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Anat Maril

Researcher at Hebrew University of Jerusalem

Publications -  46
Citations -  5402

Anat Maril is an academic researcher from Hebrew University of Jerusalem. The author has contributed to research in topics: Semantic memory & Episodic memory. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 41 publications receiving 5159 citations. Previous affiliations of Anat Maril include Harvard University.

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Building Memories: Remembering and Forgetting of Verbal Experiences as Predicted by Brain Activity

TL;DR: This article found that the ability to later remember a verbal experience is predicted by the magnitude of activation in left prefrontal and temporal cortices during that experience, and that the left prefrontal cortex and temporal cortex jointly promote memory formation for verbalizable events.
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Prefrontal–Temporal Circuitry for Episodic Encoding and Subsequent Memory

TL;DR: The results suggest that regions that demonstrate a sensitivity to novelty may actively support encoding processes that impact subsequent explicit memory and multiple content-dependent prefrontal–temporal circuits support event encoding.
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Prefrontal Contributions to Executive Control: fMRI Evidence for Functional Distinctions within Lateral Prefrontal Cortex

TL;DR: Data suggest that anatomically separable subregions within lateral PFC may be functionally distinct and are consistent with models that posit a hierarchical relationship between dorsolateral and ventrolateral regions such that the former monitors and selects goal-relevant representations being maintained by the latter.
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Perceptual specificity in visual object priming: functional magnetic resonance imaging evidence for a laterality difference in fusiform cortex.

TL;DR: Findings converge with behavioral evidence from divided visual field studies and with neuropsychological evidence underscoring the key role of right occipitotemporal cortex in processing specific visual form information.
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The Oxytocin Receptor (OXTR) Contributes to Prosocial Fund Allocations in the Dictator Game and the Social Value Orientations Task

TL;DR: The demonstration that genetic polymorphisms for the OXTR are associated with human prosocial decision making converges with a large body of animal research showing that oxytocin is an important social hormone across vertebrates including Homo sapiens.