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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

The neural mechanisms of hallucinations: A quantitative meta-analysis of neuroimaging studies.

TLDR
The need for unified theoretical frameworks that account for the full range of hallucinatory experiences is discussed, with greater activity in auditory cortex during AVHs and in visual cortex during VHs supports models proposing over-stimulation of sensory cortices in the generation of these perceptual anomalies.
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This article is published in Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews.The article was published on 2016-10-01 and is currently open access. It has received 167 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Functional neuroimaging & Prefrontal cortex.

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Citations
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Pavlovian conditioning-induced hallucinations result from overweighting of perceptual priors

TL;DR: Using a Pavlovian learning task, conditioned hallucinations were induced in four groups of people who differed orthogonally in their voice-hearing and treatment-seeking statuses and people who hear voices were significantly more susceptible to the effect.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hallucinations and Strong Priors

TL;DR: This work underlines the continuum from normal to aberrant perception, encouraging a more empathic approach to clinical hallucinations, and highlights the role of prior beliefs as a critical elicitor of hallucinations.
Journal Article

Neuropsychology of memory

TL;DR: The neuropsychology of memory is one book that the authors really recommend you to read, to get more solutions in solving this problem.
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The role of prefrontal cortex in cognitive control and executive function.

TL;DR: In this paper, a psychometric approach shows unity and diversity in cognitive control constructs, with three components in the most commonly studied constructs: general or common CC and components specific to mental set shifting and working memory updating.
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Network localization of cervical dystonia based on causal brain lesions.

TL;DR: A technique termed 'lesion network mapping', which uses connectome data from a large cohort of healthy subjects to test whether lesion locations causing cervical dystonia map to a common brain network, lends insight into the causal neuroanatomical substrate of cervical Dystonia and demonstrates convergence across idiopathic and acquired dySTONia.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

What we can do and what we cannot do with fMRI

TL;DR: An overview of the current state of fMRI is given, and the current understanding of the haemodynamic signals and the constraints they impose on neuroimaging data interpretation are presented.
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Inhibition and the right inferior frontal cortex.

TL;DR: Advances in human lesion-mapping support the functional localization of such inhibition to right IFC alone, and future research should investigate the generality of this proposed inhibitory function to other task domains, and its interaction within a wider network.
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Coordinate-based activation likelihood estimation meta-analysis of neuroimaging data: a random-effects approach based on empirical estimates of spatial uncertainty

TL;DR: The authors showed that the revised ALE‐algorithm overcomes conceptual problems of former meta‐analyses and increases the specificity of the ensuing results without loosing the sensitivity of the original approach, and may provide a methodologically improved tool for coordinate‐based meta-analyses on functional imaging data.
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The valuation system: a coordinate-based meta-analysis of BOLD fMRI experiments examining neural correlates of subjective value.

TL;DR: A quantitative, coordinate-based meta-analysis of 206 published fMRI studies investigating neural correlates of SV identifies two general patterns of SV-correlated brain responses, which appear to constitute a "valuation system," carrying a domain-general SV signal and potentially contributing to value-based decision making.
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Meta-analysis of the functional neuroanatomy of single-word reading: method and validation.

TL;DR: A novel approach for combining published neuroimaging results from multiple studies, designed to maximize the quantification of interstudy concordance while minimizing the subjective aspects of meta-analysis is described.
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