Neomi Singer
Tel Aviv University
17 Papers
54 Citations
Neomi Singer is an academic researcher from Tel Aviv University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ventral striatum & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 11 publications. Previous affiliations of Neomi Singer include Weizmann Institute of Science & Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center.
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Papers
Surprise-related activation in the nucleus accumbens interacts with music-induced pleasantness
Ofir Shany,Neomi Singer,Benjamin P. Gold,Nori Jacoby,Ricardo Tarrasch,Talma Hendler,Roni Y. Granot +6 more
TL;DR: For instance, the authors found that musical surprise was associated with changes in reported valence and arousal, as well as with enhanced activation in the auditory cortex, insula and ventral striatum, relative to unsurprising events.
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Is there a prediction network? Meta-analytic evidence for a cortical-subcortical network likely subserving prediction.
Tali Siman-Tov,Tali Siman-Tov,Roni Y. Granot,Ofir Shany,Neomi Singer,Talma Hendler,Carlos R. Gordon +6 more
TL;DR: A widely distributed brain network encompassing regions within the inferior and middle frontal gyri, anterior insula, premotor cortex, pre-supplementary motor area, temporoparietal junction, striatum, thalamus/subthalamus and the cerebellum is revealed and its relevance to motor control, attention, implicit learning and social cognition is discussed.
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Music engagement is negatively correlated with depressive symptoms during the COVID‐19 pandemic via reward‐related mechanisms
Ernest Mas-Herrero,Neomi Singer,Laura Ferreri,Michael McPhee,Robert J. Zatorre,Pablo Ripollés +5 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors assessed which of many leisure activities correlated with positive mental health outputs, with particular attention to music, which has been reported to be important for coping with the psychological burden of the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Through the Eyes of Anxiety: Dissecting Threat Bias via Emotional-Binocular Rivalry
TL;DR: The findings indicate that anxiety disorders commonly involve an initially enhanced selection of threat signals into awareness, followed by disorder-specific manifestation of diminished preferred maintenance of threat in awareness.
Feeling without seeing? engagement of ventral, but not dorsal, amygdala during unaware exposure to emotional faces
Yulia Lerner,Neomi Singer,Tal Gonen,Yonatan Weintraub,Oded Cohen,Nava Rubin,Leslie G. Ungerleider,Talma Hendler +7 more
TL;DR: A binocular rivalry procedure revealed an interesting dissociation in the amygdala during rivalry condition, pointing to a differential involvement of two clusters within the amygdala and their connected networks in naturally occurring perceptual biases of emotional content in faces.
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