6 research outputs found
Brain activation areas during recall in 24 participants, after controlling for sex and verbal IQ.
<p>Brain activation areas during recall in 24 participants, after controlling for sex and verbal IQ.</p
Brain activation areas during perception and encoding in 25 participants, after controlling for sex and verbal IQ.
<p>Brain activation areas during perception and encoding in 25 participants, after controlling for sex and verbal IQ.</p
Activation maps consistent with false subsequent remembering of pictures in participants with high visual imagery.
<p>Activation maps consistent with false subsequent remembering of pictures in participants with high visual imagery.</p
Activation maps consistent with false remembering of pictures in participants with high visual imagery.
<p>Brain activity differences between high- (n = 7) vs. low- (n = 9) visual imagery score subgroups when controlling for verbal IQ, sex, auditory hallucination proneness, and delusion proneness (see <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0169551#pone.0169551.t004" target="_blank">Table 4</a>). Activations are shown over the SRI24 structural template for illustration purposes only. A) Activation of the left middle frontal gyrus and bilateral activation of the inferior and superior parietal lobes during the false remembering of non-presented pictures when compared to correct remembering of words presented as words (contrast WP > WW). B) Activation of the left inferior and superior parietal lobe during the false remembering of non-presented pictures when compared to correct remembering of presented pictures (contrast WP > PP).</p
Brain activation differences between high (7 participants) and low (9 participants) visual imagery score subgroups during recall, after controlling for verbal IQ, sex, auditory hallucination proneness, and delusion proneness.
<p>Brain activation differences between high (7 participants) and low (9 participants) visual imagery score subgroups during recall, after controlling for verbal IQ, sex, auditory hallucination proneness, and delusion proneness.</p
Brain activation differences between high (7 participants) and low (8 participants) visual imagery score subgroups during encoding, after controlling for verbal IQ, sex, auditory hallucination proneness, and delusion proneness.
<p>Brain activation differences between high (7 participants) and low (8 participants) visual imagery score subgroups during encoding, after controlling for verbal IQ, sex, auditory hallucination proneness, and delusion proneness.</p