|
Memory retrieval.
Memory retrieval of temporal, nontemporal, person relevant and irrelevant memories by listening to statements and responding with key press versus listening sets of words and pressing a button depending on number of syllables in last word.
WOEXP: 243.
Eleanor A. Maguire; C. J. Mummery. Differential modulation of a common memory retrieval network revealed by positron emission tomography. Hippocampus 9(1):54-61, 1999. PMID: 10088900. WOBIB: 78. Cognition,Memory - Retrieval WOEXT: 24.
Asymmetry: -0.96094 (left: -1, right: +1)
|
![]() |
+1: 1.00000
Memory retrieval.
Memory retrieval of temporal, nontemporal, person relevant and irrelevant memories by listening to statements and responding with key press versus listening sets of words and pressing a button depending on number of syllables in last word.
WOEXP: 243.
Eleanor A. Maguire; C. J. Mummery. Differential modulation of a common memory retrieval network revealed by
positron emission tomography.
Hippocampus 9(1):54-61, 1999.
PMID: 10088900.
WOBIB: 78.
+2: 0.56386
Episodic memory retrieval versus semantic.
Episodic memory retrieval by judging visually sentences with a yes/no response using right fingers versus semantic knowledge retrieval.
WOEXP: 374.
Stefan Zysset; Oswald Huber; Evelyn Ferstl; D. Y. von Cramon. The anterior frontomedian cortex and evaluative judgment: an fMRI study.
NeuroImage 15(4):983-91, 2002.
PMID: 11906238.
DOI: 10.1006/nimg.2001.1008.
WOBIB: 121.
+3: 0.51129
Happiness from films.
Happiness generated from viewing silent color feature film involving a joyous romantic reconciliation versus view neutral films and recalling neutral autobiographical memories.
WOEXP: 543.
Richard D. Lane; Eric M. Reiman; Geoffrey L. Ahern; Gary E. Schwartz; Richard J. Davidson. Neuroanatomical Correlates of Happiness, Sadness, and Disgust.
The American Journal of Psychiatry 154(7):926-933, 1997.
PMID: 9210742.
FMRIDCID: .
WOBIB: 177.
+4: 0.50718
Item-related memory during episodic retrieval with old words versus new.
Episodic retrieval with a decision whether a visually presented word was previously presented with right hand button response for previously presented words versus new words not presented before.
WOEXP: 567.
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.
+5: 0.44577
Sexual arousal - male.
Sexual arousal by viewing erotic film excerpts.
WOEXP: 9.
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.
+6: 0.43549
Permanent amnesia, proportional scaling.
Hypometabolism in patients with permanent amnesia from either anoxia or Wernicke-Korsakoff's syndrome versus normal control subjects.
WOEXP: 370.
A. M. Aupee; B. Desgranges; F. Eustache; C. Lalevee; V. de la Sayette; F. Viader; J. C. Baron. Voxel-based mapping of brain hypometabolism in permanent amnesia with PET.
NeuroImage 13(6 Pt 1):1164-73, 2001.
PMID: 11352622.
DOI: 10.1006/nimg.2001.0762.
WOBIB: 119.
+7: 0.42749
Unpleasant emotion.
Viewing of unpleasant pictures, such as
frightening animals, mutilated bodies, human violence versus
viewing neural pictures, such as inanimate objects, people with
neutral facial expressions and complex visual
stimuli.
WOEXP: 295.
Richard D. Lane; Eric M. Reiman; M. M. Bradley; P. J. Lang; Geoffrey L. Ahern; Richard J. Davidson; Gary E. Schwartz. Neuroanatomical correlates of pleasant and unpleasant emotion.
Neuropsychologia 35(11):1437-44, 1997.
PMID: 9352521.
BrainMap: 276.
WOBIB: 93.
+8: 0.42286
Memory retrieval with personal relevance and temporal specificity.
Interaction between memory retrieval of temporal specificity and person relevance versus nontemporal and nonpersonal memory retrieval and sets of word listening.
WOEXP: 244.
Eleanor A. Maguire; C. J. Mummery. Differential modulation of a common memory retrieval network revealed by
positron emission tomography.
Hippocampus 9(1):54-61, 1999.
PMID: 10088900.
WOBIB: 78.
+9: 0.40975
Evaluative judgment versus semantic memory retrieval.
Evaluative judgment from visually sentences with a yes/no response using right fingers versus semantic knowledge retrieval.
WOEXP: 376.
Stefan Zysset; Oswald Huber; Evelyn Ferstl; D. Y. von Cramon. The anterior frontomedian cortex and evaluative judgment: an fMRI study.
NeuroImage 15(4):983-91, 2002.
PMID: 11906238.
DOI: 10.1006/nimg.2001.1008.
WOBIB: 121.
+10: 0.39954
Unpredictable preferred drinking.
Interaction between drinking of preferred one of juice or water and drinking at unpredictable intervals versus drinking preferred at predictable intervals on unpreferred at unpredictable intervals.
WOEXP: 335.
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.
+11: 0.39190
Happiness from films and recall.
Happiness generated from viewing silent color feature film involving a joyous romantic reconciliation and recalling happy autobiographical memories from scripts versus view neutral films and recalling neutral autobiographical memories.
WOEXP: 540.
Richard D. Lane; Eric M. Reiman; Geoffrey L. Ahern; Gary E. Schwartz; Richard J. Davidson. Neuroanatomical Correlates of Happiness, Sadness, and Disgust.
The American Journal of Psychiatry 154(7):926-933, 1997.
PMID: 9210742.
FMRIDCID: .
WOBIB: 177.
+12: 0.39128
75% fearful faces versus neural faces.
Viewing of 75% fearful grey-scale faces with sex decision task indicated with right thumb versus viewing of slightly happy faces.
WOEXP: 220.
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.
+13: 0.38041
Pleasant emotion.
Viewing of pleasant pictures, such as erotica, babies, sports events versus viewing neural pictures, such as inanimate objects, people with neutral facial expressions and complex visual stimuli.
WOEXP: 294.
Richard D. Lane; Eric M. Reiman; M. M. Bradley; P. J. Lang; Geoffrey L. Ahern; Richard J. Davidson; Gary E. Schwartz. Neuroanatomical correlates of pleasant and unpleasant emotion.
Neuropsychologia 35(11):1437-44, 1997.
PMID: 9352521.
BrainMap: 276.
WOBIB: 93.
+14: 0.37904
Semantic knowledge retrieval.
Listen to names of animals and respond with left hand thumb button press when a named animal is found in the United States and is used by people versus listen to consonant-vowel syllable triplets and responding with left hand thumb button press when a triplet contains both the consonant /b/ and the consonant /d/.
WOEXP: 169.
J. R. Binder; J. A. Frost; T. A. Hammeke; P. S. Bellgowan; S. M. Rao; R. W. Cox. Conceptual processing during the conscious resting state. A functional MRI
study.
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 11(1):80-95, 1999.
PMID: 9950716.
WOBIB: 50.
+15: 0.36675
Happy faces correlated with extraversion.
Categorization of happy face correlated with extraversion NEO personality trait.
WOEXP: 482.
Turhan Canli; Heidi Sivers; Susan L. Whitfield; Ian H. Gotlib; John E. Gabrieli. Amygdala response to happy faces as a function of extraversion.
Science 296(5576):2191, 2002.
PMID: 12077407.
DOI: 10.1126/science.1068749.
FMRIDCID: .
WOBIB: 156.
+16: 0.35722
Subject 5: Answering self-reflective questions versus answering semantic questions.
Self-reflective and semantic yes/no questions posed through headphones were answered with button press.
WOEXP: 58.
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.
+17: 0.34538
Passive versus active, 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. hypothesis generation group.
WOEXP: 530.
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.
+18: 0.34127
Sadness from films.
Sadness generated from viewing silent color feature film involving grieving a friend who committed suicide by hanging versus view neutral films and recalling neutral autobiographical memories.
WOEXP: 544.
Richard D. Lane; Eric M. Reiman; Geoffrey L. Ahern; Gary E. Schwartz; Richard J. Davidson. Neuroanatomical Correlates of Happiness, Sadness, and Disgust.
The American Journal of Psychiatry 154(7):926-933, 1997.
PMID: 9210742.
FMRIDCID: .
WOBIB: 177.
+19: 0.33791
Empathic judgements.
Judgements of visually displayed sentences about empathic situations with button press versus judgement involving social reasoning.
WOEXP: 450.
T. F. Farrow; Y. Zheng; I. D. Wilkinson; S. A. Spence; J. F. Deakin; N. Tarrier; P. D. Griffiths; P. W. Woodruff. Investigating the functional anatomy of empathy and forgiveness.
NeuroReport 12(11):2433-2438, 2001.
PMID: 11496124.
FMRIDCID: .
WOBIB: 147.
+20: 0.33198
Disgust from recall.
Disgust generated from recalling disgust autobiographical memories from scripts versus view neutral films and recalling neutral autobiographical memories.
WOEXP: 548.
Richard D. Lane; Eric M. Reiman; Geoffrey L. Ahern; Gary E. Schwartz; Richard J. Davidson. Neuroanatomical Correlates of Happiness, Sadness, and Disgust.
The American Journal of Psychiatry 154(7):926-933, 1997.
PMID: 9210742.
FMRIDCID: .
WOBIB: 177.
+21: 0.33098
Rest versus word generation.
Resting with eyes closed versus generate words covertly without articulation cued with letter or category.
WOEXP: 585.
Eraldo Paulesu; Ben Goldacre; Paola Scifo; Stefano F. Cappa; Maria Carla Gilardi; Isabella Castiglioni; Daniela Perani; Frruccio Fazio. Functional heterogeneity of left inferior frontal cortex as revealed by fMRI.
NeuroReport 8(8):2011-2017, 1997.
PMID: 9223094.
FMRIDCID: .
WOBIB: 185.
+22: 0.32975
Happy recitation in non-religious subjects.
Happy recitation of a German children's nursery rhyme with eyes closed in non-religious subjects.
WOEXP: 409.
N. P. Azari; J. Nickel; G. Wunderlich; M. Niedeggen; H. Hefter; L. Tellmann; H. Herzog; P. Stoerig; D. Birnbacher; Rüdiger J. Seitz. Neural correlates of religious experience.
European Journal of Neuroscience 13(8):1649-52, 2001.
PMID: 11328359.
DOI: 10.1046/j.0953-816x.2001.01527.x.
FMRIDCID: .
WOBIB: 132.
+23: 0.32561
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.
+24: 0.32459
Subject 7: Answering self-reflective questions versus answering semantic questions.
Self-reflective and semantic yes/no questions posed through headphones were answered with button press.
WOEXP: 60.
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.
+25: 0.32309
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.
-1: -0.08545
Tower of London task, fMRI block design model.
Determing of the minimum number of moves in one to seven moves Tower of London task versus a zero moves Tower of London task.
WOEXP: 440.
Ulrich Schall; Patrick Johnston; Jim Lagopoulos; Markus Juptner; Walter Jentzen; Renate Thienel; Alexandra Dittmann-Balcar; Stefan Bender; Philip B. Ward. Functional brain maps of Tower of London performance: a positron emission tomography and functional magnetic resonance imaging study.
NeuroImage 20(2):1154-61, 2003.
PMID: 14568484.
DOI: 10.1016/S1053-8119(03)00338-0.
FMRIDCID: .
WOBIB: 144.
-2: -0.06488
Word recognition.
Respond with "old" or "new" if visually presented words had been presented earlier versus fixation.
WOEXP: 118.
Terry L. Jernigan; A. L. Ostergaard; Ian Law; Claus Svarer; Christian Gerlach; O. B. Paulson. Brain activation during word identification and word recognition.
NeuroImage 8(1):93-105, 1998.
PMID: 9698579.
WOBIB: 35.
-3: -0.06396
Intelligence in circle task.
Mismatch in a high-g intelligence task determining the odd one of four displayed circles sets with indication by button press with middle and index fingers of the two hands versus a similar task with lower g.
WOEXP: 341.
John Duncan; Rüdiger J. Seitz; J. Kolodny; D. Bor; H. Herzog; A. Ahmed; F. N. Newell; H. Emslie. A neural basis for general intelligence.
Science 289(5478):457-60, 2000.
PMID: 10903207.
WOBIB: 110.
-4: -0.06242
Visuospatial 0-back, pooled data.
Viewing of dots in one of four displayed boxes with button pressing for indicating where the dot versus rest.
WOEXP: 350.
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.
-5: -0.06042
Word rate dependence in silent reading of proper words.
Word rate dependence in silent reading of visually presented proper words.
WOEXP: 400.
Andrea Mechelli; Karl J. Friston; Cathy J. Price. The effects of presentation rate during word and pseudoword reading: a comparison of PET and fMRI.
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 12 Suppl 2():145-156, 2000.
PMID: 11506654.
DOI: 10.1162/089892900564000.
FMRIDCID: 2-2000-11189.
WOBIB: 129.