Iris Trinkler
University of Paris
4 Papers
46 Citations
Iris Trinkler is an academic researcher from University of Paris. The author has contributed to research in topics: Alexithymia & Emotional expression. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 4 publications. Previous affiliations of Iris Trinkler include University of Strasbourg & École Normale Supérieure.
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Papers
Behavioral and Neural Correlates of Communication via Pointing
Laurent Cleret de Langavant,Philippe Remy,Philippe Remy,Iris Trinkler,Iris Trinkler,Iris Trinkler,Joseph McIntyre,Joseph McIntyre,Emmanuel Dupoux,Emmanuel Dupoux,Alain Berthoz,Anne-Catherine Bachoud-Lévi +11 more
TL;DR: It is found that when healthy participants pointed repeatedly at the same object, the communicative interaction with an addressee induced a spatial reshaping of both the pointing trajectories and the endpoint variability, which supports the hypothesis that a change in reference frame occurs when pointing conveys a communicative intention.
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Joint recognition–expression impairment of facial emotions in Huntington's disease despite intact understanding of feelings
Iris Trinkler,Iris Trinkler,Iris Trinkler,Laurent Cleret de Langavant,Anne-Catherine Bachoud-Lévi +4 more
TL;DR: The results further confirm the importance of the striatum for emotion recognition and expression, while access to the meaning of feelings relies on a different brain network, and is spared in HD.
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Contemporary Dance Practice Improves Motor Function and Body Representation in Huntington's Disease: A Pilot Study.
Iris Trinkler,Iris Trinkler,Philippe Chéhère,Julie Salgues,Marie-Lorraine Monin,Sophie Tezenas du Montcel,Sonia Khani,Marcela Gargiulo,Alexandra Durr +8 more
TL;DR: Contemporary dance practice, through work on spatial and bodily representations, helps improve motor function in HD patients, and is reflected in patients' reports that contemporary dance altered the way they "felt and lived in their bodies".
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Embodied emotion impairment in Huntington's Disease.
Iris Trinkler,Iris Trinkler,Iris Trinkler,Sévérine Devignevielle,Amal Achaibou,Romain Ligneul,Pierre Brugières,Laurent Cleret de Langavant,Beatrice de Gelder,Rachael I. Scahill,Sophie Schwartz,Anne-Catherine Bachoud-Lévi +11 more
TL;DR: Findings indicate that in patients with Huntington's Disease emotion deficits might be tied to the "motoric level" of emotion expression, which may have important consequences, interrupting empathy in nonverbal communication both ways.