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Qi Chen

Researcher at South China Normal University

Publications -  22
Citations -  393

Qi Chen is an academic researcher from South China Normal University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Inhibition of return & Sensory system. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 22 publications receiving 306 citations. Previous affiliations of Qi Chen include Forschungszentrum Jülich & Chinese Ministry of Education.

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Multisensory Competition Is Modulated by Sensory Pathway Interactions with Fronto-Sensorimotor and Default-Mode Network Regions

TL;DR: This work sought to identify prestimulus and poststimulus neural signals that were associated with auditory and visual dominance on each trial and revealed both the neural causes and the neural consequences of visual and auditory dominance during multisensory competition.
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Effects of spatial distribution of attention during inhibition of return (IOR) on flanker interference in hearing and congenitally deaf people.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that deaf people possess enhanced peripheral attentional resources as compared with hearing people because of the interaction between the spatial distribution of attention during inhibition of return and different levels of flanker interference.
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Physical training modifies the age-related decrease of GAP-43 and synaptophysin in the hippocampal formation in C57BL/6J mouse.

TL;DR: It is indicated that a moderate amount of prolonged physical training could modify the age-related decrease of the expression of GAP-43 and synaptophysin in the hippocampal formation, and that the increased expression of C57BL/6J mice might be associated with the anatomical sprouting andsynaptogenesis.
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The ugly truth: negative gossip about celebrities and positive gossip about self entertain people in different ways.

TL;DR: Although participants’ ratings did not show they were particularly happy on hearing negative gossip about celebrities, the significantly enhanced neural activity in the reward system suggested that they were indeed amused, and via enhanced functional connectivity, the prefrontal executive control network was involved in regulating the rewards system by giving explicit pleasure ratings according to social norm compliance, rather than natural true feelings.
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Vision dominates at the preresponse level and audition dominates at the response level in cross-modal interaction: behavioral and neural evidence.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the specific direction of sensory dominance depends on the level of processing: vision dominates at earlier stages, whereas audition dominates at later stages of cognitive processing.