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Serge Brédart

Researcher at University of Liège

Publications -  123
Citations -  4585

Serge Brédart is an academic researcher from University of Liège. The author has contributed to research in topics: Recall & Proper noun. The author has an hindex of 33, co-authored 122 publications receiving 4280 citations. Previous affiliations of Serge Brédart include University of British Columbia & Catholic University of Leuven.

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Two distinct neuronal networks mediate the awareness of environment and of self

TL;DR: A significant anticorrelation between external and internal awareness is found with a mean switching frequency of 0.05 Hz (range: 0.01–0.1 Hz), which is similar to BOLD fMRI slow oscillations.
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Brain Response to One's Own Name in Vegetative State, Minimally Conscious State, and Locked-in Syndrome

TL;DR: These results suggest that partially preserved semantic processing could be observed in noncommunicative brain-damaged patients, notably for the detection of salient stimuli, such as the subject's own name.
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Here I am: The cortical correlates of visual self-recognition

TL;DR: The right frontal cortex and the insula were found to be the main regions specifically implicated in visual self-recognition compared with visual processing of other highly familiar persons and the right anterior insula seemed to play a role in the integration of information about oneself independently of the stimulus domain.
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Age-related differences in updating working memory.

TL;DR: Age-related differences in updating working memory were investigated using a running memory task and age interacted with list length but not with serial position, discussed in terms of Baddeley's (1986) model.
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The neural correlates of visual self-recognition.

TL;DR: It is argued that a major aim of future research in the field should be to identify more clearly the cognitive operations induced by the perception of the self-face, and search for dissociations between neural correlates and cognitive components.