The relationship between task-positive and task-negative components of brain networks has repeatedly been shown to be characterized by dissociated fluctuations of spontaneous brain activity. We tested whether the interaction between task-positive and task-negative brain areas during resting-state predicts higher interference susceptibility, i.e. increased reaction times (RTs), during an Attention Modulation by Salience Task (AMST).
Pubmed ID: 28347858 RIS Download
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Stimulus delivery and experiment control program. Stimuli include auditory, 2D and 3D visual, and multimodal and experimental data include fMRI, ERP, MEG, psychophysics, eye movements, single neuron recording, and reaction time measures.
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