2017
2.1 Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation for Voices That Are Distressing
Corlett P. 2.1 Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation for Voices That Are Distressing. Schizophrenia Bulletin 2017, 43: s1-s1. PMCID: PMC5475441, DOI: 10.1093/schbul/sbx021.002.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchTranscranial magnetic stimulationFunctional magnetic resonance imagingWernicke's areaMagnetic stimulationDaily transcranial magnetic stimulationBilateral transcranial magnetic stimulationBrains of patientsDouble-cone coilMagnetic resonance imagingIntrinsic connectivity analysesAuditory verbal hallucinationsMechanisms of hallucinationsInsula cortexAuditory hallucinationsResonance imagingOrbitofrontal cortexNeural circuitryPatientsInsulaVerbal hallucinationsAberrant activityHallucinationsBrain activityEffective connectivityPrecise treatment
2006
Frontal Responses During Learning Predict Vulnerability to the Psychotogenic Effects of Ketamine: Linking Cognition, Brain Activity, and Psychosis
Corlett PR, Honey GD, Aitken MR, Dickinson A, Shanks DR, Absalom AR, Lee M, Pomarol-Clotet E, Murray GK, McKenna PJ, Robbins TW, Bullmore ET, Fletcher PC. Frontal Responses During Learning Predict Vulnerability to the Psychotogenic Effects of Ketamine: Linking Cognition, Brain Activity, and Psychosis. JAMA Psychiatry 2006, 63: 611-621. PMID: 16754834, DOI: 10.1001/archpsyc.63.6.611.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdultAssociation LearningBrief Psychiatric Rating ScaleCognition DisordersDelusionsDisease SusceptibilityDose-Response Relationship, DrugFemaleFrontal LobeHumansKetamineMagnetic Resonance ImagingMaleModels, TheoreticalPerceptual DisordersPlacebosProbabilityPsychiatric Status Rating ScalesPsychoses, Substance-InducedPsychotic DisordersConceptsDelusion formationPerceptual AberrationBrain activityError-dependent learningPharmacological functional magnetic resonanceAssociative learning taskFunctional magnetic resonance imagingAssociative learning processesDelusion-like beliefsFrontal cortical functionFunctional magnetic resonanceFull Scale IQUnderstanding of psychosisRight frontal cortexRight-handed volunteersNeurobiological accountsCognitive processesClinical Neuroscience InstituteFrontal activationAssociative learningFrontal responseBrain activationStructured Clinical InterviewLearning taskPsychotogenic effects
2004
On the Benefits of not Trying: Brain Activity and Connectivity Reflecting the Interactions of Explicit and Implicit Sequence Learning
Fletcher P, Zafiris O, Frith C, Honey R, Corlett P, Zilles K, Fink G. On the Benefits of not Trying: Brain Activity and Connectivity Reflecting the Interactions of Explicit and Implicit Sequence Learning. Cerebral Cortex 2004, 15: 1002-1015. PMID: 15537672, PMCID: PMC3838938, DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhh201.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsImplicit learningFunctional magnetic resonance imaging studyExplicit memory processesExpression of learningRight frontal activationLearning-related changesMedial temporal lobeMagnetic resonance imaging studyImplicit sequenceResonance imaging studyBrain basisFrontal activationNeural basisMemory processesSequence difficultyMotor sequenceBrain activityBehavioral experimentsTemporal lobeBehavioral effectsLearningExplicit attemptSubjective intentionAutomatic learningImaging studies