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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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What the heart forgets: Cardiac timing influences memory for words and is modulated by metacognition and interoceptive sensitivity

TL;DR: It is shown memory for words presented around systole was decreased relative to words at diastole, and the deleterious memory effect of systoles was greater for words detected with low confidence and amplified in individuals with low interoceptive sensitivity.
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Losing the rose tinted glasses: Neural substrates of unbiased belief updating in depression

TL;DR: Brain imaging is used in conjunction with a belief update task administered to clinically depressed patients and healthy controls to characterize brain activity that supports unbiased belief updating in clinically depressed individuals.
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Segregated encoding of reward-identity and stimulus-reward associations in human orbitofrontal cortex.

TL;DR: This demonstration of adaptation in OFC to reward specific representations opens an avenue for investigation of more complex decision mechanisms that are not immediately accessible in standard analyses, which focus on correlates of average activity.
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The Kuleshov Effect: The influence of contextual framing on emotional attributions

TL;DR: FMRI findings offer a neurobiological basis for contextual framing effects on social attributions and suggest that the amygdala may act to prime or tag affective value to faces across altering contexts.
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Cholinergic modulation of experience-dependent plasticity in human auditory cortex

TL;DR: In vivo evidence is provided that experience-dependent plasticity, evident in hemodynamic changes in human auditory cortex, is modulated by acetylcholine.