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Raymond J. Dolan

Researcher at University College London

Publications -  940
Citations -  150202

Raymond J. Dolan is an academic researcher from University College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Prefrontal cortex & Functional magnetic resonance imaging. The author has an hindex of 196, co-authored 919 publications receiving 138540 citations. Previous affiliations of Raymond J. Dolan include VU University Amsterdam & McGovern Institute for Brain Research.

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Feeling the neurobiological self

TL;DR: The self may be defined in terms of responses to experience as mentioned in this paper, and the self may also be defined as a response to the experience of the experience itself, i.e.
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Brain substrates of recovery from misleading influence.

TL;DR: The data suggest that amygdala modulation of hippocampal mnemonic representations, during the time of misleading social influence, is associated with reduced subsequent anterior–lateral prefrontal cortex activity that reflects correction.
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A computational account of threat-related attentional bias

TL;DR: It is shown that the allocation of visual attention is influenced significantly by aversive value but not by uncertainty, and this relationship is bidirectional in that attention biases value updates for attended stimuli, resulting in heightened value estimates.
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Anticipation and choice heuristics in the dynamic consumption of pain relief.

TL;DR: An experiment involving the dynamic consumption over approximately 15 minutes of a limited budget of relief from moderately painful stimuli shows that the consumption choices are consistent with a combination of simple heuristics involving early-spending, spreading or saving of relief until the end, with subjects predominantly exhibiting the last two.
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Dorsal striatal dopamine D1 receptor availability predicts an instrumental bias in action learning

TL;DR: Dopaminergic receptors in cortex, dorsal striatum, and nucleus accumbens provide distinct sources of variance in the human brain, and evidence is provided that human dorsal striatal DA D1 receptors are involved in the modulation of instrumental learning biases.