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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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Reply to Harris and Chan: Moral judgment is more than rational deliberation

TL;DR: In this paper, Harris and Chan argue that people often form moral judgments without being able to articulate the reasons, which is contrary to a rationalist view of moral judgment that defines moral judgment as the exclusive preserve of a conscious, deliberative reasoning process, and an overwhelming amount of evidence shows that intuitive and emotional processes play significant roles in moral judgment.
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Cannabis-Associated Psychotic-like Experiences Are Mediated by Developmental Changes in the Parahippocampal Gyrus.

Tao Yu, +134 more
TL;DR: It is shown here that the uncus development is involved in the cerebral basis of PLEs in a population-based sample of healthy adolescents.
Posted ContentDOI

Locus coeruleus pathology in progressive supranuclear palsy, and its relation to disease severity.

TL;DR: The loss of pigmented neurons correlated with disease severity, even after adjusting for disease duration and the interval between clinical assessment and death, and the degree of neuronal loss was associated with tau-positive inclusions.
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Free operant observing in humans: a translational approach to compulsive certainty seeking.

TL;DR: It is found that punishment robustly increased observing in non-clinical participants and that observing persisted long after punishment was removed, demonstrating how seemingly disparate theoretical and empirical approaches can be reconciled synergistically to promote a combined behavioural and cognitive account of certainty seeking.