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Nathalie Pattyn
Researcher at Royal Military Academy
Publications - 93
Citations - 1950
Nathalie Pattyn is an academic researcher from Royal Military Academy. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cognition & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 82 publications receiving 1512 citations. Previous affiliations of Nathalie Pattyn include École Normale Supérieure & VU University Amsterdam.
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Psychophysiological investigation of vigilance decrement: boredom or cognitive fatigue?
TL;DR: Physiological results clearly support the underload hypothesis to subtend the vigilance decrement, since heart period and RSA increased over time-on-task and subjective experience of participants was more compatible with boredom than with high mental effort.
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Type 1 diabetes-associated cognitive decline: a meta-analysis and update of the current literature.
Cajsa Tonoli,Elsa Heyman,Bart Roelands,Nathalie Pattyn,Nathalie Pattyn,Luk Buyse,Maria Francesca Piacentini,Maria Francesca Piacentini,Serge Berthoin,Romain Meeusen,Romain Meeusen +10 more
TL;DR: In this article, a meta-analysis was conducted to investigate differences between children and adults and to analyse factors contributing to T1D-associated cognitive decline (T1DACD).
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The influence of pre-sleep cognitive arousal on sleep onset processes
Johan Wuyts,Elke De Valck,Marie Vandekerckhove,Nathalie Pattyn,Nathalie Pattyn,Arnoud Bulckaert,Daniel Berckmans,Bart Haex,Johan Verbraecken,Raymond Cluydts +9 more
TL;DR: Pre-sleep cognitive activation successfully induced a significant cognitive load and activation in subjects to influence subsequent sleep (onset) processes and significantly prolonged sleep onset latency in healthy volunteers.
Journal Article
The influence of pre-sleep cognitive arousal on sleep onset processes
Johan Wuyts,Vincent Verhaert,Arnoud Bulckaert,Guido De Bruyne,Vasileios Exadaktylos,Daniel Berckmans,Bart Haex,Johan Verbraecken,Elke De Valck,Nathalie Pattyn,Marie Vandekerckhove,Raymond Cluydts +11 more
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Effects of Noradrenaline and Dopamine on Supraspinal Fatigue in Well-Trained Men
Malgorzata Klass,Bart Roelands,Morgan Levenez,Vinciane Fontenelle,Nathalie Pattyn,Romain Meeusen,Jacques Duchateau +6 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that noradrenaline, but not dopamine reuptake inhibition, contributes to the development of central/supraspinal fatigue after a prolonged cycling exercise performed in temperate conditions.