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Derek Evan Nee
Researcher at Florida State University
Publications - 63
Citations - 6761
Derek Evan Nee is an academic researcher from Florida State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Working memory & Prefrontal cortex. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 59 publications receiving 5762 citations. Previous affiliations of Derek Evan Nee include University of California, Berkeley & Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute.
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The Mind and Brain of Short-Term Memory
TL;DR: A conceptual model tracing the representation of a single item through a short-term memory task is described, describing the biological mechanisms that might support psychological processes on a moment-by-moment basis as an item is encoded, maintained over a delay with some forgetting, and ultimately retrieved.
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Interference resolution: Insights from a meta-analysis of neuroimaging tasks
TL;DR: A quantitative meta-analysis was performed on 47 neuroimaging studies involving tasks purported to require the resolution of interference, suggesting that resolution processes acting upon stimulus encoding, response selection, and response execution may recruit different neural regions.
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Common and unique components of response inhibition revealed by fMRI.
Tor D. Wager,Ching-Yune C. Sylvester,Steven C. Lacey,Derek Evan Nee,Michael S. Franklin,John Jonides +5 more
TL;DR: Evidence is presented for a common set of frontal and parietal regions engaged in response inhibition across three tasks: a go/no-go task, a flanker task, and a stimulus-response compatibility task that suggests common interference detection and/or resolution mechanisms are engaged across tasks.
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Depression, rumination and the default network
TL;DR: Examination of connectivity of the default network specifically in the subgenual cingulate both on- and off-task revealed that MDDs show more neural functional connectivity between the posterior-cingulate cortex and the sub genual-cesulate cortex than healthy individuals during rest periods, but not during task engagement.
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A Meta-analysis of Executive Components of Working Memory
Derek Evan Nee,Joshua W. Brown,Mary K. Askren,Mary K. Askren,Marc G. Berman,Emre Demiralp,Adam Krawitz,John Jonides +7 more
TL;DR: It is proposed that dorsal-"where"/ventral-"what" frameworks that have been applied to WM maintenance also apply to executive processes of WM and WM can largely be simplified to a dual selection model.