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Pienie Zwitserlood

Researcher at University of Münster

Publications -  157
Citations -  8902

Pienie Zwitserlood is an academic researcher from University of Münster. The author has contributed to research in topics: Amygdala & Prefrontal cortex. The author has an hindex of 47, co-authored 155 publications receiving 8131 citations. Previous affiliations of Pienie Zwitserlood include Radboud University Nijmegen & Max Planck Society.

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Anticipating upcoming words in discourse: Evidence from ERPs and reading times

TL;DR: Findings suggest that people can indeed predict upcoming words in fluent discourse and, moreover, that these predicted words can immediately begin to participate in incremental parsing operations.
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Human Fear Conditioning and Extinction in Neuroimaging: A Systematic Review

TL;DR: Differences concerning experimental factors may partly explain the variance between neuroimaging investigations on human fear conditioning and extinction and should be taken into serious consideration in the planning and the interpretation of research projects.
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The locus of the effects of sentential-semantic context in spoken-word processing

TL;DR: This research investigated the availability of lexical entries as a function of stimulus information and contextual constraint to suggest that sentential-semantic contexts have their effects during the process of selecting one of the activated candidates for recognition.
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Accessing Spoken Words: The Importance of Word Onsets

TL;DR: In this paper, a cross-modal priming technique was used to investigate the extent to which a rhyme prime (a prime that differs only in its first segment from the word that is semantically associated with the visual probe) is as effective a prime as the original word itself.
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Automatic mood-congruent amygdala responses to masked facial expressions in major depression.

TL;DR: Depressed patients exhibit potentiated amygdala reactivity to masked negative stimuli along with a reduced responsiveness to masked positive stimuli compared with healthy individuals, indicating that depression is characterized by mood-congruent processing of emotional stimuli in the amygdala already at an automatic level of processing.