Y
You Li
Researcher at South China Normal University
Publications - 22
Citations - 294
You Li is an academic researcher from South China Normal University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sensory system & Stimulus modality. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 21 publications receiving 215 citations. Previous affiliations of You Li include Chinese Academy of Sciences.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Multisensory Competition Is Modulated by Sensory Pathway Interactions with Fronto-Sensorimotor and Default-Mode Network Regions
TL;DR: This work sought to identify prestimulus and poststimulus neural signals that were associated with auditory and visual dominance on each trial and revealed both the neural causes and the neural consequences of visual and auditory dominance during multisensory competition.
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Common Variants in the BCL9 Gene Conferring Risk of Schizophrenia
Junyan Li,Guoquan Zhou,Weidong Ji,Guoyin Feng,Qian Zhao,Jie Liu,Tao Li,You Li,Peng Chen,Zhen Zeng,Ti Wang,Zhiwei Hu,Linqing Zheng,Yang Wang,Yifeng Shen,Lin He,Yongyong Shi +16 more
TL;DR: Findings indicate that common variations in the BCL9 gene confer risk of schizophrenia and may also be associated with bipolar disorder and major depressive disorder in the Chinese Han population.
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Common SNPs in Myelin Transcription Factor 1-Like (MYT1L): Association with Major Depressive Disorder in the Chinese Han Population
Ti Wang,Zhen Zeng,Tao Li,Jie Liu,Junyan Li,You Li,Qian Zhao,Zhiyun Wei,Yang Wang,Baojie Li,Guoyin Feng,Lin He,Lin He,Lin He,Yongyong Shi,Yongyong Shi +15 more
TL;DR: The results indicate that MYT1L may be a potential risk gene for MDD in the Chinese Han population, and this gene is screened for in patients and controls of Chinese Han origin.
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The ugly truth: negative gossip about celebrities and positive gossip about self entertain people in different ways.
TL;DR: Although participants’ ratings did not show they were particularly happy on hearing negative gossip about celebrities, the significantly enhanced neural activity in the reward system suggested that they were indeed amused, and via enhanced functional connectivity, the prefrontal executive control network was involved in regulating the rewards system by giving explicit pleasure ratings according to social norm compliance, rather than natural true feelings.
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The Neural Correlates of Integrated Aesthetics Between Moral and Facial Beauty
TL;DR: Novel neural evidence is provided for the integrated aesthetics of social beauty and it is suggested that integrated aesthetics is a more complex cognitive process than aesthetics restricted to a single modality.