R
Raffael Kalisch
Researcher at Max Planck Society
Publications - 16
Citations - 2304
Raffael Kalisch is an academic researcher from Max Planck Society. The author has contributed to research in topics: Hippocampal formation & Cognition. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 16 publications receiving 2205 citations. Previous affiliations of Raffael Kalisch include University of Hamburg & French Institute of Health and Medical Research.
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Journal ArticleDOI
How the Brain Translates Money into Force: A Neuroimaging Study of Subliminal Motivation
Mathias Pessiglione,Liane Schmidt,Liane Schmidt,Bogdan Draganski,Bogdan Draganski,Raffael Kalisch,Raffael Kalisch,Hakwan Lau,Hakwan Lau,Raymond J. Dolan,Raymond J. Dolan,Christopher D. Frith,Christopher D. Frith +12 more
TL;DR: It is shown that, even when subjects cannot report how much money is at stake, they nevertheless deploy more force for higher amounts, which is underpinned by engagement of a specific basal forebrain region.
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Oxytocin Attenuates Affective Evaluations of Conditioned Faces and Amygdala Activity
TL;DR: The data suggest that oxytocin modulates the expression of evaluative conditioning for socially relevant faces via influences on amygdala and fusiform gyrus, an effect that may explain its prosocial effects.
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Anxiety Reduction through Detachment: Subjective, Physiological, and Neural Effects
Raffael Kalisch,Katja Wiech,Hugo D. Critchley,Ben Seymour,John P. O'Doherty,David A. Oakley,Philip A. Allen,Raymond J. Dolan +7 more
TL;DR: It is shown that a cognitive strategy of detachment attenuates subjective and physiological measures of anticipatory anxiety for pain and reduces reactivity to receipt of pain itself.
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Levels of appraisal: a medial prefrontal role in high-level appraisal of emotional material.
TL;DR: This work shows that anxiety-related activity in dorsal medial prefrontal/rostral anterior cingulate cortex (dorsal MPFC/ACC) and lateral PFC activity during anticipatory anxiety reflects high-level appraisal, and provides neurobiological evidence for a distinction between low-level and high- level appraisal mechanisms.
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Neural Correlates of Self-distraction from Anxiety and a Process Model of Cognitive Emotion Regulation
TL;DR: The neural correlates of self-distraction, as indexed by a thought suppression task, are investigated in an anticipatory anxiety paradigm previously employed by us to study reappraisal and a process model of cognitive emotion regulation is developed.