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97 results on '"Nico Bunzeck"'

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1. Predicting executive functioning from walking features in Parkinson’s disease using machine learning

2. Effects of positive and negative social feedback on motivation, evaluative learning, and socio-emotional processing

3. Anticipating social feedback involves basal forebrain and mesolimbic functional connectivity

4. Contextual incongruency triggers memory reinstatement and the disruption of neural stability

5. Cognitive parameters can predict change of walking performance in advanced Parkinson’s disease – Chances and limits of early rehabilitation

6. Impaired episodic memory in PTSD patients — A meta-analysis of 47 studies

7. Age-related iron accumulation and demyelination in the basal ganglia are closely related to verbal memory and executive functioning

8. Does Executive Function Influence Walking in Acutely Hospitalized Patients With Advanced Parkinson's Disease: A Quantitative Analysis

9. Set Size of Information in Long-Term Memory Similarly Modulates Retrieval Dynamics in Young and Older Adults

10. Anticipating social incentives recruits alpha-beta oscillations in the human substantia nigra and invigorates behavior across the life span

11. Functional coupling between CA3 and laterobasal amygdala supports schema dependent memory formation

12. Semantic Congruence Drives Long-Term Memory and Similarly Affects Neural Retrieval Dynamics in Young and Older Adults

13. Dopamine Related Genes Differentially Affect Declarative Long-Term Memory in Healthy Humans

14. Retrieval Practice Improves Recollection-Based Memory Over a Seven-Day Period in Younger and Older Adults

15. Novelty Before or After Word Learning Does Not Affect Subsequent Memory Performance

16. Neural Habituation to Painful Stimuli Is Modulated by Dopamine: Evidence from a Pharmacological fMRI Study

17. Early effects of reward anticipation are modulated by dopaminergic stimulation.

24. The gains of a 4‐week cognitive training are not modulated by novelty

27. Benefit from retrieval practice is linked to temporal and frontal activity in healthy young and older humans

28. Novelty processing associated with neural beta oscillations improves recognition memory in young and older adults

29. Anticipating social incentives recruits alpha-beta oscillations in the human substantia nigra and invigorates behavior across the life span

30. Increasing Dopamine and Acetylcholine Levels during Encoding Does Not Modulate Remember or Know Responses during Memory Retrieval in Healthy Aging—a Randomized Controlled Feasibility Study

31. Working memory performance in the elderly relates to theta-alpha oscillations and is predicted by parahippocampal and striatal integrity

32. Theta oscillations underlie retrieval success effects in the nucleus accumbens and anterior thalamus: Evidence from human intracranial recordings

33. Neural oscillations and event-related potentials reveal how semantic congruence drives long-term memory in both young and older humans

34. Novelty Before or After Word Learning Does Not Affect Subsequent Memory Performance

35. Dopamine Enhances Item Novelty Detection via Hippocampal and Associative Recall via Left Lateral Prefrontal Cortex Mechanisms

36. Age-Related Decreases in the Retrieval Practice Effect Directly Relate to Changes in Alpha-Beta Oscillations

37. Correction: Altered activation and connectivity in a hippocampal–basal ganglia–midbrain circuit during salience processing in subjects at ultra high risk for psychosis

38. Dopamine is a double-edged sword: dopaminergic modulation enhances memory retrieval performance but impairs metacognition

39. Dopamine is a double-edged sword: Enhancing memory retrieval performance at the expense of metacognition

40. Sex differences in conditioned stimulus discrimination during context-dependent fear learning and its retrieval in humans: the role of biological sex, contraceptives and menstrual cycle phases

41. Goal- and retrieval-dependent activity in the striatum during memory recognition

42. Brain responses to different types of salience in antipsychotic naïve first episode psychosis: An fMRI study

43. Altered salience processing in attention deficit hyperactivity disorder

44. Retrieval Demands Adaptively Change Striatal Old/New Signals and Boost Subsequent Long-Term Memory

45. Pain anticipation recruits the mesolimbic system and differentially modulates subsequent recognition memory

46. Dopamine Controls the Neural Dynamics of Memory Signals and Retrieval Accuracy

47. Reward Dependent Invigoration Relates to Theta Oscillations and Is Predicted by Dopaminergic Midbrain Integrity in Healthy Elderly

48. Semantic congruence accelerates the onset of the neural signals of successful memory encoding

49. Where There is Smoke There is Fear-Impaired Contextual Inhibition of Conditioned Fear in Smokers

50. Theta-alpha oscillations bind the hippocampus, prefrontal cortex, and striatum during recollection: Evidence from simultaneous EEG-fMRI

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