Search Results - "Chikazoe, J"

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  1. 1

    Localizing performance of go/no-go tasks to prefrontal cortical subregions by Chikazoe, Junichi

    Published in Current opinion in psychiatry (01-05-2010)
    “…PURPOSE OF REVIEWResponse inhibition is an essential executive function implemented by the prefrontal cortex. Performance of go/no-go tasks, which are…”
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    Journal Article
  2. 2

    Functional Dissociation in Right Inferior Frontal Cortex during Performance of Go/No-Go Task by Chikazoe, Junichi, Jimura, Koji, Asari, Tomoki, Yamashita, Ken-ichiro, Morimoto, Hiroki, Hirose, Satoshi, Miyashita, Yasushi, Konishi, Seiki

    Published in Cerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. 1991) (01-01-2009)
    “…The contribution of the right inferior frontal cortex to response inhibition has been demonstrated by previous studies of neuropsychology, electrophysiology,…”
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  3. 3

    Activation of right inferior frontal gyrus during response inhibition across response modalities by Chikazoe, Junichi, Konishi, Seiki, Asari, Tomoki, Jimura, Koji, Miyashita, Yasushi

    Published in Journal of cognitive neuroscience (01-01-2007)
    “…The go/no-go task, which effectively taps the ability to inhibit prepotent response tendency, has consistently activated the lateral prefrontal cortex,…”
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  4. 4

    Efficiency of go/no-go task performance implemented in the left hemisphere by Hirose, Satoshi, Chikazoe, Junichi, Watanabe, Takamitsu, Jimura, Koji, Kunimatsu, Akira, Abe, Osamu, Ohtomo, Kuni, Miyashita, Yasushi, Konishi, Seiki

    Published in The Journal of neuroscience (27-06-2012)
    “…It is well known that the efficiency of response inhibition differs from person to person, but the neural mechanism that implements the efficiency is less…”
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  5. 5

    Neural mechanism underlying preparation for stopping by Chikazoe, J, Hirose, S, Yamashita, K, Miyashita, Y, Konishi, S

    Published in NeuroImage (Orlando, Fla.) (01-07-2009)
    “…Results The imaging results revealed multiple fronto-parietal activations including the posterior part of the inferior frontal gyrus (pIFG), pre-supplementary…”
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  6. 6

    Neural Mechanism in Anterior Prefrontal Cortex for Inhibition of Prolonged Set Interference by Konishi, Seiki, Chikazoe, Junichi, Jimura, Koji, Asari, Tomoki, Miyashita, Yasushi, Mishkin, Mortimer

    “…Once one cognitive set dominates our behavior, it continues to influence subsequent behavior for a while even after a task to be performed is changed to…”
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  7. 7

    Left inferior prefrontal activation associated with inhibition of irrelevant temporal-order information during recency judgments by Jimura, K, Yamashita, K, Chikazoe, J, Hirose, S, Miyashita, Y, Konishi, S

    Published in NeuroImage (Orlando, Fla.) (01-07-2009)
    “…Results Random-effect group analysis for 31 healthy human young subjects revealed significant brain activity in multiple lateral prefrontal and medial temporal…”
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  8. 8

    Activation Shift from Medial to Lateral Temporal Cortex Associated with Recency Judgements Following Impoverished Encoding by Konishi, Seiki, Asari, Tomoki, Jimura, Koji, Chikazoe, Junichi, Miyashita, Yasushi

    Published in Cerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. 1991) (01-04-2006)
    “…Recency judgements can be performed on the basis of across-event relational information that directly provides temporal order among past events. Non-relational…”
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  9. 9

    On verbal/nonverbal modality dependence of left and right inferior prefrontal activation during performance of flanker interference task by Morimoto, Hiroki M, Hirose, Satoshi, Chikazoe, Junichi, Jimura, Koji, Asari, Tomoki, Yamashita, Ken-ichiro, Miyashita, Yasushi, Konishi, Seiki

    Published in Journal of cognitive neuroscience (01-11-2008)
    “…One of the most prevailing views on the functional localization of human cognition is the hemispheric specialization, wherein the left and right hemispheres…”
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