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Journal ArticleDOI

The assessment and analysis of handedness: The Edinburgh inventory

R.C. Oldfield
- 01 Mar 1971 - 
- Vol. 9, Iss: 1, pp 97-113
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TLDR
An inventory of 20 items with a set of instructions and response- and computational-conventions is proposed and the results obtained from a young adult population numbering some 1100 individuals are reported.
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This article is published in Neuropsychologia.The article was published on 1971-03-01. It has received 33268 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Population.

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Exercise training increases size of hippocampus and improves memory

TL;DR: It is shown that aerobic exercise training increases the size of the anterior hippocampus, leading to improvements in spatial memory, and that increased hippocampal volume is associated with greater serum levels of BDNF, a mediator of neurogenesis in the dentate gyrus.
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Regional Brain Changes in Aging Healthy Adults: General Trends, Individual Differences and Modifiers

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present longitudinal measures of five-year change in the regional brain volumes in healthy adults and assess the average and individual differences in volume changes and the effects of age, sex and hypertension with latent difference score modeling.
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Cortical Mechanisms of Human Imitation

TL;DR: Two areas with activation properties that become active during finger movement, regardless of how it is evoked, and their activation should increase when the same movement is elicited by the observation of an identical movement made by another individual are found.
Journal ArticleDOI

Masked Presentations of Emotional Facial Expressions Modulate Amygdala Activity without Explicit Knowledge

TL;DR: This study, using fMRI in conjunction with masked stimulus presentations, represents an initial step toward determining the role of the amygdala in nonconscious processing.
Journal ArticleDOI

Both of us disgusted in My insula: the common neural basis of seeing and feeling disgust.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors performed an fMRI study in which participants inhaled odorants producing a strong feeling of disgust and observed video clips showing the emotional facial expression of disgust, which activated the same sites in anterior insula and to a lesser extent in the anterior cingulate cortex.
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