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Antonino Vallesi

Researcher at University of Padua

Publications -  135
Citations -  3619

Antonino Vallesi is an academic researcher from University of Padua. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cognition & Prefrontal cortex. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 119 publications receiving 2948 citations. Previous affiliations of Antonino Vallesi include International School for Advanced Studies.

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Role of the Prefrontal Cortex in the Foreperiod Effect: TMS Evidence for Dual Mechanisms in Temporal Preparation

TL;DR: The results of 2 experiments indicate that the FP effect was significantly reduced after TMS over the rDLPFC, whereas no effect was observed after stimulation of a left contralateral site and the right angular gyrus, and sequential effects were not influenced by TMS.
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An effect of spatial-temporal association of response codes: understanding the cognitive representations of time.

TL;DR: The pattern of results suggests that elapsing time, similarly to other ordered information, is represented in some circumstances through an internal spatial reference frame, in a way that may influence motor performance.
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Effects of TMS on Different Stages of Motor and Non-Motor Verb Processing in the Primary Motor Cortex

TL;DR: Findings suggest that the lexical-semantic processing of action verbs does not automatically activate the M1, and this area seems to be rather involved in post-conceptual processing that follows the retrieval of motor representations.
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Aging, Cognitive Decline and Hearing Loss: Effects of Auditory Rehabilitation and Training with Hearing Aids and Cochlear Implants on Cognitive Function and Depression among Older Adults.

TL;DR: Auditory rehabilitation by cochlear implants or hearing aids is effective also among older adults (median age of 74 years) with different degrees of hearing loss, and enables positive improvements in terms of social isolation, depression and cognitive performance.
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Developmental dissociations of preparation over time: deconstructing the variable foreperiod phenomena.

TL;DR: The results consistently suggest different ontogenetic time courses for the two effects: the sequential effects are already present in the youngest group (4-5 years old), whereas the FP effect appears gradually some years later.