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Showing 1–10 of 10 results
Advanced filters: Author: Peter H Rudebeck Clear advanced filters
  • What drives us to pursue distant, more valuable goals over more proximate, lesser ones? Counter to what you might expect, this type of advanced goal-directed planning and foresight in primates may involve the amygdala. In a reward savings task, neurons in the amygdala track the length and subjective value of internally generated plans.

    • Clayton P Mosher
    • Peter H Rudebeck
    News & Views
    Nature Neuroscience
    Volume: 18, P: 324-325
  • Decision-making requires us to correctly evaluate the likely outcomes of our choices. Murray and Rudebeck describe how evidence from lesion and neurophysiology studies in non-human primates has given us insight into the specific contributions of prefrontal cortex subdivisions in this process.

    • Elisabeth A. Murray
    • Peter H. Rudebeck
    Reviews
    Nature Reviews Neuroscience
    Volume: 19, P: 404-417
  • Under continued global warming, lakes will increasingly be covered by white ice, in particular towards the end of the ice cover season when fatal winter drownings occur most often and light limits the growth and reproduction of primary producers.

    • Gesa A. Weyhenmeyer
    • Ulrike Obertegger
    • Roman Zdorovennov
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 13, P: 1-8
  • The anterior hippocampus is thought to be involved in a wide range of cognitive functions, including memory, navigation and perception. In this Opinion article, Zeidman and Maguire show how improved functional imaging techniques are shedding light on the precise anatomy of this region and the contribution of different parts of the anterior hippocampus to specific cognitive functions.

    • Peter Zeidman
    • Eleanor A. Maguire
    Reviews
    Nature Reviews Neuroscience
    Volume: 17, P: 173-182
  • Existing data are consistent with a role for the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) either in regulating emotion and enhancing behavioral flexibility or in updating valuations on the basis of motivational states. Here the authors show that excitotoxic lesions of OFC impair value updating but do not alter either behavioral flexibility or emotion regulation and that previous observations may have been the result of damage to nearby fiber tracts.

    • Peter H Rudebeck
    • Richard C Saunders
    • Elisabeth A Murray
    Research
    Nature Neuroscience
    Volume: 16, P: 1140-1145
  • Animals form cognitive maps of the world to guide behavior. This study shows that the lateral orbitofrontal cortex is essential for creating precise, outcome-specific cognitive maps during initial learning, but not for general map creation in itself.

    • Kauê Machado Costa
    • Robert Scholz
    • Geoffrey Schoenbaum
    Research
    Nature Neuroscience
    Volume: 26, P: 107-115