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| FIELDS OF INTEREST |
My thesis was focused on research of auditory perception using event-related brain potentials (ERPs). We studied the processing of abstract invariance in human adults and newborns. Thanks to a study in collaboration with the Cognitive Brain Research Unit ( University of Helsinki , Finland ), we know that the human newborn brain can extract the abstract invariance of pitch ascension from a varying sound input. This ability for auditory abstraction may be crucial for speech and music perception. Since ERPs may be used as precursors of a behavior before it is overtly manifested they are a promising tool for the research on newborn cognition and for the assessment of normal and abnormal development even before it is behaviorally identifiable.
I am currently interested in research concerning clinical and social applications. |
September 1997-June 2001 |
Degree in Psychology (Faculty of Psychology, University of Barcelona ). |
November 2001-October 2003 |
Master degree in Neuroscience (Faculty of Medicine, University of Barcelona): “Auditory event-related potentials as a function of abstract change magnitude and direction”. |
October 2003-January 2007 |
Phd in Neuroscience (Faculty of Medicine, University of Barcelona ): “Electrophysiology of abstract auditory processing in human adults and newborns”. |
| Research grants |
| 2001 (January-June) |
Collaboration grant in the project:
Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder: neuroelectric characterization
of attentional dysfunctions (Spanish Ministry of Education and
Science, PM99-0167) |
| 2001 (August-October) |
Interchange grant in clinical psychology-neuropsychology
research and teaching with the Baja California Norte University,
Mexico (B.O.E. nº 87 de 2001/04/11) |
| 2002- 2006 |
Pre-doctoral fellowship supported by the Catalan
Government |
Papers |
Carral V., Huotilainen M., Ruusuvirta T., Fellman, V., Näätänen R., Escera C (2005). A kind of “primitive intelligence” already present at birth. European Journal of Neuroscience, 21: 3201-3204.
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Carral V., Corral M.J., Escera C (2005). Auditory event-related potentials as a function of abstract change magnitude. Neuroreport, 16: 301-305.
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Carral V., Escera C. Electrophysiology evidence of spectral range detectors in the human brain. Submitted. |
Abstracts and proceedings |
Carral V., Corral M.J., Amenedo E., Escera C. Event-related potentials as a function of auditory abstract change magnitude: a parametric study. The Evoked Potentials International Conference XIV Leipzig, 28-31 March 2004. |
Carral V., Huotilainen M., Ruusuvirta T., Näätänen R., Escera C. Modelling of abstract acoustic regularities in the human new-born brain: an evoked potential study. 35th Annual General Meeting of the European Brain and Behaviour Society. Barcelona, 17-20 September 2003. |
Carral, V., Yago, E., Corbera, S., Corral, M.J., Escera, C. (2003). Involuntary orienting of attention is modulated by novelty significance. Journal of Psychophysiology, 17, 46. |
Corral MJ., Yago E., Carral, V. & Escera C. (2001) Changes in frequency, duration or intensity of the auditory input trigger involuntary switches of attention: A behavioral and event-related brain potential study. En E. Sommerfeld, R. Kompass & T. Lachmann (Eds). Fechner Day 2001 (pp. 338-342). Leipzig: Pabst. |
Escera, C., Yago, E., Corral, M.J., Corbera, S. & Carral, V. (2002). Activation of cerebral networks underlying involuntary attention by neural mechanisms in the auditory cortex. International Journal of Psychophysiology, 45, 59. |
Corral, MJ., Yago, E., Carral, V. & Escera, C. (2001). Behavioral and electrophysiological evidence of orienting of attention towards auditory frequency, intensity and duration changes. Psychophysiology, 38, Suppl. 1, S33. |
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