Chwilla, R. Kerkhofs (Germany) ERP of prosody and syntax interaction in embedded sentences F. Honbolygó, Á. Török, Z. Bánréti, L. Hunyadi, V. Csépe (Hungary) Different roles of prosody and repetition in infant word recognition: ERP studies in 6-, 9- and 12-month-old German infants C. Männel, A.D. Friederici (Germany) Prosody meets syntax: Localization and connectivity D. Sammler (UK) 9.00 – 10.45 a.m. Room 3 Symposium C: Prestimulus EEG effects on the ERP Symposium Chair: Robert J. Barry (Australia) Pre-stimulus EEG amplitude and ERPs in a Go/NoGo task: I. Slow wave effects F.M. De Blasio, R.J. Barry (Australia) Pre-stimulus EEG amplitude and ERPs in a Go/NoGo task: II. Fast wave effects F.M. De Blasio, R.J. Barry (Australia) Pre-stimulus EEG amplitude modulation of the LPC in a dishabituation paradigm G.Z. Steiner, F.M. De Blasio, R.J. Barry (Australia) Pre-stimulus EEG phase effects on children’s ERPs R.J. Barry, F.M. De Blasio (Australia) 9.00 – 10.45 a.m. Room 4 Symposium D: Sleep and cortical dynamics in normal and pathological conditions Symposium Chair: Angelo Gemignani (Italy) 17 Study of cortical dynamics of sensory-evoked K-complexes by high density EEG in humans M. Laurino, D. Menicucci, P. Allegrini, F. Mastorci, A. Piarulli, A. Gemignani (Italy) Local aspects of sleep: Observations from intracerebral recordings in humans L. Nobili (Italy) Psychophysiological reactivity to sleep-related emotional stimuli in people with insomnia: An fMRI study C. Baglioni, K. Spiegelhalder, W. Regen, B. Feige, C. Lombardo, C. Nissen, C. Violani, D. Riemann (Germany) 9.00 – 10.45 a.m. Room 5 Symposium E: Brain development and compromised reading acquisition Symposium Chair: Paavo H.T. Leppänen (Finland) Development of auditory processing ability in children with dyslexia J.A. Hämäläinen, P.H.T. Leppänen, H. Lyytinen (Finland) Cortical organization of auditory speech perception in children and its correlation with cognitive skills T. Parviainen, P. Helenius, R. Salmelin (Finland) Auditory temporal processing in dyslexia: An ASSR study in young children S. Vanvooren, H. Poelmans, M. Hofmann, H. Luts, S. Dandache, P. Ghesquière, J. Wouters (Belgium) Audiovisual integration of print and speech emerges when children learn to read: A developmental neuroimaging study S. Brem, U. Richardson, S. Bach, C. Hofstetter, E. Martin, D. Brandeis (Finland) Impaired coding of orthographic structure in the the visual word-form system of dyslexic adolescents J. Kronschnabel, R. Schmid, U. Maurer, D. Brandeis (Switzerland) 10.45 – 11.15 a.m. Coffee Break 11.15 a.m. – 12.30 p.m. POSTER SESSION 12.30 – 1.00 p.m. General assembly of IOP members Room 1 1.00 – 1.30 p.m. Awards and closing ceremony Plenary Session Room 1 18 POSTER SESSION Take note - Posters from #1 to #76 will be presented as follows: Even numbered posters will stand-by on Friday, September 14 th Odd numbered posters will stand-by on Saturday, September 15 th 1. The time course of semantic and phonological encoding in Taiwan sign language: an ERP study - Y.S. Chiu (Taiwan) 2. Working memory components and speech perception - A comparison between healthy adults, dyslexic readers and elders - G. Zukerman, L. Fostick (Israel) 3. Turning one’s nose up at the wrong and the rancid: Disentangling the effects of anger and disgust on physiological responses to moral transgressions - A.E. Whitton, J.D. Henry, P.G. Rendell, J.R. Grisham (Australia) 4. Pathological disgust and the basal ganglia: An examination of disgust responding in obsessive-compulsive disorder A.E. Whitton, J.D. Henry, P.G. Rendell, J.R. Grisham (Australia) 5. Gender-related, cardiovascular reaction to stress and electromagnetic fields emitted by mobile phones in GSM workers - A. Bortkiewicz, E. Gadzicka, A. Szyjkowska, W. Szymczak (Poland) 6. Functional MRI of brain activity during response inhibition in children - Y. Abdullaev, J. Bruce, P.A. Fisher (USA) 7. Functional MRI evidence of pathological mirror movements in chronic adolescent cannabis abuse - Y. Abdullaev, M. I. Posner, G. D. Scott, N. Hicks (USA) 8. EEG correlates of action awareness in the parietal cortex - P. Arrighi, E. Sotgiu, L. Borelli, A. Crecchi, L. Bonfiglio, M.C. Carboncini, N. Cantore, B. Rossi, A. Frisoli, P. Andre (Italy) 9. Neural substrates underlying joy among recovering alcoholics - M.S. Park, S. Sohn, J.E. Park, J.H. Sohn (Korea) 10. Intra and interhemispheric EEG coherence in surgeons trained in robotic surgery - T. Bocci, C. Moretto, S. Tognazzi, L. Briscese, E. Giorli, E.S. Perego, M. Naraci, L. Leocani, F. Sartucci (Italy) 11. New criteria for detection of compulsive behaviour in SIP model based on an automated video analysis system - T. Tambuyzer, H.C. Wu, S. Cortebeeck, N. Cosemans, M. Loveniers, M. Verhaegen, D. Berckmans, K.V. Kuyck, J.M. Aerts (Belgium) 12. Morphometry of the corpus callosum in congenitally blind subjects - S. Campana, E. Ricciardi, D. Bonino, G. Sartori, R. Kupers, M. Ptito, P. Pietrini, F. Tomaiuolo (Italy) 13. Auditory middle latency responses (A-MLR) in patients with dementia: A relationship between A-MLR and temporal lobe atrophy - S. Wada, T. Owaki, M.Hirakawa, T. Nishino, K. Shimozono, T. Yamada (Japan) 14. The bilateral effect of visual delay on muscular activity under aversive stimulation - N. Bischof, L. Wombacher, O. Christ (Germany) 15. EEG recurrence quantification analysis in subjects with different hypnotisability - E. Castellani, D. Madeo, E.L. Santarcangelo, C. Mocenni (Italy) 16. EEG correlates of delinquent behaviour in adult subjects with ADHD - N.M. Meier, W. Perrig, T. Koenig (Switzerland) 17. Action perception: Top-down effects - M.F. Destro, P. Avanzini, A. Pascarella, L. Cattaneo, G. Rizzolatti (Italy) 18. Prediction of Premenstrual Frontal EEG Asymmetry to Depression in Menstrual Cycle - W. Zhang, F. Luo, L. Xiu, R. Zhoua (China) 19. The bilateral effect of visual delay on muscular activity and performance - L. Wombacher, N. Bischof, O. Christ (Germany) 20. Effects of head-down bed rest on the executive functions and emotional statuses of individuals - L. Qing, Z.R. Lai (China) 21. Psychophysiological criteria of job reliability - Y.V. Bessonova (Russia) 22. Evidence for the specificity of second-order visual mechanisms by evoked potentials - V. Babenko, D. Yavna, P. Ermakov (Russia) 23. Suppression of the intensity dependence of P2 auditory ERP component by continuous variation of stimuli intensity T.O. Paiva, P.R. Almeida, F. Ferreira-Santos, J.B. Vieira, C. Silveira, C.C. Reis, F. Barbosa, J. Marques-Teixeira (Portugal) 24. Skin conductance (SC) monitoring during relaxation in anorexia nervosa adolescents by wearable sensors combined with wireless technologies - L. Billeci, E. Brunori, G. Crifaci, G. Tartarisco, S. Scardigli, G. Pioggia, G. Maestro, M.A. Morales (Italy) 25. Neuroimaging of structural changes in brain of adult rats after febrile seizures at early postnatal age - K. Kulichenkova, M. Gulyaev, A. Barkova, K. Abbasova (Russia) 26. Early posterior negativity is larger for snake pictures than for spider pictures in non-phobic women - J. W. Van Strien, I.H.A. Franken, R. Eijlers, J. Huijding (The Netherlands) 19 27. Phonological priming-effect on motor reaction time and movement-related cortical potentials - E.A. Kopeykina, V.V. Khoroshikh, G.A. Kulikov, V.Y. Ivanova (Russia) 28. Psychophysiological features of perceptual learning in the process of speech emotional prosody recognition - E. Dmitrieva, V. Gelman, K. Zaitseva, A. Orlov (Russia) 29. Are socially anxious individuals less empathic? A psychophysiological investigation of facial mimicry for emotional expressions - S. Matu, I. Cristea, C. Coteţ, G. Valenza, C. Gentili, E.P. Scilingo, D. David (Romania) 30. Endocrine determinants of the formation of character traits in men with a criminal stereotype behavior - E.V. Buhantsova, L.I. Gubareva, O.A. Achverdova (Russia) 31. Multisensory integration of amplitude modulated auditory and tactile stimulation as revealed by steady-state responses - T.W. Budd (Australia) 32. Differences in brain network associated with the degree of impulsivity - J.W. Seok, H.E. Kim, J.S. Eom, J.H. Sohn (South Korea) 33. Stop paradigm in attention deficit hyperactivity disorder combined type (ADHD/C) children: a study with event related potentials (ERP) - G. Yáñez, H. Romero, J. Bernal, V. Guerrero, E. Marosi, B. Prieto, M. Rodríguez, J. Silva (México) 34. EEG mapping and informational processing during creative mental imagery in actors and non-actors - A. Rodionov (Russia) 35. Amplitude and latency of components of event related potentials as indicators of false responses in participants with different modes of thinking - I.S. Dikiy, L.A. Dikaya, P.N. Ermakov (Russia) 36. Features of EEG coherence during divergent problems solving in gifted individuals - L.A. Dikaya, E.B. Pokyl (Russia) 37. EEG correlates of professional creative problem solving with insight - L.A. Dikaya, P.N. Ermakov, I.S. Dikiy (Russia) 38. Homeostatic plasticity and human primary visual cortex: A tDCS/TMS study - T. Bocci, M. Caleo, L. Briscese, S. Tognazzi, E.S. Perego, L. Maffei, S. Rossi, A. Priori, F. Sartucci (Italy) 39. Effects of hypnotizability on prepulse inhibition of the acoustic startle response including the N100 and P200 waves of the event-related potentials - V. De Pascalis, E. Russo (Italy) 40. Comparative study of Ladasten and Afobazol influence on psychophysiological parameters of healthy volunteers N.G. Bogdan, N.V. Kolotilinskaya, B.A. Badyshtov (Russia) 41. The frequency of speech and language pathology in early childhood - S.M. Golubovic, M. Petrovic (Serbia) 42. Individual differences in multistable perception: An ERP analysis - E. Russo, F. Fracasso, V. De Pascalis (Italy) 43. Interaction between cognitive task and muscle work: Concurrent cognitive task may improve motor work performance and reduce muscle fatigue - M. Evstigneeva, A. Aleksandrov , S.E. Mathiassen, E. Lyskov (Russia) 44. EEG correlates of aggression and anxiety in a model of virtual social interactions - A.V. Bocharov, J.Y. SlobodskojPlusnin, L.V. Pylkova, LG. Mitrophanova, G.G. Knyazev (Russia) 45. EEG correlates of mind wandering - E.A. Dorosheva, G.G. Knyazev, A.V. Bocharov (Russia) 46. Cross-frequency coupling in real and simulated data - V. Müller, V. Jirsa, U. Lindenberger (Germany) 47. Synchronization of skin conductance levels in therapeutic dyads - J.R. Kleinbub, I. Messina, D. Bordin, A. Voci, V. Calvo, M. Sambin, A. Calmieri (Italy) 48. Static motor-cognitive test and evaluation criteria in the management of treatment - O. Kubryak, A. Guseva, S. Grohovsky (Russia) 49. The qEEG characteristics following long-term treatment with Atomoxetine - G.A. Chiarenza, M.G. Lo Torto, I. De Marchi, B. Sasselli, F. Briaschi, M.P. Chiarenza, L. Montaldi (Italy) 50. Selective motor cortex activation in the pianist’s brain during music listening: A combined EEG and TMS study - A. Nuara, J. Gonzalez-Rosa, E. Houdayer, R. Chieffo, F. Spagnolo, G.Comi, L. Leocani (Italy) 51. Spontaneous eyeblinks to pictures that differ in emotional valence and arousal - Y. Omori, N. Chiaki (Japan) 52. Using ERP to the detection of mental recovery after prolonged posttraumatic unconscious state - L.B. Oknina, E.V. Sharova, O.S. Zaitsev, E.L. Masherov, N.E. Zakharova, A.V. Romanov, S.A. Karelin (Russia) 53. Anger is superior to happiness in change blindness as indicated by behavioral and electrophysiological measures P. Lyyra, P. Astikainen (Finland) 54. Theta activity associated with cognitive control is reduced in relation to substance abuse risk and adolescent impulsivity - S.M. Malone, E.M. Bernat, I.B. McLaughlin, M.A. Hammer, W.G. Iacono (USA) 55. Shooting the basketbrain: electrophysiological evidence for a similar semantic processing involved in language and action visual perception - M. Manfredi, N. Crotti, A. Zani, A.M. Proverbio (Italy) 56. The multiple facets of cognitive reappraisal: Behavioral and physiological correlates - C.D. Cote, I.A. Cristea, A.S. Rusu (Romania) 57. Mechanisms of ethanol’s indirect action on psychic processes - B.N. Bezdenezhnykh (Russia) 20 58. Involuntary attention in essential tremor: a MMN study - D. Mannarelli, C. Pauletti, N. Locuratolo, M.C. De Lucia, N. Vanacore, F. Fattapposta (Italy) 59. Attentional processing in sporadic amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: The role of ERPs - D. Mannarelli, C. Pauletti, N. Locuratolo, N. Vanacore, M. Inghilleri, F. Fattapposta (Italy) 60. Influence of the concordance of temperament questionnaires data on the properties of the event-related potentials E. Lazarev, B.V. Chernyshev, E.G. Chernysheva, E.S. Osokina, D.M. Ramendik (Russia) 61. The effect of inebriation on human brain functional connectivity - C. Lithari, M.A. Klados, C. Pappas, M. Albani, D. Kapoukranidou, L. Kovatsi, D. Fragou, C. Papadelis, P. Bamidis (Greece) 62. The predictive characteristics of trait anxiety for heart rate variability parameters during mental arithmetic stress D.A. Dimitriev, E.V. Saperova (Russia) 63. Differential effect of facial expression on Mu-suppression according to the level of autistic traits - N.R. Cooper, A. Simpson, A. Till, K. Simmons, I. Puzzo (UK) 64. Increased intertrial phase coherence of alpha oscillation of migraine patient to auditory stimuli - J.H. Moon, M.K. Yum, J.K. Young (South Korea) 65. Alcohol effects on the long latency evoked potentials - O.H. Hernández, V. Monteon-Padilla, R.L. Alcantara, R.G. Martinez (Mexico) 66. Neuropsychological correlates of P300 in patients with Alzheimer’s disease - K.Y. Bae, M.S. Lee, S.H. Lee (Republic of Korea) 67. Source imaging of P300 auditory evoked potentials and clinical correlations in patients with posttraumatic stress disorder - K.Y. Bae, S.H. Lee (Republic of Korea) 68. Violent gaming: effects on physiological responses of emotions, empathy and helping behavior towards victims of random violence - P. Arriaga, J. Adrião, F. Madeira, F. Esteves (Portugal) 69. Intelligent decision-making systems for the diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease using MR images - O. Valenzuela, D. Jaramillo, I. Rojas, I. García, F. Rojas, P. Rojas, B.L. Delgado-Márquez, M. Cepero (Spain) 70. Searching for psychophysiological markers of foreign language proficiency: Evidence from eye tracking - V.A. Demareva, S. A.Polevaya (Russia) 71. ERP responses to deviant three-chord musical cadences - M.C. Carboncini, U. Barcaro, L. Bonfiglio, M. Magrini, B. Rossi, O. Salvetti, A. Virgillito (Italy) 72. The Pictogram Test evinces a left hemisphere dysfunction in schizophrenia? - Z. Apostolov, Z. Stoyanov, H. Kozhuharov (Bulgaria) 73. Dual-task (motor and cognitive) performance in healthy persons and traumatic brain injury patients - L. Zhavoronkova, A. Zharikova, S. Kuptsova, E. Kushnir, O. Maksakova (Russia) 74. Event-related potential and event-related oscillation correlates of sensory gating in low, medium and high suppressors - C.M. Blais, D. Smith, J. Choueiry, D. Impey, T.J. Phillips, S. De Lasalle, H. Dort, A. Parks, N. El Marj, V.J. Knott (Canada) 75. Emotional functions and psychological well-being in patients with cerebellar impairment - C. Licastro, F. Tramonti, P.A. Arrighi, P. Andre, A.R. Contaldo, C. Ulivi, B. Rossi (Italy) 76. Emotional heart rate component and frontal alpha asymmetry during REM sleep - A. Bulckaert, M. Vandekerckhove, T. Tambuyzer, E. De Valck, B. Haex, J. Verbraecken, D. Berckmans, V. Exadaktylos (Belgium) Take note - Posters from #77 to #152 will be presented as follows: Even numbered posters will stand-by on Sunday, September 16 th Odd numbered posters will stand-by on Monday, September 17 th 77. Suppression of eye movements in visual selective attention tasks - N.S. Ermachenko, A.A. Ermachenko, AV. Latanov (Russia) 78. Effects of autonomic nervous function with the application of manual breathing assistance - M. Yokogawa, M. Nishino, H. Miaki (Japan) 79. Classification of spino cerebellar ataxia type 2 based on the pulse-step saccadic model - F. Rojas, R.V. García, O. Valenzuela, B. San Román (Spain) 80. Late cognitive potentials as correlates of preattention and attention processing in the context of individual differences - B.V. Chernyshev, I.E. Lazarev, E.G. Chernysheva, E.S. Osokina (Russia) 81. Functional role of corpus callosum regions in human memory functioning - S.A. Kozlovskiy, AV. Vartanov, M.M. Pyasik, E.Y. Nikonova (Russia) 21 82. Neurofeedback training for young atlete - A.V. Kovaleva, A.V. Kvitchastyy, K. Bochaver, V.N. Kasatkin (Russia) 83. EEG coherence as an index to hypnotizability level - A.V. Kirenskaya, V.Y. Novototsky-Vlasov, V.M. Zvonikov (Russia) 84. Spatial EEG synchronization and variants of experimental induction of human emotions - S.G. Danko, J.A. Boytsova, L.V. Gratcheva, M.L. Solovjeva (Russia) 85. Trying a food sample influences event-related potential responses to the image of the food - K. Watari, H. Nittono (Japan) 86. Simultaneous auditory and visual stimuli presented during a P300-based concealed information test - S. Hira, Y. Saragai (Japan) 87. Semantic memory failures in reading disabled (RD) children consistent electrophysiological evidence - M. Rodríguez-Camacho, B. Prieto-Corona, J. Silva-Pereyra, E. Marosi, J. Bernal, G. Yáñez, H. Rodríguez, V. Guerrero, L. Luviano (Mexico) 88. Matching-stimulus intervals determine P3b amplitudes for both targets and nontargets - G.Z. Steiner, R.J. Barry, C.J. Gonsalvez (Australia) 89. Comparative analysis for recognition of happiness, neutral and surprise emotions using physiological signals - B.J. Park, E.H. Jang, S.H. Kim, M A. Chung, J.H. Sohn (Republic of Korea) 90. Emotional sensibility and accuracy of interoceptive awareness - Y. Terasawa, Y. Moriguchi, S. Tochizawa, R. Sato, S. Umeda (Japan) 91. Genetic influences of neural correlates of emotional processing: affective picture-related ERPs in female twins - L. A. Olson, E.M. Bernat, A. Cole, A. Anokhinb (USA) 92. The effect of low-frequency repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation on visual pattern perception - B. Haller, I. Riecansky, C. Lamm (Austria) 93. A comparative study of auditory and visual event related coherences - B. Güntekin, E. Tülay, B.T. Gölbaşi, E. Başar (Turkey) 94. Innovative technologies and methodologies based on integration of virtual reality and wearable systems for psychological stress treatment - G. Crifaci, G. Tartarisco, L. Billeci, G. Pioggia, A. Gaggioli (Italy) 95. Classification of three emotions by machine learning algorithms using psychophysiological signals - E.H. Jang, B.J. Park, S.H. Kim, M.A. Chung, J.H. Sohn (Republic of Korea) 96. Impact of stressful conditions on central and autonomic nervous system responses while driving on a drivingsimulator - E. Salvia, C. Delpuech, S. Daligault, A. Guillot, R. Martin, C. Collet (France) 97. Expressive timing facilitates the processing of phrase boundaries in music: evidence from the event-related potential - E. Istóka, A. Friberg, M. Huotilainen M. Tervaniemi (Finland) 98. Cute things are not always infantile: A psychophysiological study on the feeling of cuteness - N. Ihara, H. Nittono (Japan) 99. Individual differences in the emotional modulation of prepulse inhibition: An ERP study - K. Sommer, M. Van der Molen, V. De Pascalis (The Netherlands) 100. Top-down processes from prefrontal & parietal cortex support the perceptual constancy of decision-making & implicit memory after 200 ms - H E. Schendan, L.C. Lucia (UK) 101. Stress and cardiovascular reaction in ground airport staff - E. Gadzicka, A. Bortkiewicz, T. Makowiec – Dabrowska, W. Szymczak (Poland) 102. The effect of arithmetic proficiency on solving subtractions: ERP evidence - M.I. Núñez-Peña, M. Suárez-Pellicioni (Spain) 103. Neural correlates of humor processing: fMRI study - M. Shibata, Y. Terasawa, S. Umeda (Japan) 104. Auditory event-related delta oscillatory responses are reduced and delayed in patients with mild cognitive impairment - P. Kurt, D.D. Emek, G.G. Yener, B. Güntekin, E. Başar (Turkey) 105. The visual oddball target delta oscillatory responses are decreased in amnestic mild cognitive impairment - G. G. Yener, P. Kurt, D.D. Emek, B. Güntekin, E. Başar (Turkey) 106. CNV and the learning process in subjects with chronic schizophrenia - S. Mancevska, J. Pluncevic, L. Bozinovska, J.J. Tecce (Republic of Macedonia) 107. ERP study of the “problem size effect” in arithmetic facts: A comparison between children and adults - B. PrietoCorona, M. Rodríguez-Camacho, J. Silva-Pereyra, T. Fernández, E. Marosi, J. Bernal, T. Yáñez, V. Guerrero, M. Hernández (México) 108. Effects of working memory load on visuospatial task in reading disabled children: An event-related potentials study - J. Bernal, M. Hernández, J. Silva-Pereyra, M. Rodríguez, G. Yáñez, B. Prieto, L. Luviano, E. Marosi, H. Romero, H. Rodríguez, V. Guerrero (México) 109. Local EEG synchronization during internal and external induction of human emotions - J.A. Boytsova, S.G. Danko, L.V. Gratcheva, M.L. Solovjeva (Russia) 110. How aging affects emotional processing? Neurophysiological evidence using passive emotion evocative stimuli selected from the International Affective Picture System (IAPS) - A. Semertzidou, C.A. Frantzidis, A. Ladas, M. Karagianni, M. Tsolaki, P.D. Bamidis (Greece) 22 111. Job stress and blood pressure in public transport drivers - J. Siedlecka, A. Bortkiewicz, E. Gadzicka, T. MakowiecDąbrowska (Poland) 112. Speed of reading and number of errors in children with dysgraphia - S.M. Golubovic, J. Milutinovic (Serbia) 113. Individual differences in error-related and feedback-related negativities: Heritability, development, and associations with behaviour - A.P. Anokhin, S. Golosheykin (USA) 114. Possible role of the Gray’s behavioral inhibition system in the greater efficacy of pleasant than unpleasant imagery in subjects with high hypnotizability - E.L. Santarcangelo, M. Varanini, G. Paoletti, E. Castellani, C. Palombo, G. Carli (Italy) 115. Individual differences in infant EEG under externally controlled attention have a long-term effect on cognitive development at the preschooler age - M.M Tsetlin, T.A. Stroganova, A.I. Filatov, I.N. Posikera, E.V. Orekhova, N.P. Pushina (Russia) 116. Association between 5HTT polymorphism and cognitive fatigue development - I.S. Polikanova, O.V. Sysoeva, A.G. Tonevitsky (Russia) 117. The specific pattern of conscious perception of elementary visual and auditory signals of patients with schizophrenia diagnosis under psychotropic drugs - S.A. Polevay, S.B. Parin, M.A. Chernova (Russia) 118. A cognitive model explaining the psychophysiological system responsible for the effectiveness of The Storytelling Method of Dream Interpretation - T.L. DeCicco, U. Barcaro, A. Murkar (Canada) 119. Distribution of visuo-spatial attention in anxiety and depression - F. D’Hondt, J. Honoré, J. Delannoy, M.S. Robin, M. Bubrowsky, D. Servant, H. Sequeira (France) 120. Evaluation of mild traumatic brain injury: ERP processing in auditory and visual novelty oddball tasks - C.C. Duncan, A.C. Summers, A.T. Massey, A.F. Mirsky, F.H. Gabbay, D.M. Benedek, L.M. French (USA) 121. State anxiety modulates emotional salience processing in peripheral vision - F. D’Hondt J. Honoré, A. Williot, H. Sequeira (France) 122. Markers of early diagnostic capabilities, providing high sports results in field events - I.M. Abdullaev, L.I. Gubareva, V.A. Magin ( Russia) 123. The effect of real life stress on respiration and respiratory sinus arrhythmia - D.A. Dimitriev, Y.D. Karpenko, A.D. Dimitriev, E.V. Saperova (Russia) 124. Influence of paternal deprivation on the psychosomatic development of the children - L.I. Gubareva, S.P. Popova, L.V. Litvinova, N.F. Mishina (Russia) 125. Interrelations of frontal cortical activity with personality traits and self-appraisal - A. Stepanyan, V. Grigoryan (Armenia) 126. EEG differences in high and low creative subjects - M.G. Starchenko (Russia) 127. Personalizing alpha neurofeedback training influence on cognition and heart rate variability - M.V. Skoraya, N.V. Balios, K.B. Muravlyova, D. Vernon, O.M. Bazanova (Russia) 128. Event-related responses and rhythmic activity of the human brain during auditory localization task - L.B. Shestopalova, E.A. Petropavlovskaia, N.I. Nikitin, S.Ph. Vaitulevich (Russia) 129. EEG-fMRI reactions during actual hand movement performance and motor imagery in healthy subjects - G.N. Boldyreva, L.A. Zhavoronkova, E.V. Sharova, O.A. Simonova, L.P. Titova, D.V. Pyashina (Russia) 130. Automatic classification of disturbances of functional activity of the brain based on EEG frequency anomaly in patients with brain tumors - I.A. Voronina, V.G. Voronov (Russia) 131. Does the lack of pseudoneglect in schizophrenia patients evince right hemisphere dysfunction? - Z. Apostolov, H. Kozhuharov, Z. Stoyanov (Bulgaria) 132. Refining the neurofeedback training protocol with EMG and individual alpha activity indices control in children with ADHD - E. Sapina (Russia) 133. Biofeedback games usage possibilities as ADHD a diagnostic method - E. Sapina, E. Danilenko (Russia) 134. Dynamical aspects of voluntary reappraisal of emotions: Outcomes for experience and cardiovascular reactivity S.V. Pavlov, N.V. Reva, K.V. Loktev, L.I. Aftanas (Russia) 135. Monitoring and distant diagnostics of sportsmen’s functional state based on information technologies and telemetry in the conditions of natural activity - E.V. Runova, S.B. Parin, M.M. Nekrasova, A.V. Bakhchina, A.V. Kovalchuk, I.S. Shyshalov, S.A. Polevaya (Russia) 136. Event-related potentials and achievement motivation (research of twins) - E. Vorobyeva, P. Ermakov (Russia) 137. The rubber hand illusion paradigm transferred to the lower limb: A physiological, behavioral and subjective approach - M. Jokisch, J. Preller, A. Schropp, O. Christ, P. Beckerle, J. Vogt (Germany) 138. Comparison of ERPs independent components between four qeeg subtypes in a group of ADHD adults - S. Markovska-Simoska, N. Pop-Jordanova, A. Müller, G. Candrian (Switzerland) 139. Storage of the standard features in long-term memory - N.G. Shpagonova, V.A. Sadov, M.S. Zhilko, D.L. Petrovich (Russia) 23 140. Contribution of short-term memory retention to rotation-related ERP negativity - I. Riecansky, L. Tomova, H. Bauer, F. Fischmeister, C. Lamm (Austria) 141. A wavelet decomposition level selection method for velocity computation in noisy EOG records of ataxia patients R.V. García, F. Rojas, R. Becerra, L. Velázquez, R. Rodríguez (Cuba) 142. EEG spectral power during the performance of mental tasks and individual profile asymmetry of twins - E. Vorobyeva (Russia) 143. Towards continuous mental stress level estimation from physiological signals - J. Wijsman, B. Grundlehner, H. Liu, J. Penders, H. Hermens (The Netherlands) 144. Sensitivity of premature newborn auditory cortex to acoustically modified syllables - M.Carlier, T. Harmony, M. Colmenero, J. Ricardo-Garcel (México) 145. Shifts in visual spatial attention affect dichotic listening - M. Spajdel, I. Riecansky (Slovakia) 146. Interpersonal conflicts influenced outcome evaluation in chicken game: An ERP study - B. Yuan, K. Roberts, Z. Zhang, X. Yu, R.F. Simons, Y. Wang (China) 147. The affective states influence understanding other’s emotion in the eyes: An ERP analysis - Y. Wang, J. Wu, Y. Zheng, L. Huang, L. Pan (China) 148. Brain potentials revealed by understanding kind and hostile intentions of other people - L. Huang, Z. Zhang, C. Du, Y. Li, Y. Wang (China) 149. Semantic features of associatively encoded pairs modulate early source memory effects during retrieval - G. Pergola, B. Suchan, C. Bellebaum (Italy) 150. ERPs reflect delayed motor activation in trait impulsivity - A. Kóbor, Á. Takács, F. Honbolygó, V. Csépe (Hungary) 151. Declarative interference affects off-line processing of motor imagery learning - U. Debarnot E. Castellani, A. Guillot, V. Giannotti, M. Dimarco, L. Sebastiani (Italy) 152. The effect of age on time dependent EEG-synchronization changes during the performance of mental arithmetic task R. Boha, B. Tóth, Z. Anna Gaál, M. Molnár (Hungary) 24 SCIENTIFIC INFORMATION Slide Center The Slide Center is available in room n. 4, behind the registration desk. Speakers are requested to load their slides in the Slide Center at least three hours before their presentation (or, if their session starts at 8.00 a.m., by 6.00 p.m. on the previous day). Poster Session Posters will be displayed in the hallways near the meeting rooms and in the exhibition room. Poster presenters must attach their poster on the poster board marked with the same number they have received previously. Posters must be in the VERTICAL format only and must be maximum cm. 85 (wide) and cm. 130 (height). Posters from #1 to #76 will be presented on Friday 14th and Saturday 15th, while Posters from #77 to #152 will be displayed on Sunday 16th and Monday 17th. Poster stand-by time Posters from #1 to #76 will be presented as follows: Even numbered posters will stand-by on Friday, September 14th Odd numbered posters will stand-by on Saturday, September 15th Posters from #77 to #152 will be presented as follows: Even numbered posters will stand-by on Sunday, September 16th Odd numbered posters will stand-by on Monday, September 17th Presenting authors are required to stand-by their poster during their assigned time (authors can also elect to stay longer). Attendees expect authors to be available and willing to engage in dialogue about the work displayed. Set-up time Please set-up your poster from 8.00 – 9.00 a.m. on the first day your poster is to be displayed. Friday and Saturday presenters should set-up their posters from 8.00 – 9.00 a.m. on Friday morning. Sunday and Monday presenters should se-tup their posters from 8.00 – 9.00 a.m. on Sunday morning. Pushpins or tape will be provided in the poster area to mount your poster. Poster teardown Friday and Saturday presenters should remove their posters by 7.00 p.m. on Saturday night. Sunday and Monday presenters should remove their poster by 12.45 p.m. on Monday afternoon. IMPORTANT! Posters not removed by the end of the posted teardown time will be trashed! Remember, all poster presenters must register for the conference and make their own travel arrangements. Any author on the abstract is eligible to present at the meeting. 25 GENERAL INFORMATION Congress Venue Polo Didattico Porta Nuova Via Padre Bruno Fedi, 1 56122 Pisa Congress Venue Plan ION REG DES ISTRA T K IOP offi ce Exhibition Area SLIDE CENTRE Registration Desk Onsite the registration desk will be open for participants at the following times: Thursday, September 13th from 1.30 to 7.00 p.m. Friday, September 14th from 7.30 a.m. to 7.30 p.m. Saturday, September 15th from 7.30 a.m. to 7.00 p.m. Sunday, September 16th from 7.30 a.m. to 7.30 p.m. Monday, September 17th from 8.30 a.m. to 1.30 p.m. Registration Fees 21% VAT included IOP Members Non-Member Participants Student/Post Doc Members* Student/Post Doc Non-Members* Accompanying Persons** Social Dinner € 450,00 € 550,00 € 320,00 € 380,00 € 180,00 € 125,00 Registration Fee includes: Conference kit (Including the Special Issue of the International Journal of Psychophysiology containing all the Abstracts of the scientific presentations of the Congress), Opening Ceremony, Welcome Reception, Coffee breaks, Social Dinner, Final Program. * STUDENTS/POST DOC FEE DOES NOT INCLUDE SOCIAL DINNER Student/Post doc registration must be accompanied by a letter or a scanned document issued by a University Organization, confirming student status. ** Accompanying Persons fee includes Welcome Reception and Social Dinner. 26 Social Dinner Saturday, September 15th, from 8.00 p.m. Stazione Leopolda Piazza Guerrazzi, Pisa Registration fee includes the social dinner. Only student/post doc fee does not include the social dinner. Dinner coupons will be available for purchase at the registration desk within Friday, September 14th at 2.00 p.m. Language The official language is English. Wireless Internet access will be available to delegates by accessing the Academic wireless network and entering with personal username/password (credentials) in your Internet browser. Credentials can be obtained by filling in and returning the application form at the credentials desk. Please do not forget to bring your passport or ID. The Congress Organizers gratefully acknowledge the generous support received by: Istituto per la Riabilitazione e l’Inserimento Sociale Università di Pisa 27 16TH WORLD CONGRESS OF THE INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION OF PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY 28 Meridiana Events & Education Srl Via Volpe, 126 - 56121 Ospedaletto, PISA Phone: + 39 050 97 11 721 - Fax: + 39 050 97 41 48 [email protected] [email protected] www.meridianaevents.it