Browsing Department of Biological and Medical Psychology by Title
Now showing items 435-439 of 439
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Weaning of Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) and Atlantic halibut (Hippoglossus hippoglossus). Studying effects of dietary hydrolysed protein and intestinal maturation as a marker for readiness for weaning
(Doctoral thesis, 2006-12)The gastrointestinal tract of marine fish larvae undergoes extensive changes during the larval stage. The success in weaning increases as the juvenile stage approaches and the gastrointestinal tract attains a more adult-like ... -
When predictions about the "what", "where" and "when" interact with statistical learning, from a behavioural and neural perspective.
(Doctoral thesis, 2021-12-20)As listeners we tend to detect patterns in what we hear regardless of whether this is music, language or abstract sounds. The fundamental underlying mechanism that supports this process is called statistical learning. ... -
When the statistical MMN meets the physical MMN
(Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2019-04-03)How do listeners respond to prediction errors within patterned sequence of sounds? To answer this question we carried out a statistical learning study using electroencephalography (EEG). In a continuous auditory stream of ... -
Yrkesaktivitet, funksjonsstatus og livskvalitet hos unge personer med afasi 5 år etter akutt hjerneinfarkt – et «Norwegian Stroke in the Young Study» prosjekt
(Master thesis, 2023-05-15)Prosjektet baserte seg på data fra The Norwegian Stroke in the Young Study (NOR- SYS). Hensikten til NOR-SYS var å undersøke arv og hjerte-og karsykdommer hos unge personer mellom 15-60 år som hadde gjennomgått akutt ... -
β-Amyloid may accumulate in the human brain after focal bacterial infection: a 18F-flutemetamol positron emission tomography study
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2021)Background and purpose β‐Amyloid formation has been suggested to form part of the brain's response to bacterial infection. This hypothesis has been based on experimental animal studies and autopsy studies in humans. We ...