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Biomarkers of individual differences in human cortical visual processing

Description du projet

Association entre le métabolisme, le traitement cortical et la perception

Le projet PUPILTRAITS, financé par l’UE, vise à améliorer notre compréhension de la perception visuelle en appliquant une approche innovante de la science de la vision pour étudier comment cette dernière est affectée par l’état physiologique et les traits de personnalité. Le traitement visuel sera élucidé à l’aide de méthodes classiques et nouvelles, incluant notamment les réponses des pupilles, la résonance magnétique à ultra‑haute intensité du cortex visuel et la psychophysique. L’objectif est de produire des connaissances sur la relation entre le métabolisme, le traitement cortical et la perception. Le projet a le potentiel de changer de manière significative la compréhension des troubles du développement, tels que les troubles du spectre autistique. Il pourrait également améliorer le diagnostic grâce à une évaluation objective des styles de perception et encourager des approches thérapeutiques innovantes, en modifiant la perception et le comportement par le biais de la physiologie générale: comment nous mangeons et faisons de l’exercice.

Objectif

Vision is probably the best understood system of the human brain: studying vision has taught us much about the human mind and its complex processes. We know in detail the fundamental steps leading to visual perception, but we do not know why normally sighted people differ in how they perceive: why some “see the forest before the trees”, while others have a fragmented perceptual experience focused on local features. PUPILTRAITS aims to fill this gap by taking an innovative approach to vision science, to understand how vision is affected by physiological state and personality traits.
I will measure visual processing with both classic and new methods (that I helped develop), including pupil responses, ultra-high field Magnetic Resonance of human visual cortex, and psychophysics. Based on solid pilot data, I predict that differences in behavioral and cortical properties co-vary with personality traits, providing new reliable biomarkers of the local context-independent perception associated with autistics traits, even in young children (using pupillometry). These tools will also reveal changes of perception within individuals: during a safe and simple physiological intervention (ketosis, a metabolic state that can be naturally induced by fasting and intense physical activity), to show that early visual processing can be altered by acting on metabolism, and that this consequently affects holistic/local perceptual styles.
My aim is to provide new knowledge on the relationship between metabolism, cortical processing and perception. This has the potential for a strong societal impact: it can change our understanding of pervasive developmental disorders, like Autistic Spectrum Disorders, characterized by a different way of processing incoming information; it can aid their diagnosis through objective evaluation of perceptual styles, and encourage innovative therapeutic approaches aimed at changing perception and behavior by acting on general physiology: how we eat and exercise

Régime de financement

ERC-STG - Starting Grant

Institution d’accueil

UNIVERSITA DI PISA
Contribution nette de l'UE
€ 1 490 375,00
Adresse
LUNGARNO PACINOTTI 43/44
56126 Pisa
Italie

Voir sur la carte

Région
Centro (IT) Toscana Pisa
Type d’activité
Higher or Secondary Education Establishments
Liens
Coût total
€ 1 490 375,00

Bénéficiaires (1)