2010
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2010.06.005
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Learning related activation of somatosensory cortex by an auditory stimulus recorded with magnetoencephalography

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Cited by 8 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…Likewise, Pizzagalli and colleagues () found amplitude enhancements over primary auditory cortex occurring within 100 ms following presentation of a visual CS + that was previously paired with an auditory US. In other studies, a visual (Wik, Elbert, Fredrikson, Hoke, & Ross, ) or an auditory (Moses, Bardouille, Brown, Ross, & McIntosh, ) CS +, compared to the CS‐, increased activation of the primary somatosensory cortex when the electrodermal US was omitted. Cross‐modal conditioned brain responses disappear following extinction learning (Wik, Elbert, Fredrikson, Hoke, & Ross, ).…”
Section: Macroscopic Correlates Of Fear Conditioning: Human Eeg/meg Smentioning
confidence: 88%
“…Likewise, Pizzagalli and colleagues () found amplitude enhancements over primary auditory cortex occurring within 100 ms following presentation of a visual CS + that was previously paired with an auditory US. In other studies, a visual (Wik, Elbert, Fredrikson, Hoke, & Ross, ) or an auditory (Moses, Bardouille, Brown, Ross, & McIntosh, ) CS +, compared to the CS‐, increased activation of the primary somatosensory cortex when the electrodermal US was omitted. Cross‐modal conditioned brain responses disappear following extinction learning (Wik, Elbert, Fredrikson, Hoke, & Ross, ).…”
Section: Macroscopic Correlates Of Fear Conditioning: Human Eeg/meg Smentioning
confidence: 88%
“…Here, we used magnetoencephalography (MEG) (11,12) to address human auditory plasticity in an aversive classicalconditioning paradigm (1)(2)(3), focusing on the well-known, successive, auditory-evoked field components P1m, N1m, and P2m (13,14). Other human EEG or MEG work on conditioning typically used a visual rather than auditory CS + (15)(16)(17), but see ref.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other human EEG or MEG work on conditioning typically used a visual rather than auditory CS + (15)(16)(17), but see ref. 11).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Specifically, they asked whether the presence of memories about an object changes the way the brain responds at the time of initial perception, or whether the changes occur following initial perceptual processing at a time when memory processing is traditionally thought to occur. In contrast to Moses et al (2005Moses et al ( , 2007Moses et al ( , 2010, in which memory acquisition occurred within the experimental session, Ryan et al (2008) used a paradigm in which the ''previous learning episodes'' occurred in real life prior to the experiment, and in which the learned associated information was not presented at any time during the study and was not needed in order to complete the task given to the participants. Thus, they could ask whether early changes in neural activity actually represent a long-term change in perceptual processing, or whether they are merely a short-lived artificial change induced only in the laboratory as a result of the particular experimental procedures.…”
Section: When Does Memory Modulate Primary Sensory Activity?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Using MEG, Moses et al (2010) investigated the conditions under which extra-hippocampal systems can facilitate performance on what has traditionally been shown to be a hippocampal-dependent relational memory task: transverse patterning. (e.g.…”
Section: Imaging the Potential For Compensationmentioning
confidence: 99%