Individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) show superior performance in processing fine detail, but often exhibit impaired gestalt face perception. The ventral visual stream from the primary visual cortex (V1) to the fusiform gyrus (V4) plays an important role in form (including faces) and color perception. The aim of this study was to investigate how the ventral stream is functionally altered in ASD. Visual evoked potentials were recorded in high-functioning ASD adults (n = 14) and typically developing (TD) adults (n = 14). We used three types of visual stimuli as follows: isoluminant chromatic (red/green, RG) gratings, high-contrast achromatic (black/white, BW) gratings with high spatial frequency (HSF, 5.3 cycles/degree), and face (neutral, happy, and angry faces) stimuli. Compared with TD controls, ASD adults exhibited longer N1 latency for RG, shorter N1 latency for BW, and shorter P1 latency, but prolonged N170 latency, for face stimuli. Moreover, a greater difference in latency between P1 and N170, or between N1 for BW and N170 (i.e., the prolongation of cortico-cortical conduction time between V1 and V4) was observed in ASD adults. These findings indicate that ASD adults have enhanced fine-form (local HSF) processing, but impaired color processing at V1. In addition, they exhibit impaired gestalt face processing due to deficits in integration of multiple local HSF facial information at V4. Thus, altered ventral stream function may contribute to abnormal social processing in ASD.
[Purpose] The purpose of this study was to examine whether a low intensity exercise using
an eccentric contraction would result in skeletal muscle hypertrophy in rats. [Subjects
and Methods] Eighteen female Wistar rats were used in this study. The rats were randomly
divided into three groups. The control group performed no exercise. The level group ran on
a treadmill on a 0° incline. The downhill group ran on a treadmill on a −16° incline. The
two exercise groups ran on a treadmill at 16 m/min for 90 minutes, once every three days
for a total of twenty sessions. [Results] The muscle wet weights, the relative weight
ratios, and the muscle fiber cross-section minor axes of the downhill group were
significantly larger than those of the control and level groups. There were no differences
in the muscle wet weights, the relative weight ratios, and the muscle fiber cross-section
minor axes between the control group and the level group. [Conclusion] The stimulation
from the low intensity eccentric contraction may have produced enough mechanical stress to
induce muscle hypertrophy without the over-stressing that might have produced muscle fiber
damage. These results indicate that this technique may be an effective method of inducing
hypertrophy in skeletal muscle.
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