FEF TMS affects visual cortical activity.
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] N. P. Bichot,et al. Visual feature selectivity in frontal eye fields induced by experience in mature macaques , 1996, Nature.
[2] C. A. Marzi,et al. Transcranial magnetic stimulation selectively impairs interhemispheric transfer of visuo-motor information in humans , 1998, Experimental Brain Research.
[3] Karl J. Friston,et al. Acute Remapping within the Motor System Induced by Low-Frequency Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation , 2003, The Journal of Neuroscience.
[4] A. Leventhal,et al. Signal timing across the macaque visual system. , 1998, Journal of neurophysiology.
[5] R. Rafal,et al. Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation of the Prefrontal Cortex Delays Contralateral Endogenous Saccades , 1997, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
[6] Robert Desimone,et al. Impaired filtering of distracter stimuli by TE neurons following V4 and TEO lesions in macaques. , 2004, Cerebral cortex.
[7] Avishai Henik,et al. Endogenously Generated and Visually Guided Saccades after Lesions of the Human Frontal Eye Fields , 1994, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
[8] H. Lüders,et al. American Electroencephalographic Society Guidelines for Standard Electrode Position Nomenclature , 1991, Journal of clinical neurophysiology : official publication of the American Electroencephalographic Society.
[9] P. Matthews,et al. The role of ipsilateral premotor cortex in hand movement after stroke , 2002, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[10] Michael S. Beauchamp,et al. A Parametric fMRI Study of Overt and Covert Shifts of Visuospatial Attention , 2001, NeuroImage.
[11] A. Cowey,et al. Visual field defects after frontal eye-field lesions in monkeys. , 1971, Brain research.
[12] Jason B. Mattingley,et al. Modality-Specific Control of Strategic Spatial Attention in Parietal Cortex , 2004, Neuron.
[13] L. Squire,et al. The Neuropsychology of Memory , 1990 .
[14] M. Posner,et al. Orienting of Attention* , 1980, The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology.
[15] E. Wassermann. Risk and safety of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation: report and suggested guidelines from the International Workshop on the Safety of Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation, June 5-7, 1996. , 1998, Electroencephalography and clinical neurophysiology.
[16] R. Passingham,et al. Active maintenance in prefrontal area 46 creates distractor-resistant memory , 2002, Nature Neuroscience.
[17] A. Cowey,et al. Striate cortex (V1) activity gates awareness of motion , 2005, Nature Neuroscience.
[18] Junying Yuan,et al. Selective gating of visual signals by microstimulation of frontal cortex , 2022 .
[19] R. Ilmoniemi,et al. Neuronal responses to magnetic stimulation reveal cortical reactivity and connectivity , 1997, Neuroreport.
[20] T. Paus,et al. Cortical regions involved in eye movements, shifts of attention, and gaze perception , 2005, Human brain mapping.
[21] C. Bruce,et al. Primate frontal eye fields. II. Physiological and anatomical correlates of electrically evoked eye movements. , 1985, Journal of neurophysiology.
[22] Tomás Paus,et al. Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation of the Human Frontal Eye ®eld Facilitates Visual Awareness , 2022 .
[23] Richard S. J. Frackowiak,et al. Functional localization of the system for visuospatial attention using positron emission tomography. , 1997, Brain : a journal of neurology.
[24] T. Paus,et al. Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation of the Human Frontal Eye Field: Effects on Visual Perception and Attention , 2002, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
[25] Á. Pascual-Leone,et al. Fast Backprojections from the Motion to the Primary Visual Area Necessary for Visual Awareness , 2001, Science.
[26] Jon Driver,et al. Shifts of attention in light and in darkness: an ERP study of supramodal attentional control and crossmodal links in spatial attention. , 2003, Brain research. Cognitive brain research.
[27] Chris Rorden,et al. Transcranial magnetic stimulation of the left human frontal eye fields eliminates the cost of invalid endogenous cues , 2005, Neuropsychologia.
[28] H. Kennedy,et al. Laminar Distribution of Neurons in Extrastriate Areas Projecting to Visual Areas V1 and V4 Correlates with the Hierarchical Rank and Indicates the Operation of a Distance Rule , 2000, The Journal of Neuroscience.
[29] Neil G. Muggleton,et al. Timing of Target Discrimination in Human Frontal Eye Fields , 2004, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
[30] Matthew F S Rushworth,et al. Attentional Selection and Action Selection in the Ventral and Orbital Prefrontal Cortex , 2005, The Journal of Neuroscience.
[31] Joel R. Meyer,et al. A large-scale distributed network for covert spatial attention: further anatomical delineation based on stringent behavioural and cognitive controls. , 1999, Brain : a journal of neurology.
[32] T. Moore,et al. Microstimulation of the frontal eye field and its effects on covert spatial attention. , 2004, Journal of neurophysiology.
[33] P. Goldman-Rakic,et al. Posterior parietal cortex in rhesus monkey: II. Evidence for segregated corticocortical networks linking sensory and limbic areas with the frontal lobe , 1989, The Journal of comparative neurology.
[34] R. Passingham,et al. Signal-, set-, and movement-related activity in the human premotor cortex , 1998, Neuropsychologia.
[35] Alan C. Evans,et al. Dose-dependent reduction of cerebral blood flow during rapid-rate transcranial magnetic stimulation of the human sensorimotor cortex. , 1998, Journal of neurophysiology.
[36] M. Eimer. “Sensory gating” as a mechanism for visuospatial orienting: Electrophysiological evidence from trial-by-trial cuing experiments , 1994, Perception & psychophysics.
[37] A. Nobre,et al. Multiple mechanisms of selective attention: differential modulation of stimulus processing by attention to space or time , 2002, Neuropsychologia.
[38] J. Rothwell,et al. Functional MRI of the immediate impact of transcranial magnetic stimulation on cortical and subcortical motor circuits , 2004, The European journal of neuroscience.
[39] Gregor Thut,et al. Dorsal posterior parietal rTMS affects voluntary orienting of visuospatial attention. , 2005, Cerebral cortex.
[40] Leslie G. Ungerleider,et al. Increased Activity in Human Visual Cortex during Directed Attention in the Absence of Visual Stimulation , 1999, Neuron.
[41] J. Bullier,et al. Topography of visual cortex connections with frontal eye field in macaque: convergence and segregation of processing streams , 1995, The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience.
[42] Alan C. Evans,et al. Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation during Positron Emission Tomography: A New Method for Studying Connectivity of the Human Cerebral Cortex , 1997, The Journal of Neuroscience.
[43] T. Paus. Location and function of the human frontal eye-field: A selective review , 1996, Neuropsychologia.
[44] Jeffrey D. Schall,et al. Neural basis of deciding, choosing and acting , 2001, Nature Reviews Neuroscience.
[45] C. Pierrot-Deseilligny,et al. Cortical control of saccades in man. , 1991, Acta neurologica Belgica.
[46] M. Rushworth,et al. A primer of magnetic stimulation as a tool for neuropsychology. , 1999, Neuropsychologia.
[47] Chi-Hung Juan,et al. Human frontal eye fields and visual search. , 2003, Journal of neurophysiology.
[48] Chi-Hung Juan,et al. Dissociation of spatial attention and saccade preparation. , 2004, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[49] J. Mattingley,et al. Fast and slow parietal pathways mediate spatial attention , 2004, Nature Neuroscience.