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Anastasia Greenberg

Researcher at University of Alberta

Publications -  11
Citations -  198

Anastasia Greenberg is an academic researcher from University of Alberta. The author has contributed to research in topics: Hippocampal formation & Private sector. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 9 publications receiving 163 citations. Previous affiliations of Anastasia Greenberg include McGill University.

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Perspective-Taking Ability in Bilingual Children: Extending Advantages in Executive Control to Spatial Reasoning.

TL;DR: Bilingual children were more accurate than monolingual children in calculating the observer's view across all three positions, with no differences in the pattern of errors committed by the two language groups.
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New waves: Rhythmic electrical field stimulation systematically alters spontaneous slow dynamics across mouse neocortex.

TL;DR: The results show that slow electrical field stimulation robustly entrains and alters ongoing slow cortical dynamics during sleep‐like states, suggesting a mechanism for targeting specific cortical representations to manipulate memory processes.
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Stimulating forebrain communications: Slow sinusoidal electric fields over frontal cortices dynamically modulate hippocampal activity and cortico-hippocampal interplay during slow-wave states.

TL;DR: It is shown that sinusoidal electrical field stimulation applied to the frontal region of the cerebral cortex creates a platform for improved cortico-hippocampal communication and suggests that cortical field stimulation may function to boost memory consolidation by strengthening cortico and hippocampo-cortical interplay at multiple nested frequencies in an intensity-dependent fashion.
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ANI inactivation: unconditioned anxiolytic effects of anisomycin in the ventral hippocampus.

TL;DR: The present study offers compelling behavioral evidence for the proposal that ANI adversely affects ongoing neural function and therefore its influence is not simply limited to impairing the consolidation of long‐term memories.
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Spontaneous and electrically modulated spatiotemporal dynamics of the neocortical slow oscillation and associated local fast activity.

TL;DR: These results are the first to show that changes to slow wave dynamics cause enhancements in high frequency cortico-cortical communication and provide mechanistic clues into how the SO is relevant for sleep-dependent memory consolidation.