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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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How humans integrate the prospects of pain and reward during choice

TL;DR: It is concluded that ventral anterior cingulate cortex and ventral striatum subserve integration of action costs and benefits in humans, a finding that suggests a cross-species similarity in neural substrates that implement this function and illuminates mechanisms that underlie altered decision making under aversive conditions.
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Reciprocal neural response within lateral and ventral medial prefrontal cortex during hot and cold reasoning.

TL;DR: Despite identical logical form and content categories across "hot" and "cold" reasoning conditions, lateral and ventral medial prefrontal cortex showed reciprocal response patterns as a function of emotional saliency of content.
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Functional neuroanatomy of three-term relational reasoning.

TL;DR: It is concluded that arguments involving relations that can be easily mapped onto explicit spatial relations engage a visuo-spatial system, irrespective of concrete or abstract content.
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Familiarity enhances invariance of face representations in human ventral visual cortex: fMRI evidence.

TL;DR: Assessing priming-related fMRI repetition effects suggested a role of anterior fusiform cortex in coding image-independent representations of familiar faces in ventral visual cortex, replicating previous imaging findings obtained with common objects.
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Explaining enhanced logical consistency during decision making in autism.

TL;DR: This study investigates subjects with autism spectrum disorder using a financial task in which the monetary prospects were presented as either loss or gain and reports both behavioral evidence that ASD subjects show a reduced susceptibility to the framing effect and psycho-physiological evidence that they fail to incorporate emotional context into the decision-making process.