Journal: J. Cognitive Neuroscience

Volume 24, Issue 11

2135 -- 2146Sharon Geva, Peter Simon Jones, Jennifer T. Crinion, Cathy J. Price, Jean-Claude Baron, Elizabeth A. Warburton. The Effect of Aging on the Neural Correlates of Phonological Word Retrieval
2147 -- 2154Patrik Sörqvist, Stefan Stenfelt, Jerker Rönnberg. Working Memory Capacity and Visual-Verbal Cognitive Load Modulate Auditory-Sensory Gating in the Brainstem: Toward a Unified View of Attention
2155 -- 2170Maya Zuckerman, Daniel A. Levy, Roni Tibon, Niv Reggev, Anat Maril. Does This Ring a Bell? Music-cued Retrieval of Semantic Knowledge and Metamemory Judgments
2171 -- 2185Tsukasa Kamigaki, Tetsuya Fukushima, Keita Tamura, Yasushi Miyashita. Neurodynamics of Cognitive Set Shifting in Monkey Frontal Cortex and Its Causal Impact on Behavioral Flexibility
2186 -- 2198Keiichi Onoda, Masaki Ishihara, Shuhei Yamaguchi. Decreased Functional Connectivity by Aging Is Associated with Cognitive Decline
2199 -- 2210Nikos Konstantinou, Bahador Bahrami, Geraint Rees, Nilli Lavie. Visual Short-term Memory Load Reduces Retinotopic Cortex Response to Contrast
2211 -- 2222Andrea Marini, Cosimo Urgesi. Please Get to the Point! A Cortical Correlate of Linguistic Informativeness
2223 -- 2236Qi Chen, Ralph Weidner, Peter H. Weiss, John C. Marshall, Gereon R. Fink. Neural Interaction between Spatial Domain and Spatial Reference Frame in Parietal-Occipital Junction
2237 -- 2247Markus J. van Ackeren, Daniel Casasanto, Harold Bekkering, Peter Hagoort, Shirley-Ann Rüschemeyer. Pragmatics in Action: Indirect Requests Engage Theory of Mind Areas and the Cortical Motor Network
2248 -- 2261Dean Wyatte, Tim Curran, Randall C. O'Reilly. The Limits of Feedforward Vision: Recurrent Processing Promotes Robust Object Recognition when Objects Are Degraded
2262 -- 2267Daniel T. Smith, Keira Ball, Amanda Ellison. Inhibition of Return Impairs Phosphene Detection
2268 -- 2279Eun-young Yoon, Glyn W. Humphreys, Sanjay Kumar, Pia Rotshtein. The Neural Selection and Integration of Actions and Objects: An fMRI Study