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Liane Schmidt

Researcher at University of Paris

Publications -  32
Citations -  2009

Liane Schmidt is an academic researcher from University of Paris. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ventromedial prefrontal cortex & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 27 publications receiving 1661 citations. Previous affiliations of Liane Schmidt include École Normale Supérieure & ICM Partners.

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How the Brain Translates Money into Force: A Neuroimaging Study of Subliminal Motivation

TL;DR: It is shown that, even when subjects cannot report how much money is at stake, they nevertheless deploy more force for higher amounts, which is underpinned by engagement of a specific basal forebrain region.
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Neural mechanisms underlying motivation of mental versus physical effort.

TL;DR: It is suggested that the interaction between a common motivational system and the different task-specific systems underpinning behavioral performance might occur within the basal ganglia.
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Disconnecting force from money: effects of basal ganglia damage on incentive motivation.

TL;DR: Bilateral striato-pallidal damage specifically disconnects motor output from affective evaluation of potential rewards, a process that translates an expected reward (or goal) into behavioural activation.
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Why don't you try harder? An investigation of effort production in major depression.

TL;DR: The results show that emotional and motivational sources of effort production are dissociable in pathological conditions and suggest that incentive motivation impairment is a core deficit of major depression, which may render everyday tasks abnormally effortful for patients.
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Quantifying cerebral contributions to pain beyond nociception.

TL;DR: A multivariate pattern signature—termed the stimulus intensity independent pain signature-1 (SIIPS1)—that predicts pain above and beyond nociceptive input in four training data sets is developed and provides an extensible characterization of cerebral contributions to pain and specific brain targets for interventions.