S
Séverine Samson
Researcher at university of lille
Publications - 109
Citations - 5149
Séverine Samson is an academic researcher from university of lille. The author has contributed to research in topics: Temporal lobe & Hippocampal sclerosis. The author has an hindex of 40, co-authored 104 publications receiving 4707 citations. Previous affiliations of Séverine Samson include Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital & Lille University of Science and Technology.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Functional MR evaluation of temporal and frontal language dominance compared with the Wada test
Stéphane Lehéricy,Laurent D. Cohen,B. Bazin,Séverine Samson,Eric Giacomini,R. Rougetet,Lucie Hertz-Pannier,D. Le Bihan,Claude Marsault,Michel Baulac +9 more
TL;DR: There was a good congruence between hemispheric dominance for language as assessed with the Wada test and fMRI laterality indices in the frontal but not in the temporal lobes.
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Role of the right temporal neocortex in retention of pitch in auditory short-term memory.
TL;DR: Findings are in agreement with research on non-human primates suggesting that structures in the superior temporal gyrus are important in retaining auditory information over short time spans, and further indicate that the human right temporal area is specialized for this function.
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How emotional auditory stimuli modulate time perception.
TL;DR: Emotional and neutral sounds rated for valence and arousal were used to investigate the influence of emotions on timing in reproduction and verbal estimation tasks, suggesting that both activation and attentional processes modulate the timing of emotional events.
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Structural connectivity differences in left and right temporal lobe epilepsy
Pierre Besson,Vera Dinkelacker,Romain Valabregue,Lionel Thivard,Xavier Leclerc,Michel Baulac,Daniela Sammler,Olivier Colliot,Stéphane Lehéricy,Séverine Samson,Sophie Dupont +10 more
TL;DR: Two distinct patterns of connectivity associated with unilateral hippocampal sclerosis show how a focal pathology influences global network architecture, and how left or right-sided lesions may have differential and specific impacts on cerebral connectivity.
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Impaired recognition of scary music following unilateral temporal lobe excision
Nathalie Gosselin,Isabelle Peretz,Marion Noulhiane,Dominique Hasboun,Christine Beckett,Michel Baulac,Séverine Samson +6 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that the anteromedial temporal lobe (including the amygdala) plays a role in the recognition of danger in a musical context in patients with amygdala resection.