All Relations between mog and occipital gyrus

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Laurent A Renier, Irina Anurova, Anne G De Volder, Synnöve Carlson, John VanMeter, Josef P Rauschecke. Preserved functional specialization for spatial processing in the middle occipital gyrus of the early blind. Neuron. vol 68. issue 1. 2010-10-22. PMID:20920797. however, the right middle occipital gyrus (mog) showed a preference for spatial over nonspatial processing of both auditory and tactile stimuli. 2010-10-22 2023-08-12 Not clear
Tomokazu Urakawa, Koji Inui, Koya Yamashiro, Emi Tanaka, Ryusuke Kakig. Cortical dynamics of visual change detection based on sensory memory. NeuroImage. vol 52. issue 1. 2010-09-30. PMID:20362678. previous neuroimaging studies showed that an abrupt visual change activates the middle occipital gyrus (mog). 2010-09-30 2023-08-12 Not clear
Zhenghua Hou, Yonggui Yuan, Zhijun Zhang, Gang Hou, Jiayong You, Feng Ba. The D-allele of ACE insertion/deletion polymorphism is associated with regional white matter volume changes and cognitive impairment in remitted geriatric depression. Neuroscience letters. vol 479. issue 3. 2010-09-27. PMID:20639003. d-allele carriers exhibited significantly smaller white matter volumes of right superior frontal gyrus (sfg) and right anterior cingulated gyrus (acg), but had larger volumes of left middle temporal gyrus (mtg) and right middle occipital gyrus (mog) than i homozygotes (p < 0.001). 2010-09-27 2023-08-12 human
Matthew R Johnson, Marcia K Johnso. Top-down enhancement and suppression of activity in category-selective extrastriate cortex from an act of reflective attention. Journal of cognitive neuroscience. vol 21. issue 12. 2010-01-28. PMID:19199413. in this study, we demonstrate that a brief, simple act of reflective attention ("refreshing") is also capable of both enhancing and suppressing activity in some scene-selective areas (the parahippocampal place area [ppa]) but not others (refreshing resulted in enhancement but not in suppression in the middle occipital gyrus [mog]). 2010-01-28 2023-08-12 Not clear
Alice Mado Proverbio, Roberta Adorni, Alberto Zani, Laura Trestian. Sex differences in the brain response to affective scenes with or without humans. Neuropsychologia. vol 47. issue 12. 2009-10-13. PMID:19061906. the humans-minus-scenes contrast revealed a difference in the activation of the middle occipital gyrus (mog) in men, and of the left inferior parietal (ba40), left superior temporal gyrus (stg, ba38) and right cingulate (ba31) in women (270-290 ms). 2009-10-13 2023-08-12 human
Pia Rotshtein, Patrik Vuilleumier, Joel Winston, Jon Driver, Ray Dola. Distinct and convergent visual processing of high and low spatial frequency information in faces. Cerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991). vol 17. issue 11. 2007-12-06. PMID:17283203. in contrast, the bilateral middle occipital gyrus (mog) responded to repetition and attention manipulations of low sf. 2007-12-06 2023-08-12 human