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Fabien Perrin

Researcher at French Institute of Health and Medical Research

Publications -  73
Citations -  5108

Fabien Perrin is an academic researcher from French Institute of Health and Medical Research. The author has contributed to research in topics: Minimally conscious state & Cognition. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 70 publications receiving 4743 citations. Previous affiliations of Fabien Perrin include Lyon College & University of Liège.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Are spatial memories strengthened in the human hippocampus during slow wave sleep

TL;DR: It is shown that, in humans, hippocampal areas that are activated during route learning in a virtual town are likewise activated during subsequent slow wave sleep, and that the amount of hippocampal activity expressed during slow waveSleep positively correlates with the improvement of performance in route retrieval on the next day.
Book ChapterDOI

The locked-in syndrome : what is it like to be conscious but paralyzed and voiceless?

TL;DR: There is an urgent need for a renewed ethical and medicolegal framework for the care of locked-in patients and patients suffering from LIS should not be denied the right to live - and to live with dignity and the best possible revalidation, and pain and symptom management.
Journal ArticleDOI

Brain Response to One's Own Name in Vegetative State, Minimally Conscious State, and Locked-in Syndrome

TL;DR: These results suggest that partially preserved semantic processing could be observed in noncommunicative brain-damaged patients, notably for the detection of salient stimuli, such as the subject's own name.
Journal ArticleDOI

A differential brain response to the subject's own name persists during sleep.

TL;DR: The sleeping brain, during SII and PS, elicits a differential cognitive response to the presentation of the subject's own name, comparable to that occurring during wakefulness, and therefore that the sleeping brain is able to detect and categorize some particular aspects of stimulus significance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Voluntary brain processing in disorders of consciousness

TL;DR: The present results suggest that active evoked-related potentials paradigms may permit detection of voluntary brain function in patients with severe brain damage who present with a disorder of consciousness, even when the patient may present with very limited to questionably any signs of awareness.