Advanced Search
Display options
Filter resources
Text Availability
Article type
Publication date
Species
Language
Sex
Age
Showing 25 to 36 of 627 entries
Sorted by: Best Match Show Resources per page
Social capital and the history of mortality in Britain.

International journal of epidemiology

Razzell P, Spence C.
PMID: 15746209
Int J Epidemiol. 2005 Apr;34(2):477-8; author reply 479-80. doi: 10.1093/ije/dyi035. Epub 2005 Mar 03.

No abstract available.

Adipose tissue distribution is different in type 2 diabetes.

The American journal of clinical nutrition

Gallagher D, Kelley DE, Yim JE, Spence N, Albu J, Boxt L, Pi-Sunyer FX, Heshka S.
PMID: 19158213
Am J Clin Nutr. 2009 Mar;89(3):807-14. doi: 10.3945/ajcn.2008.26955. Epub 2009 Jan 21.

BACKGROUND: The extent to which adipose tissue (AT) distribution is different between persons with type 2 diabetes (T2DM) and nondiabetic control subjects remains unclear.OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to establish whether total body adiposity and its distribution,...

On why music changes what (we think) we taste.

i-Perception

Spence C, Deroy O.
PMID: 23755358
Iperception. 2013 Apr 16;4(2):137-40. doi: 10.1068/i0577ic. Print 2013.

A pair of recently published studies demonstrate that what we happen to be listening to can sometimes change our perception (or, at the very least, our rating) of what we are eating or drinking. In one recent study, North...

Context-dependent changes in tactile perception during movement execution.

Frontiers in psychology

Juravle G, McGlone F, Spence C.
PMID: 24367346
Front Psychol. 2013 Dec 06;4:913. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00913. eCollection 2013.

Tactile perception is inhibited during movement execution, a phenomenon known as tactile suppression. Here, we investigated whether the type of movement determines whether or not this form of sensory suppression occurs. Participants performed simple reaching or exploratory movements. Tactile...

Foreword: quality improvement efforts: advancing the science of palliative care.

Journal of pain and symptom management

Casarett DJ, Dy S, Spence C, Lupu D.
PMID: 22045366
J Pain Symptom Manage. 2011 Nov;42(5):649-51. doi: 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2011.08.001.

No abstract available.

Continuity is never out of fashion.

BMJ (Clinical research ed.)

Spence D.
PMID: 22318444
BMJ. 2012 Feb 08;344:e957. doi: 10.1136/bmj.e957.

No abstract available.

Crossmodal correspondences: Innate or learned?.

i-Perception

Spence C, Deroy O.
PMID: 23145286
Iperception. 2012;3(5):316-8. doi: 10.1068/i0526ic. Epub 2012 May 09.

"Are Chimpanzees synaesthetic?" An affirmative answer to this question appeared recently in a Nature commentary on a study by Ludwig, Adachi, and Matzuzawa (2011) that demonstrated crossmodal correspondences in both chimpanzees and humans. Here we question the claim that...

The cognitive neuroscience of crossmodal correspondences.

i-Perception

Spence C, Parise CV.
PMID: 23145291
Iperception. 2012;3(7):410-2. doi: 10.1068/i0540ic. Epub 2012 Jun 22.

In a recent article, N. Bien, S. ten Oever, R. Goebel, and A. T. Sack (2012) used event-related potentials to investigate the consequences of crossmodal correspondences (the "natural" mapping of features, or dimensions, of experience across sensory modalities) on...

Coding of multisensory temporal patterns in human superior temporal sulcus.

Frontiers in integrative neuroscience

Noesselt T, Bergmann D, Heinze HJ, Münte T, Spence C.
PMID: 22973202
Front Integr Neurosci. 2012 Aug 28;6:64. doi: 10.3389/fnint.2012.00064. eCollection 2012.

Philosophers, psychologists, and neuroscientists have long been interested in how the temporal aspects of perception are represented in the brain. In the present study, we investigated the neural basis of the temporal perception of synchrony/asynchrony for audiovisual speech stimuli...

Care less.

BMJ (Clinical research ed.)

Spence D.
PMID: 21307116
BMJ. 2011 Feb 09;342:d877. doi: 10.1136/bmj.d877.

No abstract available.

Logic and magic in mainstream and fringe medicine.

Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine

Spence D.
PMID: 20894929
J R Soc Med. 1994 Aug;87(8):493.

No abstract available.

Training, hypnosis, and drugs: artificial synaesthesia, or artificial paradises?.

Frontiers in psychology

Deroy O, Spence C.
PMID: 24133468
Front Psychol. 2013 Oct 14;4:660. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00660. eCollection 2013.

The last few years have seen the publication of a number of studies by researchers claiming to have induced "synaesthesia," "pseudo-synaesthesia," or "synaesthesia-like" phenomena in non-synaesthetic participants. Although the intention of these studies has been to try and shed...

Showing 25 to 36 of 627 entries