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Antoine Bechara

Researcher at University of Southern California

Publications -  275
Citations -  57078

Antoine Bechara is an academic researcher from University of Southern California. The author has contributed to research in topics: Iowa gambling task & Cognition. The author has an hindex of 93, co-authored 268 publications receiving 53286 citations. Previous affiliations of Antoine Bechara include Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine & University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics.

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Insensitivity to future consequences following damage to human prefrontal cortex

TL;DR: Using a novel task which simulates real-life decision-making in the way it factors uncertainty of premises and outcomes, as well as reward and punishment, it is found that prefrontal patients are oblivious to the future consequences of their actions, and seem to be guided by immediate prospects only.
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Deciding Advantageously Before Knowing the Advantageous Strategy

TL;DR: The results suggest that, in normal individuals, nonconscious biases guide behavior before conscious knowledge does, and without the help of such biases, overt knowledge may be insufficient to ensure advantageous behavior.
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Emotion, Decision Making and the Orbitofrontal Cortex

TL;DR: The somatic marker hypothesis provides a systems-level neuroanatomical and cognitive framework for decisionMaking and the influence on it by emotion and the relationship between emotion, decision making and other cognitive functions of the frontal lobe, namely working memory is reviewed.
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Subcortical and cortical brain activity during the feeling of self-generated emotions

TL;DR: The hypothesis that the process of feeling emotions requires the participation of brain regions that are involved in the mapping and/or regulation of internal organism states is tested, indicating the close relationship between emotion and homeostasis.
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Decision making, impulse control and loss of willpower to resist drugs: a neurocognitive perspective

TL;DR: It is argued that addicted people become unable to make drug-use choices on the basis of long-term outcome, and a neural framework is proposed that explains this myopia for future consequences.