|
Autobiographical episodic memory.
Listening to sentences that contained first person autobiographical episodic infomation versus listening to third-person episodic memories.
WOEXP: 209.
G. R. Fink; H. J. Markowitsch; M. Reinkemeier; T. Bruckbauer; J. Kessler; W. D. Heiss. Cerebral representation of one's own past: neural networks involved in autobiographical memory. Journal of Neuroscience 16(13):4275-82, 1996. PMID: 8753888. WOBIB: 68. Cognition,Memory - Autobiographical episodic memory WOEXT: 259.
Asymmetry: 0.96875 (left: -1, right: +1)
|
![]() |
+1: 1.00000
Autobiographical episodic memory.
Listening to sentences that contained first person autobiographical episodic infomation versus listening to third-person episodic memories.
WOEXP: 209.
G. R. Fink; H. J. Markowitsch; M. Reinkemeier; T. Bruckbauer; J. Kessler; W. D. Heiss. Cerebral representation of one's own past: neural networks involved in
autobiographical memory.
Journal of Neuroscience 16(13):4275-82, 1996.
PMID: 8753888.
WOBIB: 68.
+2: 0.57335
Item-related memory during episodic retrieval with words for living versus nonliving things.
Episodic retrieval with a decision whether a visually presented word was previously presented with right hand button response with words for living versus nonliving things.
WOEXP: 568.
Emrah Düzel; Roberto Cabeza; Terence W. Picton; Andrew P. Yonelinas; Henning Scheich; Hans-Jochen Heinze; Endel Tulving. Task-related and item-related brain processes of memory retrieval.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Science of the United States of America 96(4):1794-1799, 1999.
PMID: 9990104.
FMRIDCID: .
WOBIB: 181.
+3: 0.51056
Decrease during public speaking for subjects with social phobia.
Decrease in the interaction between public speaking to an audience about past experiences and subjects with social phobia versus privat speaking about past experience and subjects with no social phobia.
WOEXP: 242.
M. Tillfors; T. Furmark; I. Marteinsdottir; Hċkan Fischer; A. Pissiota; B. Langstrom; M. Fredrikson. Cerebral blood flow in subjects with social phobia during stressful speaking tasks: a PET study.
American Journal of Psychiatry 158(8):1220-6, 2001.
PMID: 11481154.
WOBIB: 77.
+4: 0.49542
Emotional faces with s allele SLC6A4 individuals, cohort 2.
Matching of the emotional state of a display face with other displayed faces in individuals with the short allele of the 5-HTTLPR region in the SLC6A4 gene versus emotional matching in individuals with long alleles.
WOEXP: 348.
Ahmad R. Hariri; Venkata S. Mattay; Alessandro Tessitore; Bhaskar Kolachana; Francesco Fera; David Goldman; Michael F. Egan; Daniel R. Weinberger. Serotonin transporter genetic variation and the response of the human amygdala.
Science 297(5580):400-3, 2002.
PMID: 12130784.
DOI: 10.1126/science.1071829.
WOBIB: 115.
+5: 0.48417
Autobiographical episodic memory retrieval.
Listening to sentences that contained first person autobiographical episodic infomation versus resting eyes closed.
WOEXP: 208.
G. R. Fink; H. J. Markowitsch; M. Reinkemeier; T. Bruckbauer; J. Kessler; W. D. Heiss. Cerebral representation of one's own past: neural networks involved in
autobiographical memory.
Journal of Neuroscience 16(13):4275-82, 1996.
PMID: 8753888.
WOBIB: 68.
+6: 0.45111
Drinking at predictable intervals.
Drinking of juice or water at predictable intervals versus drinking with unpredictable intervals.
WOEXP: 334.
G. S. Berns; Samuel M. McClure; G. Pagnoni; P. R. Montague. Predictability modulates human brain response to reward.
Journal of Neuroscience 21(8):2793-8, 2001.
PMID: 11306631.
WOBIB: 107.
+7: 0.44828
Free-viewing versus fixation.
Free-viewing during color minus shape matching task versus fixation during task.
WOEXP: 252.
Claus Bundesen; Axel Larsen; Soren Kyllingsbaek; Olaf B. Paulson; Ian Law. Attentional effects in the visual pathways: a whole-brain PET study.
Experimental Brain Research 147(3):394-406, 2002.
PMID: 12428147.
DOI: 10.1007/s00221-002-1243-1.
WOBIB: 81.
+8: 0.42608
Painful stimulation of the left foot.
Painful stimulation of the left foot by laser.
WOEXP: 35.
X. Xu; H. Fukuyama; S. Yazawa; T. Mima; T. Hanakawa; Y. Magata; M. Kanda; N. Fujiwara; K. Shindo; T. Nagamine; H. Shibasaki. Functional localization of pain perception in the human brain studied by PET.
NeuroReport 8(2):555-559, 1997.
PMID: 9080447.
WOBIB: 13.
+9: 0.39891
150% fearful faces versus neural faces.
Viewing of 150% computer-manipulated fearful grey-scale faces with sex decision task indicated with right thumb versus viewing of slightly happy faces.
WOEXP: 221.
Mary L. Phillips; A. W. Young; C. Senior; M. Brammer; C. Andrew; A. J. Calder; E. T. Bullmore; D. I. Perrett; D. Rowland; Steven C. R. Williams; J. A. Gray; Anthony S. David. A specific neural substrate for perceiving facial expressions of disgust.
Nature 389(6650):495-8, 1997.
PMID: 9333238.
DOI: 10.1038/39051.
WOBIB: 71.
+10: 0.38743
Obsessive compulsive disorder, positive correlation.
Positive correlation with obsessive compulsive disorder symptom intensities while contaminants placed in folded hands.
WOEXP: 323.
Philip K. McGuire; C. J. Bench; C. D. Frith; I. M. Marks; Richard S. J. Frackowiak; R. J. Dolan. Functional anatomy of obsessive-compulsive phenomena.
British Journal of Psychiatry 164(4):459-468, 1994.
PMID: 8038933.
WOBIB: 104.
+11: 0.38670
Multimodal sensory change.
Change between stimuli that are either visual, auditory or tactile.
WOEXP: 456.
J. Downar; A. P. Crawley; D. J. Mikulis; K. D. Davis. A multimodal cortical network for the detection of changes in the sensory environment.
Nature Neuroscience 3(3):277-283, 2000.
PMID: 10700261.
DOI: 10.1038/72991.
FMRIDCID: .
WOBIB: 148.
+12: 0.35544
Self-attribution versus other-attribution.
The subject moved a joystick, and a cursor on the screen was controlled by the subject using the joystick.
WOEXP: 75.
Chlöé Farrer; Chris D. Frith. Experiencing oneself vs another person as being the cause of an action: the neural correlates of the experience of agency.
NeuroImage 15(3):596-603, 2002.
PMID: 11848702.
DOI: 10.1006/nimg.2001.1009.
WOBIB: 23.
+13: 0.32579
Passive versus active. Hypothesis generation and testing group versus hypothesis generation group.
Passive state with simulus versus active states in connection with visual information processing task: same-different discrimination, visual search, spatial attention, language, memory, cross-modal imagery. Areas where changes where seen in the combined hypothesis generation and testing group but not in the hypothesis generation group alone.
WOEXP: 532.
Gordon L. Shulman; Julie A. Fiez; Maurizio Corbetta; Randy L. Buckner; Francis M. Miezin; Marcus E. Raichle; Steven E. Petersen. Common Blood Flow Changes across Visual Tasks: II. Decreases in Cerebral Cortex.
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 9(5):648-663, 1997.
FMRIDCID: .
WOBIB: 173.
+14: 0.32416
Resting versus novel word recall.
Resting versus speak load words recalled from a list of 15 words heard only one time just prior to recall.
WOEXP: 274.
Nancy C. Andreasen; D. S. O'Leary; T. Cizadlo; Stephan Arndt; K. Rezai; G. L. Watkins; L. L. Ponto; R. D. Hichwa. II. PET studies of memory: novel versus practiced free recall of word
lists.
NeuroImage 2(4):296-305, 1995.
PMID: 9343614.
WOBIB: 85.
+15: 0.31703
75% disgusted faces versus neural faces.
Viewing of 75% computer-manipulated grey-scale faces with an expression of disgust and with sex decision task indicated with right thumb versus viewing of slightly happy faces.
WOEXP: 222.
Mary L. Phillips; A. W. Young; C. Senior; M. Brammer; C. Andrew; A. J. Calder; E. T. Bullmore; D. I. Perrett; D. Rowland; Steven C. R. Williams; J. A. Gray; Anthony S. David. A specific neural substrate for perceiving facial expressions of disgust.
Nature 389(6650):495-8, 1997.
PMID: 9333238.
DOI: 10.1038/39051.
WOBIB: 71.
+16: 0.31259
Emotional faces with s allele SLC6A4 individuals, cohort 1.
Matching of the emotional state of a display face with other displayed faces in individuals with the short allele of the 5-HTTLPR region in the SLC6A4 gene versus emotional matching in individuals with long alleles.
WOEXP: 347.
Ahmad R. Hariri; Venkata S. Mattay; Alessandro Tessitore; Bhaskar Kolachana; Francesco Fera; David Goldman; Michael F. Egan; Daniel R. Weinberger. Serotonin transporter genetic variation and the response of the human amygdala.
Science 297(5580):400-3, 2002.
PMID: 12130784.
DOI: 10.1126/science.1071829.
WOBIB: 115.
+17: 0.31228
'Physical' stories versus unlinked sentences.
Story comprehension during silent reading and question answering of visually presented stories versus reading of unlinked setences.
WOEXP: 519.
Paul C. Fletcher; F Happe; Uta Frith; S. C. Baker; Raymond J. Dolan; Richard S. J. Frackowiak; Chris D. Frith. Other minds in the brain: a functional imaging study of "theory of mind" in story comprehension.
Cognition 57(2):109-128, 1995.
PMID: 8556839.
DOI: 10.1016/0010-0277(95)00692-R.
FMRIDCID: .
WOBIB: 170.
+18: 0.30691
Increases in rapid auditory processing.
Linear increase as a function of compression/presentation speed of auditorily presented sentences that were to be determine semantically true with button press.
WOEXP: 524.
Russell A. Poldrack; Elise Temple; Athanassios Protopapas; Srikantan Nagarajan; Paula Tallal; Michael Merzenich; John D. E. Gabrieli. Relations Between the Neural Bases of Dynamic Auditory Processing and Phonological Processing: Evidence from fMRI.
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 13(5):687-697, 2001.
PMID: 11506664.
FMRIDCID: 2-2001-111KR.
WOBIB: 171.
+19: 0.30633
Recognition of the previously shown objects with different location versus with changing objects.
Recognition of different spatial configurations of faces and and pictures of tools from previously shown pairs versus pairs with the same spatial relationship but with changing objects.
WOEXP: 447.
Emrah Düzel; Reza Habib; Michael Rotte; Sebastian Guderian; Endel Tulving; Hans-Jochen Heinze. Human hippocampal and parahippocampal activity during visual associative recognition memory for spatial and nonspatial stimulus configurations.
Journal of Neuroscience 23(28):9439-9444, 2003.
PMID: 14561873.
FMRIDCID: .
WOBIB: 146.
+20: 0.29998
Sexual arousal - female.
Sexual arousal by viewing erotic film excerpts.
WOEXP: 10.
Sherif Karama; Andre R. Lecours; Jean-Maxime Leroux; Pierre Bourgouin; Gilles Beaudoin; Sven Joubert; Mario Beauregard. Areas of brain activation in males and females during viewing of erotic
film excerpts.
Human Brain Mapping 16(1):1-13, 2002.
PMID: 11870922.
WOBIB: 4.
+21: 0.29479
Time-context-specific recall.
Time-context-specific cued recall of words from auditorily presented syllables versus word completion from syllable.
WOEXP: 109.
Toshikatsu Fujii; Jiro Okuda; Takashi Tsukiura; Hiroya Ohtake; Rina Miura; Reiko Fukatsu; Kyoko Suzuki; Ryuta Kawashima; Masatoshi Itoh; Hiroshi Fukuda; Atsushi Yamadori. The role of the basal forebrain in episodic memory retrieval: a positron emission tomography study.
NeuroImage 15(3):501-8, 2002.
PMID: 11848693.
DOI: 10.1006/nimg.2001.0995.
WOBIB: 32.
+22: 0.29333
Correlation with navigation accuracy .
Correlation with a measure of accuracy during navigation to a destination in a complex virtual town.
WOEXP: 128.
Eleanor A. Maguire; N. Burgess; J. G. Donnett; Richard S. J. Frackowiak; C. D. Frith; J. O'Keefe. Knowing where and getting there: a human navigation network.
Science 280(5365):921-4, 1998.
PMID: 9572740.
WOBIB: 38.
+23: 0.28018
Group: Answering self-reflective questions versus answering semantic questions.
Self-reflective and semantic yes/no questions posed through headphones were answered with button press.
WOEXP: 65.
Sterling C. Johnson; Leslie C. Baxter; Lana S. Wilder; James G. Pipe; Joseph E. Heiserman; George P. Prigatano. Neural correlates of self-reflection.
Brain 125(Pt 8):1808-14, 2002.
PMID: 12135971.
WOBIB: 20.
+24: 0.27541
Unimodal audio or visual perception of digits.
Unimodal viewing or hearing digits versus simultaneous hearing and seeing with lip-reading.
WOEXP: 500.
Gemma A. Calvert; Michael J. Brammer; Edward T. Bullmore; Ruth Campbell; S. D. Iversen; Anthony S. David. Response amplification in sensory-specific cortices during crossmodal binding.
NeuroReport 10(12):2619-2623, 1999.
PMID: 10574380.
FMRIDCID: .
WOBIB: 164.
+25: 0.26721
Controls versus London taxi drivers.
Gray matter volume in controls not driving taxi versus London taxi drivers with extensive navigation experience versus controls.
WOEXP: 197.
Eleanor A. Maguire; D. G. Gadian; I. S. Johnsrude; C. D. Good; J. Ashburner; Richard S. J. Frackowiak; C. D. Frith. Navigation-related structural change in the hippocampi of taxi drivers.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 97(8):4398-403, 2000.
PMID: 10716738.
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.070039597.
WOBIB: 63.
-1: -0.05947
Visuospatial 2-back, Boston site.
Viewing of dots in one of four displayed boxes with button pressing for indicating where the dot occured two trials back versus pressing buttons in zero-back.
WOEXP: 352.
B. J. Casey; Jonathan D. Cohen; K. O'Craven; Richard J. Davidson; W. Irwin; C. A. Nelson; D. C. Noll; X. Hu; M. J. Lowe; B. R. Rosen; C. L. Truwitt; P. A. Turski. Reproducibility of fMRI results across four institutions using a spatial working memory task.
NeuroImage 8(3):249-261, 1998.
PMID: 9758739.
FMRIDCID: .
WOBIB: 116.
-2: -0.05841
Visual orientation working memory updating.
Maintenance and update of 3 oriented visual gratings in working memory from a series of 5 to 7 items and responding to a cue by pressing a key with either left or right hand versus maintenance and response with 3 items in working memory.
WOEXP: 171.
L. Cornette; P. Dupont; E. Salmon; G. A. Orban. The neural substrate of orientation working memory.
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 13(6):813-28, 2001.
PMID: 11564325.
DOI: 10.1162/08989290152541476.
WOBIB: 51.
-3: -0.05756
Visually guided saccades.
Visually guided saccadic eye movements by following an white spot on a screen unpredictably right and left jumping along the horizontal meridian versus central fixation.
WOEXP: 150.
R. A. Berman; C. L. Colby; C. R. Genovese; J. T. Voyvodic; B. Luna; K. R. Thulborn; J. A. Sweeney. Cortical networks subserving pursuit and saccadic eye movements in humans: an FMRI study.
Human Brain Mapping 8(4):209-25, 1999.
PMID: 10619415.
WOBIB: 46.
-4: -0.05641
Visual pursuit tracking.
Visual pursuit tracking eye movement by following a white spot on a screen moving sinusoidal along the horizontal meridian versus central fixation.
WOEXP: 149.
R. A. Berman; C. L. Colby; C. R. Genovese; J. T. Voyvodic; B. Luna; K. R. Thulborn; J. A. Sweeney. Cortical networks subserving pursuit and saccadic eye movements in humans: an FMRI study.
Human Brain Mapping 8(4):209-25, 1999.
PMID: 10619415.
WOBIB: 46.
-5: -0.04454
Stage 1 sleep decreases.
Decreases during stage 1 sleep with and without hypnagogic hallucinations versus awake.
WOEXP: 386.
Troels W. Kjaer; Ian Law; Gordon Wiltschiotz; Olaf B. Paulson; Peter L. Madsen. Regional cerebral blood flow during light sleep--a H(2)(15)O-PET study.
Journal of Sleep Research 11(3):201-207, 2002.
PMID: 12220315.
WOBIB: 124.