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Christine Mohr

Researcher at University of Lausanne

Publications -  150
Citations -  5098

Christine Mohr is an academic researcher from University of Lausanne. The author has contributed to research in topics: Schizotypy & Population. The author has an hindex of 33, co-authored 145 publications receiving 4443 citations. Previous affiliations of Christine Mohr include University of Konstanz & University of Zurich.

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Linking Out-of-Body Experience and Self Processing to Mental Own-Body Imagery at the Temporoparietal Junction

TL;DR: It is suggested that the temporoparietal junction is a crucial structure for the conscious experience of the normal self, mediating spatial unity of self and body, and also suggest that impaired processing at the TPJ may lead to pathological selves such as OBEs.
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Neural basis of embodiment: distinct contributions of temporoparietal junction and extrastriate body area

TL;DR: Evoked potential mapping and a distributed linear inverse solution show that distributed brain activity at the EBA and TPJ as well as their timing are crucial for the coding of the self as embodied and as spatially situated within the human body.
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Out-of-body experience, heautoscopy, and autoscopic hallucination of neurological origin Implications for neurocognitive mechanisms of corporeal awareness and self-consciousness

TL;DR: It is believed that the scientific demystification of AP may be useful for the investigation of the cognitive functions and brain regions that mediate processing of the corporeal awareness and self consciousness under normal conditions.
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Cognition and brain function in schizotypy: a selective review.

TL;DR: It is concluded that schizotypy is a construct with apparent phenomenological overlap with schizophrenia and stable interindividual differences that covary with performance on a wide range of perceptual, cognitive, and motor tasks known to be impaired in schizophrenia.
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Electrical neuroimaging reveals early generator modulation to emotional words.

TL;DR: Data support the existence of a specialized brain network triggered by the emotional connotation of words at a very early processing stage.