Two distinct neural mechanisms for category-selective responses.
about
Inborn and experience-dependent models of categorical brain organization. A position paperIdentifying object categories from event-related EEG: toward decoding of conceptual representationsKnowledge is power: how conceptual knowledge transforms visual cognition.Category-specific activations during word generation reflect experiential sensorimotor modalitiesMasked priming of conceptual features reveals differential brain activation during unconscious access to conceptual action and sound information.Category-specific organization in the human brain does not require visual experienceAction-related properties shape object representations in the ventral stream.Multi-subject analyses with dynamic causal modeling.Interhemispheric integration of visual processing during task-driven lateralization.The cortical dynamics of intelligible speechA right visual field advantage for visual processing of manipulable objectsPreserved tool knowledge in the context of impaired action knowledge: implications for models of semantic memoryParcellation of left parietal tool representations by functional connectivity.Picturing words? Sensorimotor cortex activation for printed words in child and adult readersA review of functional imaging studies on category specificity.Concepts and categories: a cognitive neuropsychological perspective.It takes two-skilled recognition of objects engages lateral areas in both hemispheresCategory-specific versus category-general semantic impairment induced by transcranial magnetic stimulationThe representation of tools in left parietal cortex is independent of visual experienceBinaral rivalry in the presence of visual perceptual and semantic influencesBroad and narrow conceptual tuning in the human frontal lobesArguments about the nature of concepts: Symbols, embodiment, and beyond.Pyramidal cells in prefrontal cortex of primates: marked differences in neuronal structure among speciesTop-down modulations in the visual form pathway revealed with dynamic causal modeling.Shared neural processes support semantic control and action understanding.Selective activation around the left occipito-temporal sulcus for words relative to pictures: individual variability or false positives?First-pass selectivity for semantic categories in human anteroventral temporal lobe.Remote effects of hippocampal sclerosis on effective connectivity during working memory encoding: a case of connectional diaschisis?The Representation of Object-Directed Action and Function Knowledge in the Human BrainThe Relationship between Frontotemporal Effective Connectivity during Picture Naming, Behavior, and Preserved Cortical Tissue in Chronic AphasiaToward Semantics in the Wild: Activation to Manipulable Nouns in Naturalistic Reading.Unconscious processing dissociates along categorical lines.Development of Tool Representations in the Dorsal and Ventral Visual Object Processing PathwaysDissociating verbal and nonverbal audiovisual object processing.Tool manipulation knowledge is retrieved by way of the ventral visual object processing pathway.Tool selection and the ventral-dorsal organization of tool-related knowledge.Resting state functional connectivity in early blind humansThe cognitive neuroscience of prehension: recent developments.Tracking the time course of action priming on object recognition: evidence for fast and slow influences of action on perception.Modulation of task demands suggests that semantic processing interferes with the formation of episodic associations.
P2860
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P2860
Two distinct neural mechanisms for category-selective responses.
description
2005 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2005年の論文
@ja
2005年論文
@yue
2005年論文
@zh-hant
2005年論文
@zh-hk
2005年論文
@zh-mo
2005年論文
@zh-tw
2005年论文
@wuu
2005年论文
@zh
2005年论文
@zh-cn
name
Two distinct neural mechanisms for category-selective responses.
@en
type
label
Two distinct neural mechanisms for category-selective responses.
@en
prefLabel
Two distinct neural mechanisms for category-selective responses.
@en
P50
P356
P1433
P1476
Two distinct neural mechanisms for category-selective responses.
@en
P2093
Will D Penny
P304
P356
10.1093/CERCOR/BHI123
P577
2005-06-08T00:00:00Z