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Perrine Ruby

Researcher at French Institute of Health and Medical Research

Publications -  62
Citations -  5442

Perrine Ruby is an academic researcher from French Institute of Health and Medical Research. The author has contributed to research in topics: Non-rapid eye movement sleep & Dream. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 56 publications receiving 4878 citations. Previous affiliations of Perrine Ruby include University of Lyon & Claude Bernard University Lyon 1.

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Effect of subjective perspective taking during simulation of action: a PET investigation of agency

TL;DR: It is suggested that the right inferior parietal, precuneus and somatosensory cortex are specifically involved in distinguishing self-produced actions from those generated by others.
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How Would You Feel versus How Do You Think She Would Feel? A Neuroimaging Study of Perspective-Taking with Social Emotions

TL;DR: The results of this positron emission tomography study support the prediction that the frontopolar, the somatosensory cortex, and the right inferior parietal lobe are crucial in the process of self/ other distinction.
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Distinct Regions of the Medial Prefrontal Cortex Are Associated with Self-referential Processing and Perspective Taking

TL;DR: Findings show that self-referential processing and perspective taking recruit distinct regions of the MPFC and suggest that the left dorsal MPFC may be involved in decoupling one's own from other people's perspectives on the self.
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What Is Self-Specific? Theoretical Investigation and Critical Review of Neuroimaging Results.

TL;DR: It is argued that self-specificity characterizes the subjective perspective, which is not intrinsically self-evaluative but rather relates any represented object to the representing subject and is anchored to the sensorimotor integration of efference with reafference.
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Both the hippocampus and striatum are involved in consolidation of motor sequence memory.

TL;DR: Results show that both hippocampus and striatum interact during motor sequence consolidation to optimize subsequent behavior and condition the overnight memory processing that is associated with a change in their functional interactions.