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Jaana Markela-Lerenc
Researcher at Heidelberg University
Publications - 7
Citations - 380
Jaana Markela-Lerenc is an academic researcher from Heidelberg University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Stroop effect & Anterior cingulate cortex. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 7 publications receiving 370 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Prefrontal-cingulate activation during executive control: which comes first?
Jaana Markela-Lerenc,Nicole Ille,Stefan Kaiser,Peter Fiedler,Christoph Mundt,Matthias Weisbrod +5 more
TL;DR: The spatiotemporal analysis of brain activation during Stroop task execution was performed using high-density event-related potentials (ERPs) and dipole source modeling and indicated that ACC activation seems to follow the activation of PFC with some overlap between the two components.
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Stroop performance in depressive patients: a preliminary report.
TL;DR: The unexpected result that melancholic patients perform better than non-melancholic ones may be due to their more pronounced rigidity, which makes them more resistant against distraction.
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N2 event-related potential correlates of response inhibition in an auditory Go/Nogo task.
TL;DR: The authors' data provide evidence for a fronto-central Nogo-N2 component in the auditory modality, which was accompanied by a concurring inferiorFronto-temporal positivity in the Nogo condition.
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Stroop interference effect in schizophrenic patients: An electrophysiological approach
Jaana Markela-Lerenc,Christian Schmidt-Kraepelin,Daniela Roesch-Ely,Christoph Mundt,Matthias Weisbrod,Stefan Kaiser +5 more
TL;DR: The absence of the frontal deflection in patients reflects dysfunctional neural processes associated with executive control, which suggests that the parietal activity is related to successful resolution of the Stroop conflict in schizophrenic patients.
Journal ArticleDOI
Deficits in fronto‐posterior interactions point to inefficient resource allocation in schizophrenia
Anuradha Sharma,Matthias Weisbrod,Stefan Kaiser,Stefan Kaiser,Jaana Markela-Lerenc,Stephan Bender,Stephan Bender +6 more
TL;DR: Deficits in fronto‐posterior interactions point to inefficient resource allocation in schizophrenia and this work highlights the need to understand more fully the mechanism behind these deficits.