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F Peronnet

Researcher at French Institute of Health and Medical Research

Publications -  20
Citations -  2711

F Peronnet is an academic researcher from French Institute of Health and Medical Research. The author has contributed to research in topics: Visual memory & Auditory cortex. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 20 publications receiving 2611 citations.

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Auditory-Visual Integration during Multimodal Object Recognition in Humans: A Behavioral and Electrophysiological Study

TL;DR: The results indicate that multisensory integration is mediated by flexible, highly adaptive physiological processes that can take place very early in the sensory processing chain and operate in both sensory-specific and nonspecific cortical structures in different ways.
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Induced gamma-band activity during the delay of a visual short-term memory task in humans.

TL;DR: Sustained γ-band activity during the rehearsal of the first stimulus representation in short-term memory peaked at both occipitotemporal and frontal electrodes, and fits with the idea of a synchronized cortical network centered on prefrontal and ventral visual areas.
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Several attention-related wave forms in auditory areas: a topographic study.

TL;DR: It has been shown that the attention effect is expressed by at least two components in specific auditory areas, one of small amplitude, occurring during the ascending slope of the N1 component, sensitive to the pitch of the attended stimulus, and possibly originating in the supratemporal plane of the auditory cortex.
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Electrophysiological evidence for a shared representational medium for visual images and visual percepts.

TL;DR: An effect of imagery was seen within 200 ms following stimulus presentation, at the latency of the first negative component of the visual ERP, localized at the occipital and posterior temporal regions of the scalp, that is, directly over visual cortex, providing support for the claim that mental images interact with percepts in the visual system proper and hence thatmental images are themselves visual representations.
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Mental rotation: An event-related potential study with a validated mental rotation task☆

TL;DR: It is concluded that this late negativity shown in event-related potentials is an ERP marker of the mental rotation process, and that this process engages primarily posterior brain regions.