2024
High performers demonstrate greater neural synchrony than low performers across behavioral domains
Chamberlain T, Corriveau A, Song H, Kwon Y, Yoo K, Chun M, Rosenberg M. High performers demonstrate greater neural synchrony than low performers across behavioral domains. Imaging Neuroscience 2024, 2: 1-17. DOI: 10.1162/imag_a_00128.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchBrain-behavior relationshipsBrain activityBehavioral domainsIntersubject representational similarity analysisPatterns of brain activityRepresentational similarity analysisBehavior scoresNeural similarityBehavior ScaleParticipant sampleNeural synchronyBehavioral similaritiesFMRI datasetsBrainSimilarity analysisLow performanceIndividualsScoresScorersBehaviorTheoretical frameworkParticipantsRelationshipTacit assumptionSynchrony
2014
Neural portraits of perception: Reconstructing face images from evoked brain activity
Cowen AS, Chun MM, Kuhl BA. Neural portraits of perception: Reconstructing face images from evoked brain activity. NeuroImage 2014, 94: 12-22. PMID: 24650597, PMCID: PMC4028096, DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2014.03.018.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdolescentAdultBiometryBrainBrain MappingComputer SimulationData Interpretation, StatisticalEvoked Potentials, VisualFaceFemaleHumansImage Interpretation, Computer-AssistedMagnetic Resonance ImagingMaleModels, NeurologicalModels, StatisticalNerve NetPattern Recognition, VisualReproducibility of ResultsSensitivity and SpecificityStatistics as TopicConceptsBrain activityHigher-level cortical areasOccipital cortexHigher-level cortical regionsEarly visual cortexFace imagesTraining facesIndividual face imagesFace perceptionPerceptual informationTest faceVisual experienceVisual inputDistributed patternNeural activityCortical networksRecent neuroimaging advancesCortical regionsVisual cortexCortical areasNeuroimaging advancesRetinotopic mappingNeural reconstructionValidation measuresCortex
2005
Response-specific sources of dual-task interference in human pre-motor cortex
Marois R, Larson J, Chun M, Shima D. Response-specific sources of dual-task interference in human pre-motor cortex. Psychological Research 2005, 70: 436-447. PMID: 16283409, DOI: 10.1007/s00426-005-0022-6.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdultAttentionBrain MappingColor PerceptionDominance, CerebralFemaleFrontal LobeFunctional LateralityHumansImage Processing, Computer-AssistedMagnetic Resonance ImagingMaleMotor CortexNerve NetOxygenParietal LobePattern Recognition, VisualPsychomotor PerformanceReaction TimeRefractory Period, PsychologicalConceptsPsychological refractory periodPre-motor cortexResponse selectionBrain activityDual-task manipulationsDual-task situationsDual-task interferenceDual-task costsInferior frontal cortexParieto-frontal areasDual-task conditionsDorsal pre-motor cortexFMRI brain activityDistinct motor responsesNeural locusSecond stimulusPerceptual visibilityMotor responseBrain regionsStimuliFrontal cortexCentral limitationRapid successionCortexSuch performance limitations