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Dillan Cellier

Researcher at University of California, Berkeley

Publications -  7
Citations -  229

Dillan Cellier is an academic researcher from University of California, Berkeley. The author has contributed to research in topics: Working memory & Intraparietal sulcus. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 5 publications receiving 94 citations. Previous affiliations of Dillan Cellier include United States University & Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute.

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Causal Evidence for a Role of Theta and Alpha Oscillations in the Control of Working Memory.

TL;DR: A retrospective-cue WM paradigm is used to manipulate prioritization and suppression task demands designed to drive theta oscillations in prefrontal cortex and parietal alphascillations in the control of internally maintained WM representations to causally establish dissociable roles for prefrontal thetascillations andParietal alpha oscillations.
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Causal Evidence for the Role of Neuronal Oscillations in Top-Down and Bottom-Up Attention.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used rhythmic TMS to modulate ongoing beta and gamma frequency neuronal oscillations in frontal and parietal cortex while human participants performed a visual search task that manipulates bottom-up and top-down attention.
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Advances in human intracranial electroencephalography research, guidelines and good practices

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors present a critical review of iEEG research practices in a didactic framework for newcomers, as well addressing issues encountered by proficient researchers, and suggest potential guidelines for working with the data and answer frequently asked questions based on the most widespread practices.
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Distinct Oscillatory Dynamics Underlie Different Components of Hierarchical Cognitive Control

TL;DR: Different oscillatory signatures are found that correspond to two different components of hierarchical control: the level of abstraction of a rule and the number of rules in competition, which suggest that distinct neural oscillatory mechanisms underlie different parts of hierarchical cognitive control.
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The Human Intraparietal Sulcus Modulates Task-Evoked Functional Connectivity.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the human IPS is a source of top-down biasing signals that modulate task-evoked functional connectivity among task-relevant cortical regions.