Happy face viewing.
Viewing happy emotional face and indication with a button press versus viewing neutral faces.
WOEXP: 307.
Mary L. Phillips; E. T. Bullmore; R. Howard; P. W. Woodruff; I. C. Wright; Steven C. R. Williams; A. Simmons; C. Andrew; M. Brammer; Anthony S. David. Investigation of facial recognition memory and happy and sad facial expression perception: an fMRI study. Psychiatry Research 83(3):127-38, 1998. PMID: 9849722. WOBIB: 98. Emotion - Happiness WOEXT: 314.
Asymmetry: 0.00000 (left: -1, right: +1)
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+1: 1.00000
Happy face viewing.
Viewing happy emotional face and indication with a button press versus viewing neutral faces.
WOEXP: 307.
Mary L. Phillips; E. T. Bullmore; R. Howard; P. W. Woodruff; I. C. Wright; Steven C. R. Williams; A. Simmons; C. Andrew; M. Brammer; Anthony S. David. Investigation of facial recognition memory and happy and sad facial
expression perception: an fMRI study.
Psychiatry Research 83(3):127-38, 1998.
PMID: 9849722.
WOBIB: 98.
+2: 0.52781
Active elbow movement versus passive movement.
Active flexion and extension movements of the elbow of the right arm paced by a metronome versus passive movement.
WOEXP: 464.
C. Weiller; M. Juptner; S. Fellows; M. Rijntjes; G. Leonhardt; S. Kiebel; S. Muller; H. C. Diener; A. F. Thilmann. Brain representation of active and passive movements.
NeuroImage 4(2):105-110, 1996.
PMID: 9345502.
FMRIDCID: .
WOBIB: 151.
+3: 0.50571
Person-context-specific recall.
Person-context-specific cued recall of words from auditorily presented syllables versus word completion from syllable.
WOEXP: 110.
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.
+4: 0.50177
Associative encoding of familiar associations versus associative encoding of novel associations.
Generate of a sentence containing three visually displayed words that had been seen in the same context before versus generating a sentence with words that had not been seen in context before.
WOEXP: 439.
Nicola M. Hunkin; Andrew R. Mayes; Lloyd J. Gregory; Amanda K. Nicholas; Julia A. Nunn; Michael J. Brammer; Edward T. Bullmore; Steven C. R. Williams. Novelty-related activation within the medial temporal lobes.
Neuropsychologia 40(8):1456-1464, 2002.
PMID: 11931949.
FMRIDCID: .
WOBIB: 143.
+5: 0.47978
Listening to familiar voices and viewing familiar faces.
Listening to familiar voices and viewing familiar faces with right index finger button presses for indication of interruption task versus listening to unfamiliar voices and viewing unfamiliar faces also with button pressing.
WOEXP: 200.
N. J. Shah; J. C. Marshall; O. Zafiris; A. Schwab; Karl Zilles; H. J. Markowitsch; G. R. Fink. The neural correlates of person familiarity. A functional magnetic resonance imaging study with clinical implications.
Brain 124(Pt 4):804-15, 2001.
PMID: 11287379.
WOBIB: 64.
+6: 0.44485
Unfamiliar faces.
Viewing unfamiliar faces an indicating success with a button press versus viewing familiar faces.
WOEXP: 306.
Mary L. Phillips; E. T. Bullmore; R. Howard; P. W. Woodruff; I. C. Wright; Steven C. R. Williams; A. Simmons; C. Andrew; M. Brammer; Anthony S. David. Investigation of facial recognition memory and happy and sad facial
expression perception: an fMRI study.
Psychiatry Research 83(3):127-38, 1998.
PMID: 9849722.
WOBIB: 98.
+7: 0.44411
Associative encoding of familiar association versus single item encoding of familiar associations.
Generate of a sentence containing three visually displayed words that had been seen before versus repeating the words three times.
WOEXP: 437.
Nicola M. Hunkin; Andrew R. Mayes; Lloyd J. Gregory; Amanda K. Nicholas; Julia A. Nunn; Michael J. Brammer; Edward T. Bullmore; Steven C. R. Williams. Novelty-related activation within the medial temporal lobes.
Neuropsychologia 40(8):1456-1464, 2002.
PMID: 11931949.
FMRIDCID: .
WOBIB: 143.
+8: 0.43145
Auditory threat-related presented words, subject f.
Auditory presentation of threat-related words versus emotionally neutral words.
WOEXP: 507.
Richard J. Maddock; Michael H. Buonocore. Activation of left posterior cingulate gyrus by the auditory presentation of threat-related words: an fMRI study.
Psychiatry Research 75(1):1-14, 1997.
PMID: 9287369.
FMRIDCID: .
WOBIB: 165.
+9: 0.42962
Auditory threat-related presented words, subject b.
Auditory presentation of threat-related words versus emotionally neutral words.
WOEXP: 503.
Richard J. Maddock; Michael H. Buonocore. Activation of left posterior cingulate gyrus by the auditory presentation of threat-related words: an fMRI study.
Psychiatry Research 75(1):1-14, 1997.
PMID: 9287369.
FMRIDCID: .
WOBIB: 165.
+10: 0.41563
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.
+11: 0.41185
Late phase heat pain.
50 degrees Celsius heat on the left volar forearm starting 40 seconds prior to the scanning onset versus 40 degrees warm stimulus.
WOEXP: 299.
K. L. Casey; T. J. Morrow; J. Lorenz; S. Minoshima. Temporal and spatial dynamics of human forebrain activity during heat
pain: analysis by positron emission tomography.
Journal of Neurophysiology 85(2):951-9, 2001.
PMID: 11160525.
WOBIB: 95.
+12: 0.40448
Decreases in rapid auditory processing.
Linear decrease as a function of compression/presentation speed of auditorily presented sentences that were to be determine semantically true with button press.
WOEXP: 523.
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.
+13: 0.39606
Heat pain - female.
50 degrees heat pain on the left forearm of females versus 40 degrees stimulus.
WOEXP: 368.
P. E. Paulson; S. Minoshima; T. J. Morrow; K. L. Casey. Gender differences in pain perception and patterns of cerebral activation during noxious heat stimulation in humans.
Pain 76(1-2):223-9, 1998.
PMID: 9696477.
WOBIB: 118.
+14: 0.39352
Semantic fluency versus phonemic fluency.
Generate words covertly without articulation cued with a broad category, such as animals, fruits and kitchen utensils versus cued with a letter.
WOEXP: 584.
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.
+15: 0.38159
150% disgusted faces versus neural faces.
Viewing of 150% 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: 223.
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: 0.37650
Cued recall of familiar people. Individual subjects analysis.
Auditory cued recall of immediate family members, such as spouse, parents, children, siblings, versus auditory cued recall of unfamiliar people.
WOEXP: 289.
R. J. Maddock; A. S. Garrett; Michael H. Buonocore. Remembering familiar people: the posterior cingulate cortex and
autobiographical memory retrieval.
Neuroscience 104(3):667-76, 2001.
PMID: 11440800.
WOBIB: 90.
+17: 0.37497
Decrease during posttraumatic stress disorder provokation.
Decrease associated with posttraumatic stress disorder provokation by listening to trauma-related sounds such as machine gun fire and explosions versus listening to simple tones.
WOEXP: 205.
Anna Pissiota; Orjan Frans; Manuel Fernandez; Lars von Knorring; Hakan Fischer; Mats Fredrikson. Neurofunctional correlates of posttraumatic stress disorder: a PET symptom
provocation study.
European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience 252(2):68-75, 2002.
PMID: 12111339.
DOI: 10.1007/s004060200014.
WOBIB: 66.
+18: 0.36780
Focused episodic memory versus semantic memory.
Recalling a personal event from the past and describing the event aloud versus recalling and speaking aloud words that start with a specific letter.
WOEXP: 415.
Nancy C. Andreasen; Daniel S. O'Leary; Ted Cizadlo; Stephan Arndt; Karim Rezai; G. Leonard Watkins; Laura L. Ponto; Richard D. Hichwa. Remembering the past: two facets of episodic memory explored with positron emission tomography.
American Journal of Psychiatry 152(11):1576-1585, 1995.
PMID: 7485619.
FMRIDCID: .
BrainMap: 219.
WOBIB: 134.
+19: 0.35658
Coprolalia during Tourette's syndrome.
Vocal tics with coprolia while Tourette patients relaxed with closed eyes.
WOEXP: 403.
E. Stern; D. A. Silbersweig; K. Y. Chee; Andrew Holmes; M. M. Robertson; M. Trimble; Christopher D. Frith; Richard S. J. Frackowiak; Raymond J. Dolan. A functional neuroanatomy of tics in Tourette syndrome.
Archives of General Psychiatry 57(8):741-748, 2000.
PMID: 10920461.
FMRIDCID: .
WOBIB: 130.
+20: 0.35091
Subject 11: Answering self-reflective questions versus answering semantic questions.
Self-reflective and semantic yes/no questions posed through headphones were answered with button press.
WOEXP: 64.
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.
+21: 0.34977
Tension-anxiety, study 2.
Correlation between resting state blood
flow and tension-anxiety during scanning session as measured
with the Profile of Mood States.
WOEXP: 463.
David H. Zald; Dorothy L. Mattson; Jose V. Pardo. Brain activity in ventromedial prefrontal cortex correlates with individual differences in negative affect.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 99(4):2450-2454, 2002.
PMID: 11842195.
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.042457199.
FMRIDCID: .
WOBIB: 150.
+22: 0.33862
Heat pain - male.
50 degrees heat pain on the left forearm of males versus 40 degrees stimulus.
WOEXP: 367.
P. E. Paulson; S. Minoshima; T. J. Morrow; K. L. Casey. Gender differences in pain perception and patterns of cerebral activation during noxious heat stimulation in humans.
Pain 76(1-2):223-9, 1998.
PMID: 9696477.
WOBIB: 118.
+23: 0.33701
Relative metabolic increases in Alzheimer's disease.
Relative metabolic differences between Alzheimer's disease patients and controls.
WOEXP: 192.
Nora D. Volkow; Wei Zhu; Christoph A. Felder; Klaus Mueller; Tomihisa F. Welsh; Gene J. Wang; Mony J. de Leon. Changes in brain functional homogeneity in subjects with Alzheimer's
disease.
Psychiatry Research 114(1):39-50, 2002.
PMID: 11864808.
WOBIB: 61.
+24: 0.33658
Decrease during robbery re-experience.
Viewing neutral video of people walking in a park versus viewing a video showing a previously experienced bank-robbery.
WOEXP: 322.
Hċkan Fischer; G. Wik; M. Fredrikson. Functional neuroanatomy of robbery re-experience: affective memories
studied with PET.
NeuroReport 7(13):2081-6, 1996.
PMID: 8930963.
WOBIB: 103.
+25: 0.33502
Neutral face recognition with
ketamine versus fearful with placebo drug.
Neutral face recognition after
ketamine-induced emotional blunting versus with placebo infusion
and fearful face recognition after ketamine
infusion.
WOEXP: 480.
Kathryn M. Abel; Matthew P. G. Allin; Katarzyna Kucharska-Pietura; Anthony S. David; Chris Andrew; Steven C. R. Williams; Michael J. Brammer; Mary L. Phillips. Ketamine alters neural processing of facial emotion recognition in healthy men: an fMRI study.
NeuroReport 14(3):387-391, 2003.
PMID: 12634489.
DOI: 10.1097/01.wnr.0000058031.29600.31.
FMRIDCID: .
WOBIB: 155.
-1: -0.06520
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: -0.06297
Spatial intelligence.
Mismatch in a high-g intelligence task determining the odd one of four displayed drawings with indication by button press with middle and index fingers of the two hands versus a similar task with lower g.
WOEXP: 339.
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.
-3: -0.05278
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.
-4: -0.05213
Word rate dependence in silent reading of pseudowords.
Word rate dependence in silent reading of visually presented pseudowords.
WOEXP: 401.
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.
-5: -0.05201
Word rate dependence in silent reading.
Word rate dependence in silent reading of visually presented proper words and pseudowords.
WOEXP: 399.
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.