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Corby L. Dale

Researcher at University of California, San Francisco

Publications -  28
Citations -  1595

Corby L. Dale is an academic researcher from University of California, San Francisco. The author has contributed to research in topics: Magnetoencephalography & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 24 publications receiving 1461 citations. Previous affiliations of Corby L. Dale include Veterans Health Administration & San Francisco VA Medical Center.

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Toward a neurobiology of temporal cognition: advances and challenges

TL;DR: It is proposed that cerebellar dysfunction may induce deregulation of tonic thalamic tuning, which disrupts gating of the mnemonic temporal information generated in the basal ganglia through striato-thalamo-cortical loops.
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A 600 kb deletion syndrome at 16p11.2 leads to energy imbalance and neuropsychiatric disorders

Flore Zufferey, +186 more
TL;DR: The 16p11.2 deletion impacts in a quantitative and independent manner FSIQ, behaviour and body mass index, possibly through direct influences on neural circuitry, and these features are clinically significant and reproducible.
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When Top-Down Meets Bottom-Up: Auditory Training Enhances Verbal Memory in Schizophrenia

TL;DR: The observation that neuroplasticity-based cognitive training brings patients closer to physiological patterns seen in healthy participants, suggesting that it changes the brain in an adaptive manner in schizophrenia.
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Preparatory allocation of attention and adjustments in conflict processing.

TL;DR: The results demonstrate that preparatory attentional allocation following a cue to the upcoming level of conflict is mediated by a network involving Dorsolateral Prefrontal Cortex (DLPFC) and the Intraparietal Sulcus (IPS), which was associated with decreased Anterior Cingulate Cortex/pre-Supplementary Motor Area and IPS activity during the flanker target presentation.
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Dynamic Activation of Frontal, Parietal, and Sensory Regions Underlying Anticipatory Visual Spatial Attention

TL;DR: Behavioral performance corresponded with the magnitude of attention-related activity in different brain regions at each time period during deployment, adding to the emerging electrophysiological characterization of different cortical networks that operate during anticipatory deployment of visual spatial attention.