Kalina ChristoffSummaryAffiliation: University of Cambridge Country: UK Publications
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Publications
Neural basis of spontaneous thought processesKalina Christoff
MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, Cambridge, UK
Cortex 40:623-30. 2004..By considering such long-term memory processes as an essential part of thought mechanisms, it may be possible to gain better understanding into spontaneous thought phenomena that have remained unaccounted for until now...
Evaluating self-generated information: anterior prefrontal contributions to human cognitionKalina Christoff
Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, Medical Research Council, Cambridge, United Kingdom
Behav Neurosci 117:1161-8. 2003..This characterization of RLPFC function may help explain seemingly disparate findings across multiple cognitive domains and could provide a unified account of this region's contribution to human cognition...
Localizing the rostrolateral prefrontal cortex at the individual levelRachelle Smith
Department of Psychology, University of British Columbia, Canada
Neuroimage 36:1387-96. 2007..In addition, the results provide further support for the previously proposed functional dissociation between lateral and medial BA10...
Neural correlates of the automatic processing of threat facial signalsAdam K Anderson
Department of Psychology, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305, USA
J Neurosci 23:5627-33. 2003..Amygdala processing is thus specific to fear only during attended processing, when cortical processing is undiminished, and more broadly tuned to threat during unattended processing, when cortical processing is diminished...
The role of the prefrontal cortex in the maintenance of verbal working memory: an event-related FMRI analysisNandakumar S Narayanan
Department of Psychology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA
Neuropsychology 19:223-32. 2005..These results suggest an increasingly important role for the PFC in actively maintaining information as the amount of that information increases...
Improving reverse neuroimaging inference: cognitive domain versus cognitive complexityKalina Christoff
Trends Cogn Sci 10:352-3. 2006
