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Anthony I. Jack

Researcher at Case Western Reserve University

Publications -  52
Citations -  2593

Anthony I. Jack is an academic researcher from Case Western Reserve University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Consciousness & Visual cortex. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 50 publications receiving 2392 citations. Previous affiliations of Anthony I. Jack include University College London & University of Washington.

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Imaging the intentional stance in a competitive game

TL;DR: A study that investigates the neural substrates of "on-line" mentalizing, using PET, by asking volunteers to second-guess an opponent, suggesting a specific link between activity in this brain region and the adoption of an intentional stance.
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fMRI reveals reciprocal inhibition between social and physical cognitive domains

TL;DR: There is a physiological constraint on the ability to simultaneously engage two distinct cognitive modes, and two types of problem-solving task are identified: tasks requiring social cognition and tasks requiring physical cognition, i.e., reasoning about the causal/mechanical properties of inanimate objects.
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Introspective Physicalism as an Approach to the Science of Consciousness.

TL;DR: It is argued that a theory of consciousness should provide an account of the very processes that allow us to acquire and use information about the authors' own mental states - the processes underlying introspection - through the construction of information-processing models that can account for 'Type-C' processes.
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Introspection and cognitive brain mapping: from stimulus-response to script-report.

TL;DR: It is argued for a re-evaluation of the standard 'cognitive mapping' paradigm, emphasizing the use of retrospective reports alongside behavioural and brain imaging techniques, and using all three sources of evidence can compensate for their individual limitations and triangulate on higher cognitive processes.
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Separate modulations of human V1 associated with spatial attention and task structure.

TL;DR: FMRI was used while normal human volunteers engaged in simple detection and discrimination tasks, revealing separable modulations of early visual cortex associated with spatial attention and task structure that demonstrate that early visual areas are modulated by at least two types of endogenous signals.