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Richard J. Davidson

Researcher at University of Wisconsin-Madison

Publications -  642
Citations -  99052

Richard J. Davidson is an academic researcher from University of Wisconsin-Madison. The author has contributed to research in topics: Prefrontal cortex & Mindfulness. The author has an hindex of 156, co-authored 602 publications receiving 91414 citations. Previous affiliations of Richard J. Davidson include Iowa State University & French Institute of Health and Medical Research.

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An Imaging Roadmap for Biology Education: From Nanoparticles to Whole Organisms

TL;DR: A nanoimaging, molecular imaging, and medical imaging teaching unit is incorporated into three 1-h class periods of an introductory course on ways of knowing biology, derived from NIH Roadmap initiatives in nanomedicine, regenerative medicine, and nuclear medicine.
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Higher resting-state BNST-CeA connectivity is associated with greater corrugator supercilii reactivity to negatively valenced images.

TL;DR: Relations between resting-state BNST-CeA connectivity and both facial electromyographic activity of the corrugator supercilii muscle and eyeblink startle magnitude during affective image presentation within the Refresher sample of the Midlife in the United States study suggest that functional interactions between BnST and CeA contribute to the behavioral response to negative emotional events.
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Young children's post tantrum affiliation with their parents

TL;DR: In this paper, a database of 331 parental narratives of tantrums had by children 18-60 months old, 29% of the tantrums were followed by child-initiated affiliation with parents.

Right Dorsolateral Prefrontal Cortical Activity and Behavioral

TL;DR: It is shown that individuals with greater tonic (resting) activity in right-posterior DLPFC rate themselves as more behaviorally inhibited, providing novel support for recent conceptual- izations of behavioral inhibition and clues to the mechanisms that might underlie variation in threat-in- duced negative affect.
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Getting a Grip on the Handgrip Task: Handgrip Duration Correlates with Neuroticism But Not Conscientiousness.

TL;DR: Correlations between handgrip performance and personality traits theoretically closely linked with self-regulation: conscientiousness and neuroticism and correlations separated by gender suggest associations were primarily driven by female participants.