M
Mohamed L. Seghier
Researcher at Emirates College for Advanced Education
Publications - 115
Citations - 10728
Mohamed L. Seghier is an academic researcher from Emirates College for Advanced Education. The author has contributed to research in topics: Functional magnetic resonance imaging & Lateralization of brain function. The author has an hindex of 52, co-authored 109 publications receiving 9356 citations. Previous affiliations of Mohamed L. Seghier include French Institute of Health and Medical Research & Khalifa University.
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fMRI Evidence for Activation of Multiple Cortical Regions in the Primary Auditory Cortex of Deaf Subjects Users of Multichannel Cochlear Implants
TL;DR: Arguments, obtained without interference with unwanted scanner noise, plead in favor of a functional subdivision of the primary auditory cortex into multiple cortical regions in cochlear implant users.
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Lesion sites that predict the ability to gesture how an object is used
Cathy J. Price,Jennifer T. Crinion,Alexander P. Leff,Fiona M. Richardson,Thomas M. Schofield,Susan Prejawa,Susan Ramsden,Karine Gazarian,Matthew Lawrence,Louise Ambridge,Michael Andric,Steven L. Small,Mohamed L. Seghier +12 more
TL;DR: Which parts of the temporal and parietal lobes impair the ability to gesture object use and which parts need to be intact to support it after damage are identified and provided a framework for future studies aiming to predict the consequences of brain damage.
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Dissociating frontal regions that co-lateralize with different ventral occipitotemporal regions during word processing.
TL;DR: Co-variation in lateralization during word reading dissociated three subsystems in Posterior ventral occipito-temporal cortex with precentral gyrus, anterior vOT with pars orbitalis, middle frontal gyrus and thalamus.
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Dissociating the semantic function of two neighbouring subregions in the left lateral anterior temporal lobe.
Ana Sanjuán,Ana Sanjuán,Thomas M.H. Hope,Ōiwi Parker Jones,Ōiwi Parker Jones,Susan Prejawa,Marion Oberhuber,Julie Guerin,Mohamed L. Seghier,David W. Green,Cathy J. Price +10 more
TL;DR: One subregion was more activated for object naming than matching semantically related objects, consistent with (D), the retrieval of a specific concept for naming, and the implications of these novel findings for cognitive models of semantic processing and left anterior temporal lobe function are discussed.
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The neural bases of hemispheric specialization
TL;DR: This special issue of Neuropsychologia includes a collection of 17 papers that represent a snapshot on some of the current issues in the search for the origin of HS, and the understanding of its structural and functional properties in relation with normal and pathological cognitive processing.