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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.

Papers
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Neuronal activity in early visual areas during global and local processing: a comment

TL;DR: In a paper published in the 10:4 issue of JOCN, Heinze et al. ( 1998) studied a directed attention task using hierarchically organized letter Navon stimuli and found that higher stages of perceptual processing that activate temporo-parietal cortex are implicated in a divided-attention task using such stimuli.
Book Chapter

Functional neuroanatomy of human emotion

TL;DR: This chapter reviews recent findings in the neuroscientific study of emotion focusing on data from human functional neuroimaging experiments, finding the concept of value- dependent neural selection has proved valuable in modeling emotional processes in the brain.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Ergodicity-Breaking Reveals Time Optimal Economic Behavior in Humans

TL;DR: The authors compare the effects of additive versus multiplicative gamble dynamics on risky choice and show that risk aversion increases under multiplicative dynamics, distributing close to the values that maximise the time average growth of wealth.
Journal ArticleDOI

Taming the shrewdness of neural function: methodological challenges in computational psychiatry

TL;DR: Some of the challenges and opportunities for techniques and approaches that are presenting themselves as computational psychiatry starts to take on a more concrete form are considered.
Journal ArticleDOI

No unified reward prediction error in local field potentials from the human nucleus accumbens: evidence from epilepsy patients

TL;DR: The results do not support the idea that postsynaptic potentials in the Nacc represent a RPE that unifies outcome magnitude and prior value expectation, and the generalizability of the findings to healthy individuals is discussed.