An Event -
related Neuroimaging Study Distinguishing Form and Content in Sentence Processing.
Not exact matches
A
study by researchers from McGill University in Canada involving
neuroimaging, which creates pictures of the brain's structure and neural activity, showed that smelling the body odor of someone closely
related activates the dorsomedial prefrontal cortex, a part of the brain responsible for recognizing family.
Many people suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and other stress -
related disorders show increased activity in the right hemisphere of the brain — and in emotional, nonverbal processing — and decreased activity in the left, according to
neuroimaging studies.
I am also co-Director of the Clinical Core of the Alzheimer's Disease
Neuroimaging Study along with
related projects.
«In this
study, we focused on the activity of the anterior cingulate cortex, which has been shown by others to be
related to error processing, and which we have shown to be associated with fatigue,» said Dr. Wylie, who is associate director of Neuroscience Research and the Rocco Ortenzio
Neuroimaging Center at Kessler Foundation.
When trying to memorize information, it is better to
relate it to something meaningful rather than repeat it again and again to make it stick, according to a recent Baycrest Health Sciences
study published in
NeuroImage.
All students who were interested in participating and were not affected by standard safety -
related contraindications for MRI (e.g., the presence of metallic implants) participated in the
neuroimaging study.
Latest trends in
neuroimaging studies are focusing more on scalability issues both
related to larger data samples and cpu intensive computational methods.
Recent work in fragile X syndrome suggests aberrant fronto - striatal and fronto - parietal networks and
relates these abnormalities «forward» to behavior and «backward» to decreased protein expression.As the field of
neuroimaging has matured, it has revealed its promise as a safe, reliable, in - vivo tool in the
study of developmental disorders.