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Yoram Louzoun
Researcher at Bar-Ilan University
Publications - 208
Citations - 5283
Yoram Louzoun is an academic researcher from Bar-Ilan University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Epitope. The author has an hindex of 36, co-authored 192 publications receiving 4320 citations. Previous affiliations of Yoram Louzoun include Interdisciplinary Center for Neural Computation & Princeton University.
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Mother and infant coordinate heart rhythms through episodes of interaction synchrony.
TL;DR: bootstrapping analysis indicated that the concordance between maternal and infant biological rhythms increased significantly during episodes of affect and vocal synchrony compared to non-synchronous moments, and time-series analysis showed that mother and infant coordinate heart rhythms within lags of less than 1 s.
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Rep‐Seq: uncovering the immunological repertoire through next‐generation sequencing
TL;DR: Some of the technologies are described, which are collectively refer to as Rep‐Seq (repertoire sequencing), to portray achievements in the field and to present the essential and inseparable role of next‐generation sequencing to the understanding of entities in immune response.
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Functional connectivity of the prefrontal cortex and the amygdala in posttraumatic stress disorder
TL;DR: Functional connectivity in patients with PTSD and healthy trauma survivors during repeated symptom provocation using H(2)O(15) positron emission tomography is examined to suggest that inferences of direct correspondence between animal studies and pathophysiology of PTSD should be made with caution.
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Brain-to-Brain Synchrony during Naturalistic Social Interactions.
TL;DR: These findings link brain-to-brain synchrony to the degree of social connectedness among interacting partners, ground neural synchrony in key nonverbal social behaviors, and highlight the role of human attachment in providing a template for two-brain coordination.
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The importance of being discrete: life always wins on the surface.
TL;DR: The microscopic granularity insures the emergence of macroscopic localized subpopulations with collective adaptive properties that allow their survival and development in two dimensions "life" (the localized proliferating phase) always prevails.