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René Marois

Researcher at Vanderbilt University

Publications -  99
Citations -  10233

René Marois is an academic researcher from Vanderbilt University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Attentional blink & Working memory. The author has an hindex of 44, co-authored 98 publications receiving 9466 citations. Previous affiliations of René Marois include Allen Institute for Brain Science & Yale University.

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Capacity limit of visual short-term memory in human posterior parietal cortex

TL;DR: Functional magnetic resonance imaging is used to suggest that activity in the posterior parietal cortex is tightly correlated with the limited amount of scene information that can be stored in visual short-term memory, and suggests that the posterior PAR cortex is a key neural locus of the authors' impoverished mental representation of the visual world.
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Capacity limits of information processing in the brain

TL;DR: A review of the neurobiological literature suggests that the capacity limit of VSTM storage is primarily localized to the posterior parietal and occipital cortex, whereas the AB and PRP are associated with partly overlapping fronto-parietal networks.
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The attentional blink: A review of data and theory

TL;DR: It is concluded that the attentional blink arises from attentional demands of Tl for selection, working memory encoding, episodic registration, and response selection, which prevents this high-level central resource from being applied to T2 at shortT1-T2 lags.
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The role of the fusiform face area in social cognition: implications for the pathobiology of autism.

TL;DR: In two linked functional magnetic resonance imaging studies of healthy young adults, it is shown that the FFA is engaged by a social attribution task (SAT) involving perception of human-like interactions among three simple geometric shapes.
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Posterior parietal cortex activity predicts individual differences in visual short-term memory capacity

TL;DR: The individual-differences approach supports a key role for the PPC in VSTM by demonstrating that its activity level predicts individual differences in V STM storage capacity.