Search Results - "FRANKLAND, M"

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  1. 1

    An architecture for encoding sentence meaning in left mid-superior temporal cortex by Frankland, Steven M., Greene, Joshua D.

    “…Human brains flexibly combine the meanings of words to compose structured thoughts. For example, by combining the meanings of “bite,” “dog,” and “man,” we can…”
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    Journal Article
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    Chromaticity of color perception and object color knowledge by Hsu, Nina S., Frankland, Steven M., Thompson-Schill, Sharon L.

    Published in Neuropsychologia (01-01-2012)
    “…► We use luminance judgments to tap color perception and color memory processes. ► Using fMRI, we examined and compared brain activity during both color tasks…”
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    Journal Article
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    Concepts and Compositionality: In Search of the Brain's Language of Thought by Frankland, Steven M, Greene, Joshua D

    Published in Annual review of psychology (04-01-2020)
    “…Imagine Genghis Khan, Aretha Franklin, and the Cleveland Cavaliers performing an opera on Maui. This silly sentence makes a serious point: As humans, we can…”
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    Journal Article
  4. 4

    Two Ways to Build a Thought: Distinct Forms of Compositional Semantic Representation across Brain Regions by Frankland, Steven M, Greene, Joshua D

    Published in Cerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. 1991) (18-05-2020)
    “…Abstract To understand a simple sentence such as “the woman chased the dog”, the human mind must dynamically organize the relevant concepts to represent who…”
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    Journal Article
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    The relational bottleneck as an inductive bias for efficient abstraction by Webb, Taylor W., Frankland, Steven M., Altabaa, Awni, Segert, Simon, Krishnamurthy, Kamesh, Campbell, Declan, Russin, Jacob, Giallanza, Tyler, O’Reilly, Randall, Lafferty, John, Cohen, Jonathan D.

    Published in Trends in cognitive sciences (01-09-2024)
    “…Human learners acquire abstract concepts from limited experience. The effort to explain this capacity has fueled debate between symbolic and connectionist…”
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    Journal Article
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    Evidence for Spinozan "Unbelieving" in the Right Inferior Prefrontal Cortex by Bernhard, Regan M, Frankland, Steven M, Plunkett, Dillon, Sievers, Beau, Greene, Joshua D

    Published in Journal of cognitive neuroscience (01-04-2023)
    “…Humans can think about possible states of the world without believing in them, an important capacity for high-level cognition. Here, we use fMRI and a novel…”
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    Journal Article
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    Hemodynamic and sedative effects of dexmedetomidine in dog by Bloor, B C, Frankland, M, Alper, G, Raybould, D, Weitz, J, Shurtliff, M

    “…This study investigated hemodynamic and sedative effects of a single dose of the selective alpha-2 adrenoceptor agonist dexmedetoimidine (DMED) in…”
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    A core outcome set for pre‐eclampsia research: an international consensus development study by Duffy, JMN, Cairns, AE, Richards‐Doran, D, 't Hooft, J, Gale, C, Brown, M, Chappell, LC, Grobman, WA, Fitzpatrick, R, Karumanchi, SA, Khalil, A, Lucas, DN, Magee, LA, Mol, BW, Stark, M, Thangaratinam, S, Wilson, MJ, Dadelszen, P, Williamson, PR, Ziebland, S, McManus, RJ

    “…Objective To develop a core outcome set for pre‐eclampsia. Design Consensus development study. Setting International. Population Two hundred and eight‐one…”
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    Journal Article Conference Proceeding
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    Alkylating partial muscarinic agonists related to oxotremorine. N-[4-[(2-Haloethyl)methylamino]-2-butynyl]-5-methyl-2-pyrrolidones by Ringdahl, Bjorn, Roch, Margareth, Katz, Esther D, Frankland, Maria C

    Published in Journal of medicinal chemistry (01-03-1989)
    “…N-[4-[(2-Chloroethyl)methylamino]-2-butynyl]-5-methyl-2-pyrrolidone (3) and N-[4-[(2-bromoethyl)methylamino]-2-butynyl]-5-methyl-2- pyrrolidone (4) were…”
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    Journal Article
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