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Edmund T. Rolls
Researcher at University of Warwick
Publications - 645
Citations - 84442
Edmund T. Rolls is an academic researcher from University of Warwick. The author has contributed to research in topics: Orbitofrontal cortex & Visual cortex. The author has an hindex of 153, co-authored 612 publications receiving 77928 citations. Previous affiliations of Edmund T. Rolls include Fudan University & Newcastle University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Functional Connectome Prediction of Anxiety Related to the COVID-19 Pandemic.
Li He,Dongtao Wei,Fan Yang,Jie Zhang,Wei Cheng,Jianfeng Feng,Wenjing Yang,Kaixiang Zhuang,Qunlin Chen,Zhiting Ren,Yu Li,Xiaoqin Wang,Yu Mao,Zhiyi Chen,Mei Liao,HuiRu Cui,Chunbo Li,Qinghua He,Xu Lei,Tingyong Feng,Hong Chen,Peng Xie,Edmund T. Rolls,Linyan Su,Lingjiang Li,Jiang Qiu +25 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors test whether the prepandemic functional connectome predicted individual anxiety in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, and the results showed that increased anxiety was associated with the functional connectivity.
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Invariant visual object recognition: biologically plausible approaches
Leigh Robinson,Edmund T. Rolls +1 more
TL;DR: Some requirements for the neurobiological mechanisms of high-level vision, and how some different approaches perform are highlighted, in order to help understand the fundamental underlying principles of invariant visual object recognition in the ventral visual stream.
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Time for retrieval in recurrent associative memories
TL;DR: The results show that the dynamics of recurrent processing is sufficiently rapid for it to contribute to processing within the short times observed in neurophysiological experiments.
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Drinking in the rhesus monkey: peripheral factors.
TL;DR: Rhesus monkeys prepared with chronic cannulae implanted in the stomach and duodenum were water deprived for 22.5 hr, and pattern of continuous sham drinking indicates that oropharyngeal stimulation is not sufficient alone, or together with the passage of water through the stomachand the initial part of theduodenum, to terminate drinking.
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Connection between the prefrontal cortex and pontine brain-stimulation reward sites in the rat
Edmund T. Rolls,Steven J. Cooper +1 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that because neurons in the sulcal and medial prefrontal cortex are activated by rewarding stimulation of the far-distant pontine tegmentum, as well as of other reward sites, activation of the demonstrated pathway between the prefrontal cortex and the pontine Tegmentum may be involved in brain-stimulation reward.