1.Intervention study of Orff rhythm-beat-tap training on positive emotions in elderly patients with mild dementia
Min LIU ; Yinping SHEN ; Qiuxia JIN ; Miao DA ; Shihui PANG ; Yueli ZHU ; Haiqin CHEN
Chinese Journal of Modern Nursing 2021;27(2):177-182
Objective:To study effects of Orff rhythm-beat-tap training on positive emotions in elderly patients with mild dementia.Methods:Using the convenient sampling method, a total of 72 elderly patients with mild dementia who were treated in the Third People's Hospital of Huzhou from August 2018 to August 2019 were selected as the research objects and they were divided into two groups using the simple random sampling method. After the start of the study, 2 cases dropped out because of failure to persist in training, 1 case dropped out because of transfer during hospitalization and 1 case dropped out because of aggravation of the disease and changing drugs. A total of 68 cases were included in the study, including 33 cases in the intervention group and 35 cases in the control group. The control group received routine nursing, while the intervention group received 12-week Orff rhythm-beat-tap training on this basis. The scores of Positive and Negative Affect Schedule (PANAS) , Apathy Evaluation Scale (AES) and Dementia Mood Assessment Scale (DMAS) were evaluated before and after the intervention.Results:The score of positive emotion after intervention in the intervention group was (31.58±1.87) , higher than (26.66±2.93) in the control group, and the difference was statistically significant ( t=8.297, P<0.01) . After intervention, the score of negative emotion of the intervention group was (21.97±2.30) , the score of apathy was (44.88±5.22) , and the score of dementia mood was (23.18±4.33) , which were lower than (23.80±3.94) , (51.91±7.49) and (26.09±6.20) of the control group, and there were statistically significant differences in scores between the two groups ( t=-2.356, -4.514, -2.225; P<0.05) . Conclusions:Orff rhythm-beat-tap training is suitable for elderly patients with mild dementia, which can effectively enhance positive emotional experience of patients, improve apathy and optimize mood.
2.Temporal Unfolding of Racial Ingroup Bias in Neural Responses to Perceived Dynamic Pain in Others.
Chenyu PANG ; Yuqing ZHOU ; Shihui HAN
Neuroscience Bulletin 2024;40(2):157-170
In this study, we investigated how empathic neural responses unfold over time in different empathy networks when viewing same-race and other-race individuals in dynamic painful conditions. We recorded magnetoencephalography signals from Chinese adults when viewing video clips showing a dynamic painful (or non-painful) stimulation to Asian and White models' faces to trigger painful (or neutral) expressions. We found that perceived dynamic pain in Asian models modulated neural activities in the visual cortex at 100 ms-200 ms, in the orbitofrontal and subgenual anterior cingulate cortices at 150 ms-200 ms, in the anterior cingulate cortex around 250 ms-350 ms, and in the temporoparietal junction and middle temporal gyrus around 600 ms after video onset. Perceived dynamic pain in White models modulated activities in the visual, anterior cingulate, and primary sensory cortices after 500 ms. Our findings unraveled earlier dynamic activities in multiple neural circuits in response to same-race (vs other-race) individuals in dynamic painful situations.
Adult
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Humans
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Brain Mapping
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Pain
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Empathy
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Racism
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Gyrus Cinguli/physiology*
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Magnetic Resonance Imaging
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Brain/physiology*