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Eva Feredoes

Researcher at University of Reading

Publications -  33
Citations -  2367

Eva Feredoes is an academic researcher from University of Reading. The author has contributed to research in topics: Working memory & Transcranial magnetic stimulation. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 31 publications receiving 2124 citations. Previous affiliations of Eva Feredoes include Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging & University College London.

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Anodal transcranial direct current stimulation of prefrontal cortex enhances working memory.

TL;DR: The results indicate that left prefrontal anodal stimulation leads to an enhancement of working memory performance, which depends on the stimulation polarity and is specific to the site of stimulation.
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Causal evidence for frontal involvement in memory target maintenance by posterior brain areas during distracter interference of visual working memory

TL;DR: Time-locked transcranial magnetic stimulation during functional MRI provided a new line of causal evidence for a top-down DLPFC-based control mechanism that promotes successful maintenance of relevant information in WM in the presence of distraction.
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Instead of "playing the game" it is time to change the rules: Registered Reports at AIMS Neuroscience and beyond

TL;DR: The last ten years have witnessed increasing awareness of questionable research practices (QRPs) in the life sciences, including p-hacking, HARKing, lack of replication, publication bias, low statistical power, and lack of data sharing as mentioned in this paper.
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Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation Dissociates Working Memory Manipulation from Retention Functions in the Prefrontal, but not Posterior Parietal, Cortex

TL;DR: Results in the PFC are consistent with the view that this region contributes more importantly to the control of information in working memory than to its STR, and in the SPL, they illustrate the importance of supplementing the fundamentally correlational data from neuroimaging with a disruptive method, which affords stronger inference about structure-function relations.
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Combined neurostimulation and neuroimaging in cognitive neuroscience: past, present, and future

TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of neuro-stimulation on brain networks are investigated using computational network analyses. But the authors focus on the causal structure-function inferences, and do not consider the effect of neuroimaging on cognitive state changes.