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Mario Liotti

Researcher at Simon Fraser University

Publications -  87
Citations -  13572

Mario Liotti is an academic researcher from Simon Fraser University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder & Stroop effect. The author has an hindex of 45, co-authored 84 publications receiving 12838 citations. Previous affiliations of Mario Liotti include University of Padua & University of Nottingham.

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Book ChapterDOI

Altered Long-Range Phase Synchronization and Cortical Activation in Children Born Very Preterm

TL;DR: Preliminary results suggest that children born very preterm exhibit altered inter-regional functional connectivity and cortical activation during cognitive processing, as well as reduced activation in very pre term children relative to controls.
Journal ArticleDOI

To stop or not to stop: A high spatio-temporal resolution study of response inhibition using MEG

TL;DR: In this article, the authors applied the Stop Signal Task to 12 healthy young adults using whole-head magnetoencephalography and found that the evoked magnetic response to Successful Stops showed an earlier and greater amplitude N2-like peak relative to Failed Stops.
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Behavioral and electrophysiological responses to smoking-related words in a Smoking Stroop task discriminate between relapse and abstinence following a one-month quit attempt

TL;DR: The findings suggest that smoking cues are more salient for abstinent smokers who are prone to relapse, and this ERP activity evoked by cigarette cues may be a potential biomarker for relapse susceptibility.
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Functional brain organization of preparatory attentional control in visual search.

TL;DR: Fast event-related fMRI was used to identify the brain networks that are active when preparing to search for a visual target and suggests that when participants anticipate a demanding search task, they develop a different advanced representation of a visually identical target stimulus compared to when they anticipate a nondemanding search.
Journal ArticleDOI

Magnetoencephalography study of brain dynamics in young children born extremely preterm

TL;DR: MEG was recorded while 5-7 year-old children were performing a visual-spatial memory recognition task, and full-term children showed greater gamma-band amplitude in the right temporal region during the task, than children who were born extremely preterm.