Roman Kessler
University of Marburg
8 Papers
4 Citations
Roman Kessler is an academic researcher from University of Marburg. The author has contributed to research in topics: Functional magnetic resonance imaging & Fusiform face area. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 8 publications. Previous affiliations of Roman Kessler include University of Giessen.
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Papers
Long-Term Neuroanatomical Consequences of Childhood Maltreatment: Reduced Amygdala Inhibition by Medial Prefrontal Cortex.
Roman Kessler,Roman Kessler,Simon Schmitt,Simon Schmitt,Torsten Sauder,Frederike Stein,Frederike Stein,Dilara Yüksel,Dilara Yüksel,Dominik Grotegerd,Udo Dannlowski,Tim Hahn,Astrid Dempfle,Jens Sommer,Jens Sommer,Olaf Steinsträter,Olaf Steinsträter,Igor Nenadic,Igor Nenadic,Tilo Kircher,Tilo Kircher,Andreas Jansen,Andreas Jansen +22 more
TL;DR: A mechanistic explanation for the amygdala hyperactivity in subjects with particular risk for depression, in particular childhood maltreatment, is proposed, caused by a malfunctioned amygdala downregulation via the medial prefrontal cortex.
The Trajectory of Hemispheric Lateralization in the Core System of Face Processing: A Cross-Sectional Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Pilot Study.
Franziska E. Hildesheim,Franziska E. Hildesheim,Isabell Debus,Isabell Debus,Roman Kessler,Roman Kessler,Ina Thome,Ina Thome,Kristin M. Zimmermann,Kristin M. Zimmermann,Olaf Steinsträter,Olaf Steinsträter,Jens Sommer,Jens Sommer,Inge Kamp-Becker,Inge Kamp-Becker,Rudolf Stark,Andreas Jansen,Andreas Jansen +18 more
TL;DR: An fMRI paradigm suitable for assessing activation in the core system of face processing in young children at the single subject level is established and a trend for increased lateralization in adults is shown.
Fingerprints, forever young?
Roman Kessler,Olaf Henniger,Christoph Busch +2 more
- 10 Jan 2021
TL;DR: In this paper, a hierarchical linear model was used to delineate mated similarity scores as a function of fingerprint quality and the time interval between reference and probe images, and the results showed that the fingerprint as a biometric characteristic and the features extracted from it do not change over the adult life span.
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Revisiting the effective connectivity within the distributed cortical network for face perception
Roman Kessler,Kristin M. Rusch,Kristin M. Rusch,Kim C. Wende,Kim C. Wende,Verena Schuster,Verena Schuster,Andreas Jansen +7 more
- 01 Dec 2021
TL;DR: A conceptual replication of Fairhall and Ishai's 2007 model of the core system of face perception is conducted using four different functional magnetic resonance imaging data sets and the resulting model is revised, proposing that it is a suitable working model for further studies assessing the functional interaction within the core System of Face perception.
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"I Spy with my Little Eye, Something that is a Face…": A Brain Network for Illusory Face Detection.
Ina Thome,Ina Thome,Daniela Michelle Hohmann,Daniela Michelle Hohmann,Kristin M. Zimmermann,Kristin M. Zimmermann,Kristin M. Zimmermann,Marie L. Smith,Roman Kessler,Roman Kessler,Andreas Jansen,Andreas Jansen +11 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a functional magnetic resonance imaging (FMRI) study showed that illusory face perception is caused by matching high-dimensional sensory input with internal face templates, achieved through a top-down mediated coupling between prefrontal regions and brain areas in the ventral temporal cortex.
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