Marion Vincent

Marion Vincent
French National Centre for Scientific Research | CNRS · Laboratoire de Sciences Cognitives & Sciences Affectives (SCALab UMR 9193)

MD Eng., PhD

About

18
Publications
1,557
Reads
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200
Citations
Additional affiliations
November 2017 - December 2017
National Institute for Research in Computer Science and Control
Position
  • Research Assistant
September 2015 - June 2017
Université de Montpellier
Position
  • Teaching Asssistant
Description
  • Electrophysiological basics of neural stimulation (MSc, 1rst y.) Functionnal mapping of the brain with Direct electrical stimulation and Electrophysiological recordings (MSc, 2nd y.) Matlab Modelisation of neural electrical stimulation (MSc, 1rst y.)
January 2015 - June 2017
Université de Montpellier
Position
  • Research Assistant
Description
  • Practical work for Basics of Object-Oriented Programming in Java - First year students Practical work for Java Distributed Computing - Second year students
Education
September 2010 - September 2013
Polytech Grenoble
Field of study
  • Health Information Technologies

Publications

Publications (18)
Article
Full-text available
Human beings represent spatial information according to egocentric (body-to-object) and allocentric (object-to-object) frames of reference. In everyday life, we constantly switch from one frame of reference to another in order to react effectively to the specific needs of the environment and task demands. However, to the best of our knowledge, no s...
Article
When listeners hear a message produced by their interlocutor, they can predict upcoming words thanks to the sentential context and their attention can be focused on the speaker's communication intention. In two electroencephalographical (EEG) studies, we investigated the oscillatory correlates of prediction in spoken-language comprehension and how...
Article
Advances in timing research advocate for the existence of two timing mechanisms (automatic vs. controlled) that are related to the level of cognitive control intervening for motor behavior regulation. In the present study, we used the functional near‐infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) cutting‐edge technique to examine the hypothesis that prefrontal inhi...
Article
We investigated the mechanisms underlying the online-processing of phonological constraints using oddball fast-periodic visual stimulation coupled with EEG. We focused on the Sonority Sequencing Principle and examined whether steady-state visual evoked potentials (SSVEPs) are sensitive to the sonority constraint on syllable onsets. Native French sp...
Article
In natural listening situations, understanding spoken sentences requires interactions between several multisensory to linguistic levels of information. In two electroencephalographical studies, we examined the neuronal oscillations of linguistic prediction produced by unimodal and bimodal sentence listening to observe how these brain correlates wer...
Article
Full-text available
Direct electrical stimulation (DES) is used to perform functional brain mapping during awake surgery and in epileptic patients. DES may be coupled with the measurement of Evoked Potentials (EP) to study the conductive and integrative properties of activated neural ensembles and probe the spatiotemporal dynamics of short- and long-range networks. Ho...
Article
Full-text available
People are able to modify the spontaneous pace of their actions to interact with their environment and others. This ability is underpinned by high-level cognitive functions but little is known in regard to the brain areas that underlie such temporal control. A salient practical issue is that current neuroimaging techniques (e.g., EEG, fMRI) are ext...
Article
The trail making test part B (TMT-B) is one of the most widely used task for the assessment of set-shifting ability in patients. However, the set of brain regions impacting TMT-B performance when lesioned is still poorly known. In this case report, we provide a multimodal analysis of a patient operated on while awake for a diffuse low-grade glioma...
Article
Objective: Direct electrical stimulation (DES) at 60 Hz is used to perform real-time functional mapping of the brain, and guide tumour resection during awake neurosurgery. Nonetheless, the electrophysiological effects of DES remain largely unknown, both locally and remotely. Approach: In this study, we lowered the DES frequency to 1-10 Hz and we...
Article
Direct electrical stimulation (DES) is used to perform functional brain mapping during awake surgery but its electrophysiological effects remain by far unknown. DES may be coupled with the measurement of evoked potentials (EPs) to study the conductive and integrative properties of activated neural ensembles and probe the spatiotemporal dynamics of...
Conference Paper
Direct electrical stimulation (DES) at 60 Hz is used clinically to perform real-time functional mapping of the brain and guide tumor resection during wide-awake neurosurgery. The electrophysiological effects of DES remain by far unknown, both locally and remotely. In this study, by lowering the DES frequency to 9 Hz and by using differential record...
Thesis
The "Awake brain surgery" consists in removing some infiltrative and slow-growing brain tumor tissues in an awake patient. The neurosurgeon performs an anatomo-functional mapping of the brain by electrically stimulating brain areas near the tumor to discriminate functional versus nonfunctional areas. This stimulation is both made cortically and sub...
Conference Paper
Direct electrical stimulation (DES) at 60 Hz is used to perform real-time functional mapping of the brain during wide-awake neurosurgery. The electrophysiological effects of DES are largely unknown, locally and at a more remote distance. Here, by lowering the DES frequency to 10 Hz and by using a differential recording mode of electro-corticographi...
Article
Both electrical microstimulation (EMS) and direct electrical stimulation (DES) of the brain are used to perform functional brain mapping. EMS is applied to animal fundamental neuroscience experiments, whereas DES is performed in the operating theatre on neurosurgery patients. The objective of the present review was to shed new light on electrical s...

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