scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Institution

Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit

FacilityCambridge, United Kingdom
About: Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit is a facility organization based out in Cambridge, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Cognition & Semantic memory. The organization has 801 authors who have published 3055 publications receiving 257962 citations.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The present investigation is the first to identify distinct neuronal mechanisms for semantic and phonological contributions to reading that correspond to those previously associated with phonological and semantic processing.
Abstract: Previous studies of patients with phonological and surface alexia have demonstrated a double dissociation between the reading of pseudo words and words with atypical spelling-to-sound relationships. A corresponding double dissociation in the neuronal activation patterns for pseudo words and exception words has not, however, been consistently demonstrated in normal subjects. Motivated by the literature on acquired alexia, the present study contrasted pseudo words to exception words and explored how neuronal interactions within the reading system are influenced by word type. Functional magnetic resonance imaging was used to measure neuronal responses during reading in 22 healthy volunteers. The direct comparison of reading pseudo words and exception words revealed a double dissociation within the left frontal cortex. Pseudo words preferentially increased left dorsal premotor activation, whereas exception words preferentially increased left pars triangularis activation. Critically, these areas correspond to those previously associated with phonological and semantic processing, respectively. Word-type dependent interactions between brain areas were then investigated using dynamic causal modeling. This revealed that increased activation in the dorsal premotor cortex for pseudo words was associated with a selective increase in effective connectivity from the posterior fusiform gyrus. In contrast, increased activation in the pars triangularis for exception words was associated with a selective increase in effective connectivity from the anterior fusiform gyrus. The present investigation is the first to identify distinct neuronal mechanisms for semantic and phonological contributions to reading.

222 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Depressed and manic patients exhibited abnormal neural responses to sad, fearful, and happy facial expressions, and the attentional level of sad facial affect processing has important consequences for abnormalities of amygdala and cingulate activation in manic patients.

221 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results show that, in prefrontal cortex, filtering of ignored locations is strong, early and spatially global, and may be important in blindness to unattended signals—a conspicuous aspect of human selective attention.
Abstract: Prefrontal cortex is thought to be important in attention and awareness. Here we recorded the activity of prefrontal neurons in monkeys carrying out a focused attention task. Having directed attention to one location, monkeys monitored a stream of visual objects, awaiting a predefined target. Although neurons rarely discriminated between one non-target and another, they commonly discriminated between targets and non-targets. From the onset of the visual response, this target/non-target discrimination was effectively eliminated when the same objects appeared at an unattended location in the opposite visual hemifield. The results show that, in prefrontal cortex, filtering of ignored locations is strong, early and spatially global. Such filtering may be important in blindness to unattended signals--a conspicuous aspect of human selective attention.

220 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The model suggests that verb deficits might occur in patients for whom functional features are damaged relative to sensory features, and concludes that the "verb deficit" shown in patients was an artifact of the lower imageability of verbs in confrontation naming tasks.

220 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) was used to study the neuropathology of 25 vegetative and minimally conscious patients in vivo and to identify measures that could potentially distinguish the patients in these two groups.

220 citations


Authors

Showing all 815 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Trevor W. Robbins2311137164437
Simon Baron-Cohen172773118071
Edward T. Bullmore165746112463
John R. Hodges14981282709
Barbara J. Sahakian14561269190
Steven Williams144137586712
Alan D. Baddeley13746789497
John S. Duncan13089879193
Adrian M. Owen10745251298
John D. Pickard10762842479
Dorothy V. M. Bishop10437737096
David M. Clark10237040943
David K. Menon10273240046
Karalyn Patterson10129140802
Roger A. Barker10162039728
Network Information
Related Institutions (5)
Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital
9.5K papers, 619.1K citations

92% related

Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology
15.1K papers, 436.6K citations

91% related

Radboud University Nijmegen
83K papers, 3.2M citations

86% related

Salk Institute for Biological Studies
13.1K papers, 1.6M citations

85% related

University of Lübeck
17.4K papers, 549.6K citations

85% related

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20235
202227
2021266
2020230
2019180
2018156