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Sally A. Grace

Researcher at Swinburne University of Technology

Publications -  14
Citations -  358

Sally A. Grace is an academic researcher from Swinburne University of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Body dysmorphic disorder & Cognition. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 13 publications receiving 189 citations. Previous affiliations of Sally A. Grace include Australian Catholic University & Centre for Mental Health.

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Advances in the field of intranasal oxytocin research: lessons learned and future directions for clinical research

TL;DR: Recent advances from human and animal research are outlined that provide converging evidence for functionally relevant effects of the intranasal oxytocin administration route, suggesting that direct nose-to-brain delivery underlies the behavioral effects of Oxytocin on social cognition and behavior.
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Oxytocin and brain activity in humans: A systematic review and coordinate-based meta-analysis of functional MRI studies.

TL;DR: A coordinate-based meta-analysis for task-based neuroimaging literature using activation likelihood estimation (ALE) identified task-related IN-OXT increases in activity within a cluster of the left superior temporal gyrus during tasks of emotion processing.
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The neurobiology of body dysmorphic disorder: A systematic review and theoretical model.

TL;DR: A neurobiological model of BDD pathophysiology that involves wide‐spread disorganisation in neural networks involved in cognitive control and the interpretation of visual and emotional information is put forth.
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Sex differences in the neuroanatomy of alcohol dependence: hippocampus and amygdala subregions in a sample of 966 people from the ENIGMA Addiction Working Group

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined hippocampal and amygdala subregions in a large sample of 966 people from the ENIGMA Addiction Working Group and found that males with alcohol dependence had smaller volumes of the total amygdala and its basolateral nucleus than male controls, that exacerbated with alcohol dose.