R
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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Predictors of post-traumatic stress disorder following physical trauma: an examination of the stressor criterion.
TL;DR: Distress post injury (high scores on the impact of event scale), indicative of difficulty with cognitive assimilation of the traumatic event, was found to be highly predictive of psychiatric morbidity and PTSD at 6 months.
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Adolescent Tuning of Association Cortex in Human Structural Brain Networks.
František Váša,Jakob Seidlitz,Jakob Seidlitz,Rafael Romero-Garcia,Kirstie Whitaker,Kirstie Whitaker,Gideon Rosenthal,Petra E. Vértes,Maxwell Shinn,Aaron Alexander-Bloch,Peter Fonagy,Raymond J. Dolan,Raymond J. Dolan,Peter B. Jones,Ian M. Goodyer,Olaf Sporns,Edward T. Bullmore,Edward T. Bullmore +17 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that human adolescence is associated with biologically plausible changes in structural imaging markers of brain network organization, consistent with the concept of tuning or consolidating anatomical connectivity between frontal cortex and the rest of the connectome.
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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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Effects of Low-Spatial Frequency Components of Fearful Faces on Fusiform Cortex Activity
TL;DR: Emotional modulation of a face-responsive region of fusiform is driven by the low-frequency components of the stimulus, an effect independent of subjects' reported perception but evident in an incidental measure of behavioral performance.
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Impulsive choice and response in dopamine agonist-related impulse control behaviors
Valerie Voon,Brady Reynolds,Christina Brezing,Cecile Gallea,Meliha Skaljic,Vindhya Ekanayake,Hubert H. Fernandez,Marc N. Potenza,Raymond J. Dolan,Mark Hallett +9 more
TL;DR: Greater impulsive choice, faster RT, faster decision conflict RT, and executive dysfunction may contribute to ICDs in PD.