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(NAS Colloquium) Neuroimaging of Human Brain Function (1998)
National Academy of Sciences (NAS)

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Colloquium on Neuroimaging of Human Brain Function

NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES

Colloquium Series

In 1991, the National Academy of Sciences inaugurated a series of scientific colloquia, five or six of which are scheduled each year under the guidance of the NAS Council’s Committee on Scientific Programs. Each colloquium addresses a scientific topic of broad and topical interest, cutting across two or more of the traditional disciplines. Typically two days long, colloquia are international in scope and bring together leading scientists in the field. Papers from colloquia are published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

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Front Matter (R1-R6)
Contents (R7-R8)
The neuroimaging of human brain function (1-2)
Behind the scenes of functional brain imaging: A historical and physiological perspective (3-10)
Event-related functional MRI: Past, present, and future (11-18)
Event-related brain potentials in the study of visual selective attention (19-25)
Functional and structural mapping of human cerebral cortex: Solutions are in the surfaces (26-33)
Imaging neuroscience: Principles or maps? (34-40)
Spatially independent activity patterns in functional MRI data during the Stroop color-naming task (41-48)
Functional analysis of primary visual cortex (V1) in humans (49-55)
The representation of the ipsilateral visual field in human cerebral cortex (56-62)
On the role of selective attention in visual perception (63-68)
Frontoparietal cortical networks for directing attention and the eye to visual locations: Identical, independent, or overlapping neural systems? (69-76)
Neural components of topographical representation (77-84)
The neural development and organization of letter recognition: Evidence from functional neuroimaging, computational modeling, and behavioral studies (85-90)
The effects of practice on the functional anatomy of task performance (91-98)
The acquisition of skilled motor performance: Fast and slow experience-driven changes in primary motor cortex (99-106)
Rapidly induced auditory plasticity: The ventriloquism aftereffect (107-113)
Components of verbal working memory: Evidence from neuroimaging (114-120)
A neural system for human visual working memory (121-128)
Functional neuroimaging studies of encoding, priming, and explicit memory retrieval (129-136)
Anatomy of word and sentence meaning (137-143)
The role of left prefrontal corex in language and memory (144-151)
Neuroimaging studies of word reading (152-159)
Cerebral organization for langague in deaf and hearing subjects: Biological constraints and effects of experience (160-167)