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Liana Machado

Researcher at University of Otago

Publications -  66
Citations -  1946

Liana Machado is an academic researcher from University of Otago. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cognition & Eye movement. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 61 publications receiving 1673 citations. Previous affiliations of Liana Machado include Bangor University & University of Wales.

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Benefits of regular aerobic exercise for executive functioning in healthy populations

TL;DR: Examination of exercise-related benefits for specific components of executive functioning in young adults and children indicates that regular engagement in aerobic exercise can provide a simple means for healthy people to optimize a range of executive functions.
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Contributions of Subregions of the Prefrontal Cortex to Working Memory: Evidence from Brain Lesions in Humans

TL;DR: The results support a distributed localization of function in lateral PFC during working memory, with larger lesions impaired maintenance and monitoring of spatial and object information in the spatial tasks.
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Evidence cerebral blood-flow regulation mediates exercise-cognition links in healthy young adults.

TL;DR: The results provide novel insight into the cognitive and cerebrovascular benefits that may be gained with regular engagement in physical activity, even in a high-functioning population.
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Predictive value of novel stimuli modifies visual event-related potentials and behavior.

TL;DR: The results indicate that behavioral context determines how novel stimuli are processed and influence behavior, and the enhanced N2 for 100% predictive novel stimuli appears to index an alerting system facilitating behavioral detection.
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Spatial repetition blindness is modulated by selective attention to color or shape.

TL;DR: Findings support new conclusions that RB depends critically on visual attention, rather than simply on the stimulus presented or the overt response required, and while attention can be restricted to a single visual dimension, this is efficient only when the same dimension is selected for both objects.