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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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Cerebral correlates of autonomic cardiovascular arousal: a functional neuroimaging investigation in humans.

TL;DR: Evidence is provided for the involvement of areas previously implicated in cognitive and emotional behaviours in the representation of peripheral autonomic states, consistent with a functional organization that produces integrated cardiovascular response patterns in the service of volitional andotional behaviours.
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Dissociable Neural Responses in Human Reward Systems

TL;DR: Functional neuroimaging was used to assess neural response within human reward systems under different psychological contexts and demonstrated neural sensitivity of midbrain and ventral striatal regions to financial rewards and hippocampal sensitivity to financial penalties.
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The anatomy of melancholia--focal abnormalities of cerebral blood flow in major depression.

TL;DR: An anatomical dissociation has been described between the rCBF profiles associated with depressed mood and depression-related cognitive impairment and the pre-frontal and limbic areas identified in this study constitute a distributed anatomical network that may be functionally abnormal in major depressive disorder.
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Relating Introspective Accuracy to Individual Differences in Brain Structure

TL;DR: The ability to introspect about self-performance is key to human subjective experience, but the neuroanatomical basis of this ability is unknown as discussed by the authors, and it is unknown whether this interindividual variability was associated with a distinct neural basis.
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Neural activity in the human brain relating to uncertainty and arousal during anticipation.

TL;DR: Brain activity during delay between reward-related decisions and their outcomes is measured to highlight distinct contributions of cognitive uncertainty and autonomic arousal to anticipatory neural activity in prefrontal cortex.