Eve De Rosa

Eve De Rosa
  • Professor (Associate) at Cornell University

About

39
Publications
7,699
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1,865
Citations
Current institution
Cornell University
Current position
  • Professor (Associate)
Additional affiliations
July 2003 - July 2013
University of Toronto
Position
  • Professor (Associate)

Publications

Publications (39)
Article
Full-text available
Attentional states reflect the changing behavioral relevance of stimuli in one’s environment, having important consequences for learning and memory. Supporting well-established cortical contributions, attentional states are hypothesized to originate from subcortical neuromodulatory nuclei, such as the basal forebrain (BF) and locus coeruleus (LC),...
Article
Full-text available
Subjective feelings are thought to arise from conceptual and bodily states. We examine whether the valence of feelings may also be decoded directly from objective ecological statistics of the visual environment. We train a visual valence (VV) machine learning model of low-level image statistics on nearly 8000 emotionally charged photographs. The VV...
Article
Computerized training platforms could be an accessible means for older adults to maintain cognitive health, and several such tools are already commercially available. However, it remains unclear whether older adults use these tools if training is not externally prescribed. We explored older adults' self-initiated experiences with cognitive training...
Preprint
Prospect theory has suggested that decisions reflect a bias toward avoidance of loss compared to equivalent gains. In our study we examine whether a similar bias is found in decisions regarding whether a loss associated stimulus or a gain associated stimulus is given priority in perception. We find that for most people, gains are given priority ove...
Article
Background Measuring the health of the locus coeruleus (LC), the brainstem site of the first cellular damage in Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) pathogenesis, is of particular interest for early diagnosis. In both rodents and humans (Elman 2017; Kelberman 2023; Malatt 2022; Weinshenker 2008), increased tonic firing rates have been noted in middle age. This...
Preprint
Full-text available
The pigment neuromelanin, produced in the locus coeruleus (LC) as a byproduct of catecholamine synthesis, gives the "blue spot" its name, and both identifies LC neurons and is thought to play an important yet complex role in normal and pathological aging. Using neuromelanin-sensitive T1-weighted turbo spin echo MRI scans we characterized volume and...
Preprint
Full-text available
Attentional states continuously reflect the predictability and uncertainty in one’s environment having important consequences for learning and memory. Beyond well known cortical contributions, rapid shifts in attention are hypothesized to also originate from deep nuclei, such as the basal forebrain (BF) and locus coeruleus (LC) neuromodulatory syst...
Article
Background Racial and ethnic underrepresentation in aging research and need for effective recruitment strategies is well documented. A Community Research Liaison (CRL) role created under a NIA award is demonstrating the value of embedding staff from underrepresented communities in the research infrastructure. Methods The role and qualifications fo...
Article
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The cognitive aging process is not necessarily linear. Central task-evoked pupillary responses, representing a brainstem-pupil relationship, may vary across the lifespan. Thus we examined, in 75 adults ranging in age from 19 to 86, whether task-evoked pupillary responses to an attention task may serve in as an index of cognitive aging. This is beca...
Article
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The role of the heart in the experience of time has been long theorized but empirical evidence is scarce. Here, we examined the interaction between fine‐grained cardiac dynamics and the momentary experience of subsecond intervals. Participants performed a temporal bisection task for brief tones (80–188 ms) synchronized with the heart. We developed...
Preprint
The role of the heart in the experience of time has been long theorized but empirical evidence is scarce. Here we examined the interaction between fine-grained cardiac dynamics and the momentary experience of subsecond intervals. Participants performed a temporal bisection task for brief tones (80-188 ms) synchronized with the heart. We developed a...
Preprint
Computerized training platforms could be an accessible means for older adults to maintain cognitive health, and several such tools are already commercially available. However, it remains unclear whether older adults’ use these tools if training is not externally prescribed. We explored older adults’ self-initiated experiences with cognitive trainin...
Article
Full-text available
Learning from others provides the foundation for culture and the advancement of knowledge. Learning a new visuospatial skill from others represents a specific challenge—overcoming differences in perspective so that we understand what someone is doing and why they are doing it. The “what” of visuospatial learning is thought to be easiest from a shar...
Article
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Visual wavelengths are not only associated with the subjective experience of color but also have long been thought to regulate affect. Here we examined the attracting rewarding properties of opposite ends of the wavelength spectrum, as well as their individual variation. As reward is multifaceted, we sought convergent evidence from subjective and o...
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Fluctuations in mental and bodily states have both been shown to be associated with negative affective experience. Here we examined how momentary fluctuations in attentional and cardiac states combine to regulate the perception of positive social value. Faces varying in trustworthiness were presented during a go/no-go letter target discrimination t...
Article
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People are often characterized as poor savers. Here we examined whether cues associated with earning and saving have differential salience for attention and action. We first modeled earning and saving after positive and negative variants of monetary reinforcement, i.e., gains versus avoiding loss. Despite their equivalent absolute magnitude in a mo...
Article
Full-text available
The basal forebrain (BF) is poised to play an important neuromodulatory role in brain regions important to cognition due to its broad projections and complex neurochemistry. While significant in vivo work has been done to elaborate BF function in nonhuman rodents and primates, comparatively limited work has examined the in vivo function of the huma...
Preprint
Full-text available
The basal forebrain (BF) is poised to play an important neuromodulatory role in brain re-gions important to cognition due to its broad projections and complex neurochemistry. While significant in vivo work has been done to elaborate BF function in nonhuman rodents and primates, comparatively limited work has examined the in vivo function of the hum...
Article
Color has long been thought to have metaphorical affective associations; however, it is unclear whether colors have genuine affective properties. We sought affective, behavioral, perceptual and neural evidence for the differential rewarding properties of color. Spanning the visible spectrum, we pitted the short wavelength, blue, versus the long wav...
Article
The visual search task established the feature integration theory of attention in humans and measures visuospatial attentional contributions to feature binding. We recently demonstrated that the neuromodulator acetylcholine (ACh), from the nucleus basalis magnocellularis (NBM), supports the attentional processes required for feature binding using a...
Article
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We examined visual selective attention under perceptual load--simultaneous presentation of task-relevant and -irrelevant information--in healthy young and older adult human participants to determine whether age differences are observable at early stages of selection in the visual cortices. Participants viewed 50/50 superimposed face/place images an...
Article
Visual scenes contain many statistical regularities such as the likely identity and location of objects that are present; with experience, such regularities can be encoded and can ultimately facilitate the deployment of spatial attention to important locations. Memory-guided attention has been extensively examined in adults with the 'contextual cue...
Article
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Positive and negative emotional states are thought to have originated from fundamentally opposing approach and avoidance behaviors. Furthermore, affective valence has been hypothesized to exert opposing biases in cognitive control. Here we examined with functional magnetic resonance imaging whether the opposing influences of positive and negative s...
Article
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We examined whether the selection mechanisms committed to the suppression of ignored stimuli can be modified by experience to produce a sustained, rather than transient, change in behavior. Subjects repeatedly ignored the shape of stimuli, while attending to their color. On subsequent attention to shape, there was a robust and sustained decrement i...
Article
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The binding problem refers to the fundamental challenge of the CNS to integrate sensory information registered by distinct brain regions to form a unified neural representation of a stimulus. Although the human cognitive literature has established that attentional processes in frontoparietal cortices support feature binding, the neurochemical and s...
Article
The binding problem refers to the fundamental challenge of the central nervous system to integrate sensory information registered by multiple brain regions to form a unified neural representation of a stimulus. Although the human cognitive literature has yielded substantial insights into the attention-dependent nature and general cortical networks...
Article
The binding problem is the brain's fundamental challenge to integrate sensory information to form a unified representation of a stimulus. A recent nonhuman animal model suggests that acetylcholine serves as the neuromodulatory substrate for feature binding. We hypothesized that this animal model of cholinergic contributions to feature binding may b...
Article
In proactive interference (PI) paradigms, previous learning impairs the acquisition of new, related information. In rats, efficient resolution of PI relies on cholinergic modulation from the basal forebrain (BF). To test whether humans resolve PI using a functional network dependent on the medial septum/diagonal band of Broca (MS/DB) nuclei of the...
Article
Full-text available
The binding problem refers to the fundamental challenge of the central nervous system to integrate sensory information registered by multiple brain regions to form a unified neural representation of a stimulus. Human behavioral, neuropsychological, and functional neuroimaging evidence suggests a fundamental role for attention in feature binding; ho...
Article
Striatal structures form critical nodes of multiple circuits that are implicated in the pathophysiology of schizophrenia and alcoholism. Here, we examined the separate and combined effects of schizophrenia and alcoholism and effects of medication type and drinking recency on striatal volumes. Accordingly, we measured caudate nucleus, putamen, and n...
Article
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Striatal structures are involved in dopaminergic alcohol reward mechanisms and aspects of motor control. Basal forebrain structures hold cholinergic mechanisms influencing memory formation, vulnerable to chronic alcoholism; however, alcoholism's effect on volumes of these structures has seldom been considered with in vivo measurement. We measured b...
Article
Acquisition of new learning is challenged by the phenomenon of proactive interference (PI), which occurs when previous learning disrupts later learning. Whereas human neuroimaging studies have focused on the cortical contributions to interference resolution, animal studies demonstrate that efficient resolution of PI depends on cholinergic modulatio...
Article
Full-text available
The present study examined whether automaticity, defined here as independence from attentional modulation, is a fundamental principle of the neural systems specialized for processing social signals of environmental threat. Attention was focused on either scenes or faces presented in a single overlapping display. Facial expressions were neutral, fea...
Article
Full-text available
Proactive interference (PI) occurs when previously learned information reduces the ability to acquire new, related information. Given that PI is modulated by the cholinergic system in rats (E. De Rosa & M. E. Hasselmo, 2000) and that chronic alcohol dependence disrupts cholinergic function in rats and humans, associative properties of PI in patient...
Article
Full-text available
This article represents a symposium of the 2002 joint meeting of RSA and ISBRA held in San Francisco. Presentations were Neuropathology of alcohol-related cerebellar damage in humans, by Antony J. Harding; Neuropathological evidence of cerebellar damage in an animal model of alcoholism, by Roberta Pentney and Cynthia Dlugos; Understanding cortical-...

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