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Developmental Alterations of Frontal-Striatal-Thalamic Connectivity in Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
Fitzgerald, Kate Dimond; Welsh, Robert C.; Stern, Emily R.; Angstadt, Mike; Hanna, Gregory L.; Abelson, James L.; Taylor, Stephan F. – Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 2011
Objective: Pediatric obsessive-compulsive disorder is characterized by abnormalities of frontal-striatal-thalamic circuitry that appear near illness onset and persist over its course. Distinct frontal-striatal-thalamic loops through cortical centers for cognitive control (anterior cingulate cortex) and emotion processing (ventral medial frontal…
Descriptors: Cognitive Ability, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Behavior Disorders, Comparative Analysis
Mattai, Anand A.; Weisinger, Brian; Greenstein, Deanna; Stidd, Reva; Clasen, Liv; Miller, Rachel; Tossell, Julia W.; Rapoport, Judith L.; Gogtay, Nitin – Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 2011
Objective: Cortical gray matter (GM) abnormalities in patients with childhood-onset schizophrenia (COS) progress during adolescence ultimately localizing to prefrontal and temporal cortices by early adult age. A previous study of 52 nonpsychotic siblings of COS probands had significant prefrontal and temporal GM deficits that appeared to…
Descriptors: Siblings, Schizophrenia, Adolescents, Children
Badzakova-Trajkov, Gjurgjica; Haberling, Isabelle S.; Corballis, Michael C. – Neuropsychologia, 2011
Magical ideation has been shown to be related to measures of hand preference, in which those with mixed handedness exhibit higher levels of magical ideation than those with either consistent left- or right-handedness. It is unclear whether the relation between magical ideation and hand preference is the result of a bias in questionnaire-taking…
Descriptors: Creativity, Handedness, Measures (Individuals), Diagnostic Tests
Rosburg, Timm; Mecklinger, Axel; Johansson, Mikael – Neuropsychologia, 2011
Strategic recollection refers to control processes that allow the retrieval of information that is relevant for a specific situation. These processes can be studied in memory exclusion tasks, which require the retrieval of particular kinds of episodic information. In the current study, we investigated strategic recollection in reality monitoring…
Descriptors: Item Response Theory, Cognitive Processes, Recall (Psychology), Task Analysis
Gray, Kurt; Knickman, T. Anne; Wegner, Daniel M. – Cognition, 2011
Patients in persistent vegetative state (PVS) may be biologically alive, but these experiments indicate that people see PVS as a state curiously more dead than dead. Experiment 1 found that PVS patients were perceived to have less mental capacity than the dead. Experiment 2 explained this effect as an outgrowth of afterlife beliefs, and the…
Descriptors: Hospices (Terminal Care), Cognitive Ability, Brain, Death
Meffert, Elisabeth; Tillmanns, Eva; Heim, Stefan; Jung, Stefanie; Huber, Walter; Grande, Marion – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2011
Two important research lines in neuro- and psycholinguistics are studying natural or experimentally induced slips of the tongue and investigating the symptom patterns of aphasic individuals. Only few studies have focused on explaining aphasic symptoms by provoking aphasic symptoms in healthy speakers. While all experimental techniques have so far…
Descriptors: Psycholinguistics, Models, Aphasia, Error Patterns
Wu, Ying Choon; Coulson, Seana – Brain and Language, 2011
Conversation is multi-modal, involving both talk and gesture. Does understanding depictive gestures engage processes similar to those recruited in the comprehension of drawings or photographs? Event-related brain potentials (ERPs) were recorded from neurotypical adults as they viewed spontaneously produced depictive gestures preceded by congruent…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Speech, Cognitive Processes, Nonverbal Communication
Yu, Hongbo; Gong, Lanyun; Qiu, Yinchen; Zhou, Xiaolin – Brain and Language, 2011
The Chinese character is composed of a finite set of strokes whose order in writing follows consensual principles and is learnt through school education. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), this study investigates the neural activity associated with the perception of writing sequences by asking participants to observe…
Descriptors: Chinese, Diagnostic Tests, Written Language, Orthographic Symbols
Verleger, Rolf; Binkofski, Ferdinand; Friedrich, Monique; Sedlmeier, Peter; Kompf, Detlef – Brain and Cognition, 2011
In patients with the callosal type of anarchic-hand syndrome, the left hand often does not act as intended and counteracts the right hand. Reports are scarce about the underlying neurophysiological mechanisms. We report the case G.H. who developed the syndrome after infarction of the left arteria pericallosa. It has been suggested that the…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Stimuli, Neurological Impairments, Patients
Maril, Anat; Avital, Rinat; Reggev, Niv; Zuckerman, Maya; Sadeh, Talya; Sira, Liat Ben; Livneh, Neta – Neuropsychologia, 2011
A known contributor to adults' superior memory performance compared to children is their differential reliance on an existing knowledge base. Compared to those of adults, children's semantic networks are less accessible and less established, a difference that is also thought to contribute to children's relative resistance to semantically related…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Memory, Children, Young Adults
Midgley, Katherine J.; Holcomb, Phillip J.; Grainger, Jonathan – Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2011
ERPs were used to explore the different patterns of processing of cognate and noncognate words in the first (L1) and second (L2) language of a population of second language learners. L1 English students of French were presented with blocked lists of L1 and L2 words, and ERPs to cognates and noncognates were compared within each language block. For…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Word Recognition, Diagnostic Tests, Brain Hemisphere Functions
Aristei, Sabrina; Melinger, Alissa; Abdel Rahman, Rasha – Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2011
In this study, we investigated semantic context effects in language production with event-related brain potentials, extracted from the ongoing EEG recorded during overt speech production. We combined the picture-word interference paradigm and the semantic blocking paradigm to investigate the temporal dynamics and functional loci of semantic…
Descriptors: Speech, Models, Semantics, Brain Hemisphere Functions
Obermeier, Christian; Holle, Henning; Gunter, Thomas C. – Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2011
The present series of experiments explores several issues related to gesture-speech integration and synchrony during sentence processing. To be able to more precisely manipulate gesture-speech synchrony, we used gesture fragments instead of complete gestures, thereby avoiding the usual long temporal overlap of gestures with their coexpressive…
Descriptors: Sentences, Stimuli, Memory, Nonverbal Communication
Gureckis, Todd M.; James, Thomas W.; Nosofsky, Robert M. – Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2011
Recent fMRI studies have found that distinct neural systems may mediate perceptual category learning under implicit and explicit learning conditions. In these previous studies, however, different stimulus-encoding processes may have been associated with implicit versus explicit learning. The present design was aimed at decoupling the influence of…
Descriptors: Incidental Learning, Learning Processes, Diagnostic Tests, Brain Hemisphere Functions
Vocat, Roland; Pourtois, Gilles; Vuilleumier, Patrik – Neuropsychologia, 2011
Errors generate typical brain responses, characterized by two successive event-related potentials (ERP) following incorrect action: the error-related negativity (ERN) and the positivity error (Pe). However, it is unclear whether these error-related responses are sensitive to the magnitude of the error, or instead show all-or-none effects. We…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Diagnostic Tests, Error Patterns

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