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Sanjay Kumar

Researcher at Oxford Brookes University

Publications -  26
Citations -  725

Sanjay Kumar is an academic researcher from Oxford Brookes University. The author has contributed to research in topics: N2pc & Working memory. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 26 publications receiving 598 citations. Previous affiliations of Sanjay Kumar include University of Birmingham & National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences.

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Sensory gating impairment in development of post-concussive symptoms in mild head injury.

TL;DR: The role of sensory gating impairment in post‐concussive symptoms in mild head injury patients was investigated and it was found that poor modulation of incoming sensory information reported by MHI patients are the result ofpoor modulation ofcoming sensory information.
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Perceptual and motor-based responses to hand actions on objects: evidence from ERPs

TL;DR: There are increased perceptual and motor-based responses to objects and object-like stimuli that are grasped correctly, even when the grip is irrelevant to the task, consistent with the automatic coding of potential appropriate actions based on visual information from objects in the environment.
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Widespread cognitive impairment in psychogenic anterograde amnesia

TL;DR: The case illustrates that psychogenic anterograde amnesia might be associated with a wider range of cognitive deficits, and possible neurobiological explanations are discussed to explain large cognitive impairments associated with anterOGrade psychogenic amnesia.
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Attending to the possibilities of action

TL;DR: Evidence on attention to action is reviewed, drawing on sets of converging evidence from neuropsychological patients through to studies of the time course and neural locus of action-based cueing of attention in normal observers to suggest that action relations between stimuli can be coded pre-attentively, in the absence of attention to the stimulus.
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Self‐Referential Processing and Emotion Context Insensitivity in Major Depressive Disorder

TL;DR: Compared to control participants, depressed participants exhibited reduced “happy” and “sad” emotional biases, regardless of the self‐relevance of stimuli, indicating that depressed participants may exhibit generalised Emotion Context Insensitivity (ECI), characterised by hyopoattention to both positive and negative information, at short stimulus presentations.