Changes in Sensory-Cognitive Input: Effects on Cerebral Blood Flow
1990 ◽
Vol 10
(1)
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pp. 38-42
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Keyword(s):
Eight healthy right-handed young men were subjected to local CBF measurement by [15O]water and positron emission tomography during partial sensory deprivation and during sensory-cognitive activation; physiological, hormonal, and subjective stress measurements were also performed. Results indicated that (a) “whole-brain” CBF increased during activation; (b) the greatest increase in CBF was in the primary visual cortex; (c) differences between hemispheres were not observed, but CBF was greater anteriorly than posteriorly in the deprivation condition only; (d) within-subject variability of CBF was not influenced by the sensory-cognitive condition; and (e) the procedure was not stressful.
1995 ◽
Vol 15
(1)
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pp. 111-114
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2001 ◽
Vol 21
(12)
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pp. 1472-1479
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2003 ◽
Vol 98
(5)
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pp. 1101-1111
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2000 ◽
Vol 92
(6)
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pp. 1009-1015
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2009 ◽
pp. 211-215
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2012 ◽
Vol 18
(3)
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pp. 264-274
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2003 ◽
Vol 54
(8)
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pp. 826-832
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1982 ◽
Vol 2
(1)
◽
pp. 89-98
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1983 ◽
pp. 107-112
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