Showing 1,001 - 1,020 results of 3,726 for search '"Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging"', query time: 0.26s Refine Results
  1. 1001

    That's my hand! Activity in premotor cortex reflects feeling of ownership of a limb. by Ehrsson, H, Spence, C, Passingham, R

    Published 2004
    “…A perceptual illusion was used to manipulate feelings of ownership of a rubber hand presented in front of healthy subjects while brain activity was measured by functional magnetic resonance imaging. The neural activity in the premotor cortex reflected the feeling of ownership of the hand. …”
    Journal article
  2. 1002

    Attentional modulation of object representations in working memory. by Lepsien, J, Nobre, A

    Published 2007
    “…Event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging revealed that orienting attention in WM modulated the activity in fusiform and parahippocampal gyri, involved in maintaining representations of faces and scenes respectively. …”
    Journal article
  3. 1003

    Looking under the bonnet of conservation conflicts: Can neuroscience help? by Can, Ö, Macdonald, D

    Published 2018
    “…Using positron emission tomography (PET), functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and magnetoencephalograhy (MEG), neuroscience is revealing how humans are wired in ways that have bearing on any problem that involves values; and nature/wildlife conservation is surely one of those. …”
    Journal article
  4. 1004

    Prioritizing new over old: an fMRI study of the preview search task. by Olivers, C, Smith, S, Matthews, P, Humphreys, G

    Published 2005
    “…Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we replicate and extend findings showing the involvement of superior and inferior parietal areas in the preview task when compared to both a relatively easy single-set search task and a more effortful full-set search task. …”
    Journal article
  5. 1005

    Orienting attention to locations in perceptual versus mental representations. by Nobre, A, Coull, J, Maquet, P, Frith, C, Vandenberghe, R, Mesulam, M

    Published 2004
    “…We used event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging to identify the neural system involved in directing attention to locations in arrays held as mental representations, and to compare it with the system for directing spatial attention to locations in the external world. …”
    Journal article
  6. 1006

    A cognitive neuropsychological model of antidepressant drug action. by Pringle, A, Browning, M, Cowen, P, Harmer, C

    Published 2011
    “…Evidence from behavioural and functional magnetic resonance imaging studies supports this hypothesis. …”
    Journal article
  7. 1007

    The prefrontal cortex: response selection or maintenance within working memory? by Rowe, J, Toni, I, Josephs, O, Frackowiak, R, Passingham, R

    Published 2000
    “…We used event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging to study the performance of a spatial working memory task by humans. …”
    Journal article
  8. 1008

    The functional anatomy of auditory hallucinations in schizophrenia. by Lennox, B, Park, S, Medley, I, Morris, P, Jones, P

    Published 2000
    “…We used continuous whole brain functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) with a 3-T magnet to map the cerebral activation associated with auditory hallucinations in four subjects with schizophrenia. …”
    Journal article
  9. 1009

    A cognitive neuropsychological model of antidepressant drug action. by Pringle, A, Browning, M, Cowen, P, Harmer, C

    Published 2011
    “…Evidence from behavioural and functional magnetic resonance imaging studies supports this hypothesis. …”
    Journal article
  10. 1010

    Organizing conceptual knowledge in humans with a gridlike code by Constantinescu, A, O'Reilly, J, Behrens, T

    Published 2016
    “…Grid cells use a hexagonally symmetric code to organize spatial representations and are the likely source of a precise hexagonal symmetry in the functional magnetic resonance imaging signal. Humans navigating conceptual two-dimensional knowledge showed the same hexagonal signal in a set of brain regions markedly similar to those activated during spatial navigation. …”
    Journal article
  11. 1011

    The multiple-demand (MD) system of the primate brain: mental programs for intelligent behaviour. by Duncan, J

    Published 2010
    “…Single cell and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data indicate a key role for MD cortex in defining and controlling the parts of such programs, with focus on the specific content of a current cognitive operation, rapid reorganization as mental focus is changed, and robust separation of successive task steps. …”
    Journal article
  12. 1012

    Brain mechanisms for inferring deceit in the actions of others. by Grèzes, J, Frith, C, Passingham, R

    Published 2004
    “…Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we studied subjects watching videos of actors lifting a box and judged whether or not the actors were trying to deceive them concerning the real weight of the box. …”
    Journal article
  13. 1013

    Dissociating pain from its anticipation in the human brain. by Ploghaus, A, Tracey, I, Gati, J, Clare, S, Menon, R, Matthews, P, Rawlins, J

    Published 1999
    “…The experience of pain is subjectively different from the fear and anxiety caused by threats of pain. Functional magnetic resonance imaging in healthy humans was applied to dissociate neural activation patterns associated with acute pain and its anticipation. …”
    Journal article
  14. 1014

    Vivid visual mental imagery in the absence of the primary visual cortex. by Bridge, H, Harrold, S, Holmes, E, Stokes, M, Kennard, C

    Published 2012
    “…In this study, we show that in spite of his near-complete cortical blindness, SBR exhibits vivid visual mental imagery both behaviorally and when measured with functional magnetic resonance imaging. The pattern of cortical activation to visual mental imagery in SBR is indistinguishable from individual sighted subjects, in contrast to the visual perceptual responses, which are greatly attenuated.…”
    Journal article
  15. 1015

    Abstract reward and punishment representations in the human orbitofrontal cortex. by O'Doherty, J, Kringelbach, M, Rolls, E, Hornak, J, Andrews, C

    Published 2001
    “…Using event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), we measured brain activation in human subjects doing an emotion-related visual reversal-learning task in which choice of the correct stimulus led to a probabilistically determined 'monetary' reward and choice of the incorrect stimulus led to a monetary loss. …”
    Journal article
  16. 1016

    Neural correlates of conscious and unconscious vision in parietal extinction. by Rees, G, Wojciulik, E, Clarke, K, Husain, M, Frith, C, Driver, J

    Published 2002
    “…Brain areas activated by stimuli in the left visual field of a right parietal patient suffering from left visual extinction were identified using event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging. Left visual field stimuli that were extinguished from awareness still activated the ventral visual cortex, including areas in the damaged right hemisphere. …”
    Journal article
  17. 1017

    Processing conflicting information: facilitation, interference, and functional connectivity. by Cohen Kadosh, R, Cohen Kadosh, K, Henik, A, Linden, D

    Published 2008
    “…We used functional magnetic resonance imaging while participants performed a magnitude conflict task (the size congruity paradigm). …”
    Journal article
  18. 1018

    Activation of auditory cortex during silent lipreading. by Calvert, G, Bullmore, E, Brammer, M, Campbell, R, Williams, S, McGuire, P, Woodruff, P, Iversen, S, David, A

    Published 1997
    “…Watching a speaker's lips during face-to-face conversation (lipreading) markedly improves speech perception, particularly in noisy conditions. With functional magnetic resonance imaging it was found that these linguistic visual cues are sufficient to activate auditory cortex in normal hearing individuals in the absence of auditory speech sounds. …”
    Journal article
  19. 1019

    Residual processing of chromatic signals in the absence of a geniculostriate projection. by Barbur, J, Sahraie, A, Simmons, A, Weiskrantz, L, Williams, S

    Published 1998
    “…We have investigated the residual processing of chromatic signals in a subject with unilateral damage to the primary visual cortex using psychophysical, pupillometric and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) methods. Of particular interest was to establish the correlation between the subject's ability to make use of chromatic signals in the blind hemifield to discriminate between different coloured targets, the corresponding residual pupil colour responses and the level and location of cortical activation generated by the same stimuli as revealed by fMRI. …”
    Journal article
  20. 1020

    Functional neuroimaging and withdrawal of life-sustaining treatment from vegetative patients by Wilkinson, D, Kahane, G, Horne, M, Savulescu, J

    Published 2009
    “…Recent studies using functional magnetic resonance imaging of patients in a vegetative state have raised the possibility that such patients retain some degree of consciousness. …”
    Journal article