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Showing 796 to 810 of 2,398 results Save | Export
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Virji-Babul, Naznin; Moiseev, Alexander; Cheung, Teresa; Weeks, Daniel J.; Cheyne, Douglas; Ribary, Urs – American Journal on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities, 2010
Results of a magnetoencephalography (MEG) brain imaging study conducted to examine the cortical responses during action execution and action observation in 10 healthy adults and 8 age-matched adults with Down syndrome are reported. During execution, the motor responses were strongly lateralized on the ipsilateral rather than the contralateral side…
Descriptors: Control Groups, Observation, Down Syndrome, Adults
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Beaton, Elliott A.; Stoddard, Joel; Lai, Song; Lackey, John; Shi, Jianrong; Ross, Judith L.; Simon, Tony J. – American Journal on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities, 2010
Turner syndrome is associated with spatial and numerical cognitive impairments. We hypothesized that these nonverbal cognitive impairments result from limits in spatial and temporal processing, particularly as it affects attention. To examine spatiotemporal attention in girls with Turner syndrome versus typically developing controls, we used a…
Descriptors: Females, Congenital Impairments, Spatial Ability, Brain Hemisphere Functions
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Paz, Rony; Bauer, Elizabeth P.; Pare, Denis – Learning & Memory, 2008
Memory consolidation is thought to involve the gradual transfer of transient hippocampal-dependent traces to distributed neocortical sites via the rhinal cortices. Recently, medial prefrontal (mPFC) neurons were shown to facilitate this process when their activity becomes synchronized. However, the mechanisms underlying this enhanced synchrony…
Descriptors: Memory, Neurological Organization, Learning, Stimuli
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Allison, Bradford; Schumacher, Gary – Journal of Cases in Educational Leadership, 2011
This case presents a situation in which a reformist superintendent attempts to achieve a systemwide, yet simple change in the school time schedule to incorporate well-established neurocognitive sleep research to enhance student learning. The public discussion of the reform proposal brought forth a very negative, single issue group who took over…
Descriptors: Superintendents, Sleep, Scientific Research, Brain
Ortiz, Enrique – Online Submission, 2010
The purpose of this study was to analyze participants' levels of hemoglobin as they performed arithmetic mental calculations using Optical Topography (OT, helmet type brain-scanning system, also known as Functional Near-Infrared Spectroscopy or fNIRS). A central issue in cognitive neuroscience involves the study of how the human brain encodes and…
Descriptors: Topography, Mental Computation, Memorization, Brain
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Bagot, Rosemary C.; Meaney, Michael J. – Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 2010
Objective: Child and adolescent psychiatry is rife with examples of the sustained effects of early experience on brain function. The study of behavioral genetics provides evidence for a relation between genomic variation and personality and with the risk for psychopathology. A pressing challenge is that of "conceptually" integrating findings from…
Descriptors: Psychiatry, Psychopathology, Personality, Genetics
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Qiu, Anqi; Adler, Marcy; Crocetti, Deana; Miller, Michael I.; Mostofsky, Stewart H. – Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 2010
Objective: Basal ganglia abnormalities have been suggested as contributing to motor, social, and communicative impairments in autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Volumetric analyses offer limited ability to detect localized differences in basal ganglia structure. Our objective was to investigate basal ganglia shape abnormalities and their association…
Descriptors: Autism, Psychomotor Skills, Males, Brain
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Yang, Tony T.; Simmons, Alan N.; Matthews, Scott C.; Tapert, Susan F.; Frank, Guido K.; Max, Jeffrey E.; Bischoff-Grethe, Amanda; Lansing, Amy E.; Brown, Gregory; Strigo, Irina A.; Wu, Jing; Paulus, Martin P. – Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 2010
Objective: Functional neuroimaging studies have led to a significantly deeper understanding of the underlying neural correlates and the development of several mature models of depression in adults. In contrast, our current understanding of the underlying neural substrates of adolescent depression is very limited. Although numerous studies have…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Brain, Depression (Psychology), Science Education
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Boudelaa, Sami; Pulvermuller, Friedemann; Hauk, Olaf; Shtyrov, Yury; Marslen-Wilson, William – Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2010
There are two views about morphology, the aspect of language concerned with the internal structure of words. One view holds that morphology is a domain of knowledge with a specific type of neurocognitive representation supported by specific brain mechanisms lateralized to left fronto-temporal cortex. The alternate view characterizes morphological…
Descriptors: Semitic Languages, Semantics, Morphemes, Brain Hemisphere Functions
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Bowers, Jeffrey S. – Psychological Review, 2010
Plaut and McClelland (2010) and Quian Quiroga and Kreiman both challenged my characterization of localist and distributed representations. They also challenged the biological plausibility of grandmother cells on conceptual and empirical grounds. This reply addresses these issues in turn. The premise of my argument is that grandmother cells in…
Descriptors: Definitions, Models, Brain, Psychological Studies
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Heinzle, Jakob; Hepp, Klaus; Martin, Kevan A. C. – Psychological Review, 2010
Reading is a highly complex task involving a precise integration of vision, attention, saccadic eye movements, and high-level language processing. Although there is a long history of psychological research in reading, it is only recently that imaging studies have identified some neural correlates of reading. Thus, the underlying neural mechanisms…
Descriptors: Psychological Studies, Eye Movements, Human Body, Language Processing
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Halverson, Hunter E.; Freeman, John H. – Learning & Memory, 2010
The conditioned stimulus (CS) pathway that is necessary for visual delay eyeblink conditioning was investigated in the current study. Rats were initially given eyeblink conditioning with stimulation of the ventral nucleus of the lateral geniculate (LGNv) as the CS followed by conditioning with light and tone CSs in separate training phases.…
Descriptors: Visual Stimuli, Stimulation, Animals, Eye Movements
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Madden, Carol; Hoen, Michel; Dominey, Peter Ford – Brain and Language, 2010
This article addresses issues in embodied sentence processing from a "cognitive neural systems" approach that combines analysis of the behavior in question, analysis of the known neurophysiological bases of this behavior, and the synthesis of a neuro-computational model of embodied sentence processing that can be applied to and tested in the…
Descriptors: Sentences, Simulation, Interaction, Language Processing
Atkins, Norman, Jr. – ProQuest LLC, 2009
Intercellular signaling is vital to communication within neuronal circuits. The suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), the master circadian clock of mammals, contains a dense collection of neurons that align their intrinsic rhythmicity with environmental stimulus and physiological state. While peptide physiology has been demonstrated as a contributor to…
Descriptors: Animals, Cues, Stimulation, Physiology
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Hermens, Frouke; Scharnowski, Frank; Herzog, Michael H. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2009
To make sense out of a continuously changing visual world, people need to integrate features across space and time. Despite more than a century of research, the mechanisms of features integration are still a matter of debate. To examine how temporal and spatial integration interact, the authors measured the amount of temporal fusion (a measure of…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Spatial Ability, Computer Simulation, Networks
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