S
S. H. Annabel Chen
Researcher at Nanyang Technological University
Publications - 4
Citations - 175
S. H. Annabel Chen is an academic researcher from Nanyang Technological University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Working memory & Transcranial direct-current stimulation. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 4 publications receiving 152 citations. Previous affiliations of S. H. Annabel Chen include National Taiwan University.
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Modality specific cerebro-cerebellar activations in verbal working memory: An fMRI study
TL;DR: The present fMRI study investigated load and modality (auditory and visual) dependent cerebro-cerebellar VWM activation using a Sternberg task and revealed modality-independent activations in left frontal, insular, cingulate, and bilateral inferior parietal/supramarginal regions.
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Verbal memory impairments in children after cerebellar tumor resection.
Matthew P. Kirschen,Mathew S. Davis-Ratner,Marnee W. Milner,S. H. Annabel Chen,S. H. Annabel Chen,Pam Schraedley-Desmond,Paul G. Fisher,John E. Desmond +7 more
TL;DR: It is postulate that damage to left hemispheral lobule VIII may interfere with encoding of auditory stimuli into the phonological store, and thereby allow us to predict with greater accuracy which specific neurocognitive processes will be affected by a cerebellar tumor resection.
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Sex difference in tDCS current mediated by changes in cortical anatomy: A study across young, middle and older adults.
Rajan Kashyap,Sagarika Bhattacharjee,Rajan Kashyap,Jin, Hongrui,Alicia M. Goodwill,Beth A. O'Brien,Brenda Rapp,Kenichi Oishi,John E. Desmond,S. H. Annabel Chen +9 more
TL;DR: In this article, the effects of cortical anatomical parameters (volumes, dimension, and torque) on simulated tDCS current density in healthy young, middle-aged, and older males and females were investigated.
Journal ArticleDOI
Reading proficiency influences the effects of transcranial direct current stimulation: Evidence from selective modulation of dorsal and ventral pathways of reading in bilinguals
Sagarika Bhattacharjee,Rajan Kashyap,Beth A. O'Brien,Michael McCloskey,Kenichi Oishi,John E. Desmond,Brenda Rapp,S. H. Annabel Chen +7 more
TL;DR: Dorsal and ventral reading pathways can be selectively modulated by tDCS in bilingual readers with dorsal (sub-lexical) pathway stimulation affecting reading in both scripts and ventrals pathway stimulation selectively affecting Chinese reading.