R
Russell A. Poldrack
Researcher at Stanford University
Publications - 481
Citations - 70423
Russell A. Poldrack is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cognition & Functional neuroimaging. The author has an hindex of 125, co-authored 452 publications receiving 58695 citations. Previous affiliations of Russell A. Poldrack include University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign & University of Texas at Austin.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
The Costs of Reproducibility.
TL;DR: The ways in which ECRs can achieve their career goals while doing better science and the need for established researchers to support them in these efforts are highlighted.
Journal ArticleDOI
Neural activity differs between explicit and implicit learning of artificial grammar strings: An fMRI study
TL;DR: In comparison with a baseline task, recognition and grammatical judgments led to different patterns of neural activation: Recognition activated the right frontal cortex, whereas grammatical judgment activated the left frontal cortex.
Journal ArticleDOI
Secondary-task effects on classification learning.
TL;DR: The results show that concurrent task performance can have different effects on implicit and explicit knowledge acquired within the same task and also underscore the importance of considering effects on learning and performance separately.
Journal ArticleDOI
Right inferior frontal cortex: addressing the rebuttals.
TL;DR: It is claimed that when rIFC is triggered by a stop signal, unexpected event or endogenous rule, it engages a brake; i.e., it slows, pauses, or completely stops an action via one or more rI FC-based fronto-basal-ganglia networks.
Posted ContentDOI
Best Practices in Data Analysis and Sharing in Neuroimaging using MRI
Thomas E. Nichols,Samir Das,Simon B. Eickhoff,Alan C. Evans,Tristan Glatard,Michael Hanke,Nikolaus Kriegeskorte,Michael P. Milham,Russell A. Poldrack,Jean-Baptiste Poline,Erika Proal,Bertrand Thirion,David C. Van Essen,Tonya White,B.T. Thomas Yeo +14 more
TL;DR: The purpose of this work is to elaborate the principles of open and reproducible research for neuroimaging using Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI), and then distill these principles to specific research practices.