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Cited 11 time in webofscience Cited 11 time in scopus
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Cerebral activation and lateralization due to the cognition of a various driving speed difference: An fMRI study

Authors
Kim, Hyung-SikChoi, Mi-HyunYoon, Hee-JeongKim, Hyun-JooJeoung, Ul-HoPark, Sung-JunLim, Dae-WoonChung, Soon-CheolLee, Beob-Yi
Issue Date
2014
Publisher
IOS PRESS
Keywords
Cerebral activation; Cerebral lateralization; Driving speed difference; fMRI
Citation
BIO-MEDICAL MATERIALS AND ENGINEERING, v.24, no.1, pp 1133 - 1139
Pages
7
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
BIO-MEDICAL MATERIALS AND ENGINEERING
Volume
24
Number
1
Start Page
1133
End Page
1139
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/15280
DOI
10.3233/BME-130913
ISSN
0959-2989
1878-3619
Abstract
This study investigated the changes of cerebral activation and lateralization due to the cognition of three driving speeds in comparison to a reference driving speed using functional magnetic resonance imaging fMRI. A driving video as a visual stimulation source was recorded with four different driving speeds in a real driving situation. The experiment consisted of three blocks and each block included a one-minute control phase and a one-minute stimulation phase. The activation area and the lateralization index were analyzed by subtracting high speed data from low speed data. Such areas as occipital, parietal and frontal lobes, which is related to visual cognition, high order visual and spatial attention (or vigilance), were activated due to the cognition of various driving speed differences. As the driving speed difference increased, the activation area increased in the areas related to spatial attention (or vigilance), such as the frontal lobe, however, changes of neuronal activation in the occipital and parietal lobes were inconsistent. As the driving speed difference increased, the absolute value of cerebral lateralization decreased. These results may provide some basic data for elucidating the brain-function mechanism related to the cognition of a various driving speed difference based on a realistic visual stimulation.
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