about
Thoughts of death modulate psychophysical and cortical responses to threatening stimuliThe primary somatosensory cortex largely contributes to the early part of the cortical response elicited by nociceptive stimuli.Seeing touch and pain in a stranger modulates the cortical responses elicited by somatosensory but not auditory stimulation.Dishabituation of laser-evoked EEG responses: dissecting the effect of certain and uncertain changes in stimulus spatial location.Emotional conflict in a model modulates nociceptive processing in an onlooker: a laser-evoked potentials study.The primary somatosensory cortex contributes to the latest part of the cortical response elicited by nociceptive somatosensory stimuli in humans.Seeing facial expressions enhances placebo analgesia.Intracortical modulation, and not spinal inhibition, mediates placebo analgesia.Seeing One's Own Painful Hand Positioned in the Contralateral Space Reduces Subjective Reports of Pain and Modulates Laser Evoked Potentials.Painful engrams: Oscillatory correlates of working memory for phasic nociceptive laser stimuli.Republished review: systematic review and meta-analysis of psychomotor effects of mobile phone electromagnetic fields.Cognitive aspects of nociception and pain: bridging neurophysiology with cognitive psychology.Attention to pain! A neurocognitive perspective on attentional modulation of pain in neuroimaging studies.Commentary: Top-down and bottom-up modulation of pain-induced oscillations.Dynamic characteristics of multisensory facilitation and inhibition.Functional features of nociceptive-induced suppression of alpha band electroencephalographic oscillations.Mismatch responses evoked by nociceptive stimuli.Mortality salience modulates cortical responses to painful somatosensory stimulation: Evidence from slow wave and delta band activity.Visual reminders of death enhance nociceptive-related cortical responses and event-related alpha desynchronisation.Functional features of crossmodal mismatch responses.Fine-grained analysis of shared neural circuits between perceived and observed pain: implications for the study of empathy for pain.rTMS-induced virtual lesion of the posterior parietal cortex (PPC) alters the control of reflexive shifts of social attention triggered by pointing hands.Timing of repetition suppression of event-related potentials to unattended objectsVisual cues of threat elicit greater steady-state electroencephalographic responses than visual reminders of death
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description
investigador
@es
researcher
@en
wetenschapper
@nl
name
Elia Valentini
@en
Elia Valentini
@nl
type
label
Elia Valentini
@en
Elia Valentini
@nl
prefLabel
Elia Valentini
@en
Elia Valentini
@nl
P31
P496
0000-0003-0259-6824