3 results match your criteria: "and Bernstein Center for Computational Neuroscience Heidelberg-Mannheim[Affiliation]"

Brain-computer interfaces provide conscious access to neural activity by means of brain-derived feedback ("neurofeedback"). An individual's abilities to monitor and control feedback are two necessary processes for effective neurofeedback therapy, yet their underlying functional neuroanatomy is still being debated. In this study, healthy subjects received visual feedback from their amygdala response to negative pictures.

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Objectives: The human brain is organized into large-scale networks that dynamically interact with each other. Extensive evidence has shown characteristic changes in certain large-scale networks during transitions from internally directed to externally directed attention. The aim of the present study was to compare these context-dependent network interactions during emotion regulation and to examine potential alterations in remitted unipolar and bipolar disorder patients.

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Cross-modal distortion of time perception: demerging the effects of observed and performed motion.

PLoS One

November 2012

Research Group Computational Neuroscience, Central Institute of Mental Health, Medical Faculty Mannheim/Heidelberg University, and Bernstein Center for Computational Neuroscience Heidelberg-Mannheim, Mannheim, Germany.

Temporal information is often contained in multi-sensory stimuli, but it is currently unknown how the brain combines e.g. visual and auditory cues into a coherent percept of time.

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