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Trevor W. Robbins

Researcher at University of Cambridge

Publications -  1184
Citations -  177352

Trevor W. Robbins is an academic researcher from University of Cambridge. The author has contributed to research in topics: Prefrontal cortex & Cognition. The author has an hindex of 231, co-authored 1137 publications receiving 164437 citations. Previous affiliations of Trevor W. Robbins include Centre national de la recherche scientifique & Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

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Avoid jumping to conclusions under uncertainty in Obsessive Compulsive Disorder

TL;DR: It is concluded that despite the large sample size and good matching between groups, the Beads task in its most widely used form is not a useful measure of IU or of information gathering in OCD.
Journal Article

Random number generation in patients with symptomatic and presymptomatic Huntington's disease.

TL;DR: Analysis of RNG performance in a group of mild to moderate Huntington's disease patients, asymptomatic gene-positive HD patients, and controls showed that the frequency of errors, preferential selection of favorite numbers, and counting in 1's correlated significantly with the degree of symptom severity.
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Brain networks subserving fixed versus performance-adjusted delay stop trials in a stop signal task.

TL;DR: While activation measures in the inhibitory networks of both delay variants were highly comparable, the neural responses to fixed delay trials were more variable across participants, suggesting that performance-adjusted stop signal tasks may be more suitable for studies in which the performance differences need to be controlled for.
Posted ContentDOI

Serotonin depletion impairs both Pavlovian and instrumental reversal learning in healthy humans

TL;DR: Healthy volunteers showed impairments in updating both behaviour and emotion to reflect changing contingencies upon depleting the serotonin precursor tryptophan, and reversal deficits in each domain were correlated with the extent of tryPTophan depletion.
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Inhibition-Related Cortical Hypoconnectivity as a Candidate Vulnerability Marker for Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder

TL;DR: Findings indicate that hypoconnectivity between anterior and posterior cortical regions during inhibitory control represents a candidate vulnerability marker for OCD.