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Subject 9: Answering self-reflective questions versus answering semantic questions.
Self-reflective and semantic yes/no questions posed through headphones were answered with button press.
WOEXP: 62.
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. Cognition,Attention - Self-reflection WOEXT: 364.
Asymmetry: -0.50000 (left: -1, right: +1)
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+1: 1.00000
Subject 9: Answering self-reflective questions versus answering semantic questions.
Self-reflective and semantic yes/no questions posed through headphones were answered with button press.
WOEXP: 62.
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.
+2: 0.76697
Subject 1: Answering self-reflective questions versus answering semantic questions.
Self-reflective and semantic yes/no questions posed through headphones were answered with button press.
WOEXP: 54.
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.
+3: 0.63919
Auditory threat-related presented words in 10 subjects.
Auditory presentation of threat-related words versus emotionally neutral words.
WOEXP: 501.
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.
+4: 0.61454
Auditory threat-related presented words, subject a.
Auditory presentation of threat-related words versus emotionally neutral words.
WOEXP: 502.
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.
+5: 0.60209
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.
+6: 0.53715
Valid cue-induced visuospatial expectancy with anticipatory bias versus without anticipatory bias.
Valid cue-induced visuospatial expectancy with anticipatory bias where a centrally presented diamond on the screen indicated valid cues for a peripheral target and where the response was significantly faster versus trials where response was not significantly faster. Response was made by pushing a button..
WOEXP: 202.
D. M. Small; D. R. Gitelman; M. D. Gregory; A. C. Nobre; T. B. Parrish; M-M Mesulam. The posterior cingulate and medial prefrontal cortex mediate the
anticipatory allocation of spatial attention.
NeuroImage 18(3):633-41, 2003.
PMID: 12667840.
WOBIB: 65.
+7: 0.51007
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.
+8: 0.50187
Auditory threat-related presented words, subject c.
Auditory presentation of threat-related words versus emotionally neutral words.
WOEXP: 504.
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: 0.49845
Decreases in heat pain in left forearm.
34 degrees stimulus on ventral surface of left forearm versus painful heat stimulus.
WOEXP: 363.
R. C. Coghill; J. D. Talbot; A. C. Evans; Ernst Meyer; Albert Gjedde; M. C. Bushnell; G. H. Duncan. Distributed processing of pain and vibration by the human brain.
Journal of Neuroscience 14(7):4095-108, 1994.
PMID: 8027764.
WOBIB: 117.
+10: 0.49704
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.
+11: 0.49580
Task-related episodic retrieval versus semantic.
Episodic retrieval with a decision whether a visually presented word was presented in an encoding list with right hand button response versus semantic retrieval.
WOEXP: 565.
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.
+12: 0.48756
Visuospatial attention with cue effect to valid cues.
Visuospatial attention with directional cue either by central expectancy where a central diamond indicated left/right cue or by a change in luminance in a peripheral square, and with cue effect to valid cue.
WOEXP: 372.
M. M. Mesulam; A. C. Nobre; Y. H. Kim; T. B. Parrish; D. R. Gitelman. Heterogeneity of cingulate contributions to spatial attention.
NeuroImage 13(6 Pt 1):1065-72, 2001.
PMID: 11352612.
DOI: 10.1006/nimg.2001.0768.
WOBIB: 120.
+13: 0.48742
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.
+14: 0.47809
Visuospatial attention with cue effect to invalid cues.
Visuospatial attention with directional cue either by central expectancy where a central diamond indicated left/right cue or by a change in luminance in a peripheral square, and with cue effect to invalid cue.
WOEXP: 373.
M. M. Mesulam; A. C. Nobre; Y. H. Kim; T. B. Parrish; D. R. Gitelman. Heterogeneity of cingulate contributions to spatial attention.
NeuroImage 13(6 Pt 1):1065-72, 2001.
PMID: 11352612.
DOI: 10.1006/nimg.2001.0768.
WOBIB: 120.
+15: 0.47699
Valid cue-induced visuospatial expectancy with anticipatory bias versus neural cue.
Valid cue-induced visuospatial expectancy with anticipatory bias where a centrally presented diamond on the screen indicated valid cues for a peripheral target and where the response was significantly faster versus nondirectional cues. Response was made by pushing a button..
WOEXP: 201.
D. M. Small; D. R. Gitelman; M. D. Gregory; A. C. Nobre; T. B. Parrish; M-M Mesulam. The posterior cingulate and medial prefrontal cortex mediate the
anticipatory allocation of spatial attention.
NeuroImage 18(3):633-41, 2003.
PMID: 12667840.
WOBIB: 65.
+16: 0.47168
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.
+17: 0.46382
Auditory threat-related presented words, subject e.
Auditory presentation of threat-related words versus emotionally neutral words.
WOEXP: 506.
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.
+18: 0.45073
Forgiveness judgements.
Judgements of visually displayed sentences about forgiveness situations with button press versus judgement involving social reasoning.
WOEXP: 451.
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.
+19: 0.42822
Tension-anxiety, study 1.
Correlation between resting state blood
flow and tension-anxiety during scanning session as measured
with the Profile of Mood States.
WOEXP: 462.
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.
+20: 0.41906
Subject 6: Answering self-reflective questions versus answering semantic questions.
Self-reflective and semantic yes/no questions posed through headphones were answered with button press.
WOEXP: 59.
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: 0.41644
Correlation with pain intensity.
Correlation with subjective ratings of pain intensity with hot pain right volar forearm.
WOEXP: 248.
T. R. Tolle; T. Kaufmann; T. Siessmeier; S. Lautenbacher; A. Berthele; F. Munz; W. Zieglgansberger; F. Willoch; M. Schwaiger; B. Conrad; P. Bartenstein. Region-specific encoding of sensory and affective components of pain in
the human brain: a positron emission tomography correlation analysis.
Annals of Neurology 45(1):40-47, 1999.
PMID: 9894875.
WOBIB: 79.
+22: 0.40944
Subject 8: Answering self-reflective questions versus answering semantic questions.
Self-reflective and semantic yes/no questions posed through headphones were answered with button press.
WOEXP: 61.
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.
+23: 0.40812
Auditory threat-related presented words, subject h.
Auditory presentation of threat-related words versus emotionally neutral words.
WOEXP: 509.
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.
+24: 0.39258
Memory retrieval of words.
Memory retrieval of visual presented words that were previously seen versus "memory retrieval" of not previously presented words.
WOEXP: 251.
R. N. Henson; Michael D. Rugg; Tim Shallice; R. J. Dolan. Confidence in recognition memory for words: dissociating right prefrontal
roles in episodic retrieval.
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 12(6):913-23, 2000.
PMID: 11177413.
WOBIB: 80.
+25: 0.38490
Visuospatial 2-back, pooled data.
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: 349.
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.
-1: -0.04920
Activation in sadness film viewing versus neutral film viewing.
Passive viewing of 2.5 minute emotional film clips.
WOEXP: 282.
S. Aalto; P. Naatanen; E. Wallius; L. Metsahonkala; H. Stenman; P. M. Niem; H. Karlsson. Neuroanatomical substrata of amusement and sadness: a PET activation study
using film stimuli.
NeuroReport 13(1):67-73, 2002.
PMID: 11924897.
WOBIB: 88.
-2: -0.04795
Silent reading of pseudowords versus rest.
Silent reading of visually pseudowords versus resting.
WOEXP: 396.
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.
-3: -0.04485
High visual orientation working memory maintenance.
Maintenance of 6 serial presented oriented visual gratings in working memory and responding to a cue by pressing a key with either left or right hand versus pressing a key with either left or right hand depending on orientation of visual grating.
WOEXP: 170.
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.
-4: -0.04434
Silent reading of proper words versus rest.
Silent reading of visually presented proper words versus resting.
WOEXP: 395.
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: -0.04399
Visuospatial 0-back, Minnesota site.
Viewing of dots in one of four displayed boxes with button pressing for indicating where the dot appears versus viewing dots in alternating boxes.
WOEXP: 358.
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.