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James W. Lewis

Researcher at West Virginia University

Publications -  40
Citations -  2099

James W. Lewis is an academic researcher from West Virginia University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Perception & Natural sounds. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 39 publications receiving 1940 citations.

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Cortical Networks Related to Human Use of Tools

TL;DR: This review compares and summarizes results from 64 paradigms published over the past decade that have examined cortical regions associated with tool use skills and tool knowledge and revealed cortical networks in both hemispheres, though with a clear left hemisphere bias.
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Distinct Cortical Pathways for Processing Tool versus Animal Sounds

TL;DR: The data suggest that the recognition processing for some sounds involves a causal reasoning mechanism (a high-level auditory “how” pathway), automatically evoked when attending to hand-manipulated tool sounds, that effectively associates the dynamic motor actions likely to have produced the sound(s).
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A Quantitative Meta-Analysis of Functional Imaging Studies of Social Rejection

TL;DR: Reliving an unwanted rejection by a romantic partner was significantly characterized by activation within and beyond the “Cyberball” brain network, suggesting that the neural correlates of social pain are more complex than previously thought.

A Quantitative Meta-Analysis of Functional Imaging Studies of Social

TL;DR: The authors found that reliving an unwanted rejection by a romantic partner was significantly characterized by activation within and beyond the Cyberball brain network, suggesting that the neural correlates of social pain are more complex than previously thought, and also performed an MKDA of the neuroimaging studies of reliving a romantic rejection to test whether the pain matrix was activated if the rejection were more meaningful.
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The Common Neural Bases Between Sexual Desire and Love: A Multilevel Kernel Density fMRI Analysis

TL;DR: A shared activation within the insula, with a posterior-to-anterior pattern, from desire to love, suggests that love grows out of and is a more abstract representation of the pleasant sensorimotor experiences that characterize desire.