2 results match your criteria: "Research Center JuelichJuelich[Affiliation]"
Front Hum Neurosci
July 2016
Department of Psychiatry, Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, Medical Faculty, RWTH Aachen UniversityAachen, Germany; Jülich Aachen Research Alliance - Translational Brain MedicineAachen, Germany; Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Medical Faculty, University of TübingenTübingen, Germany; Institute for Neuroscience and Medicine (INM-1), Research Center JuelichJuelich, Germany.
[This corrects the article on p. 44 in vol. 10, PMID: 26909031.
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May 2016
Human Brain Research Center, Kyoto University Graduate School of MedicineKyoto, Japan; The Graduate School of Core Ethics and Frontier Sciences, Ritsumeikan UniversityKyoto, Japan.
In everyday life, free products have a strong appeal to us, even if we do not need them. Behavioral studies demonstrated that people have a tendency to switch their preference from preferred more expensive products to less preferable, cheaper alternatives, when the cheaper option becomes free. However, the neural representation of this behavioral anomaly called "Zero price" is still unclear.
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