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Jyoti Mishra

Researcher at University of California, San Diego

Publications -  101
Citations -  2654

Jyoti Mishra is an academic researcher from University of California, San Diego. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cognition & Working memory. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 84 publications receiving 1899 citations. Previous affiliations of Jyoti Mishra include University of Bradford & University of California, Berkeley.

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Early Cross-Modal Interactions in Auditory and Visual Cortex Underlie a Sound-Induced Visual Illusion

TL;DR: Evidence is provided that perception of the illusory second flash is based on a very rapid dynamic interplay between auditory and visual cortical areas that is triggered by the second sound.
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Neural basis of superior performance of action videogame players in an attention-demanding task.

TL;DR: The electrophysiological findings suggest that the superior target detection capabilities of the VGPs are attributable, at least in part, to enhanced suppression of distracting irrelevant information and more effective perceptual decision processes.
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Neural Basis of the Ventriloquist Illusion

TL;DR: Event-related brain potentials combined with event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging are utilized to demonstrate on a trial-by-trial basis that a precisely timed biasing of the left-right balance of auditory cortex activity by the discrepant visual input underlies the ventriloquist illusion.
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The Database of Quantitative Cellular Signaling: management and analysis of chemical kinetic models of signaling networks

TL;DR: The Database of Quantitative Cellular Signaling is a repository of models of signaling pathways intended both to serve the growing field of chemical-reaction level simulation of signaling networks, and to anticipate issues in large-scale data management for signaling chemistry.
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Adaptive Training Diminishes Distractibility in Aging across Species

TL;DR: In this article, a targeted cognitive training approach that adaptively manipulated distractor challenge was evaluated in parallel auditory experiments with older rats and humans, which resulted in enhanced discrimination abilities in the setting of irrelevant information in both species.