Theodor Landis
University of Geneva
206 Papers
2.1K Citations
Theodor Landis is an academic researcher from University of Geneva. The author has contributed to research in topics: Visual perception & Electroencephalography. The author has an hindex of 59, co-authored 206 publications. Previous affiliations of Theodor Landis include Carnegie Mellon University & Geneva College.
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Papers
Comprehensive postictal neuropsychology improves focus localization in epilepsy.
TL;DR: It is concluded that neuropsychology can yield lateralizing and sometimes localizing information, even for extratemporal foci, if carried out during the postictal period and based on a global analysis of the clinical neuropsychological picture.
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•Journal Article
Lateralized semantic priming: modulation by levodopa, semantic distance, and participants' magical beliefs.
TL;DR: These findings speak against a general dopaminergic focusing of SSA, but one that respects each hemisphere’s specialization, and suggest that individuals’ schizotypal features are important determinants of dopamine-induced changes in hemispheric functioning.
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Clinicoanatomical correlates of a Fou rire prodromique in a pontine infarction
TL;DR: These are the first clinicoanatomical correlates integrating MRI lesion mapping with immunohistochemical studies for a serotoninergic specific enzyme of human brain stems in prodromal pathological laughter and a right pontine infarction in the territory of the paramedian branch of the basilar artery.
Hemineglect: take a look at the back space.
TL;DR: It is suggested that of the three Euclidean dimensions (up/down, left/right, and front/back), at least the latter two are modularly and separately represented in the human brain.
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Cognitive task influence on relative hemispheric motor control: Mouth asymmetry and lateral eye movements
TL;DR: While strictly verbal cognitive tasks showed a strong left-hemisphere dominance, the presence of visualization and emotion in cognitive tasks resulted in increased involvement of the right hemisphere in motor control of speech as measured by mouth asymmetry.
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