André Tadi's scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Table 1 Studies included in the meta-analysis
Table 2 Stimulus material of the included studies
Table 3 Regions with significant activation during phonematic verbal fluency tasks
Table 4 Regions with significant activation during semantic verbal fluency tasks
PRISMA flow chart of the literature search.

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A coordinate-based ALE functional MRI meta-analysis of brain activation during verbal fluency tasks in healthy control subjects
  • Article
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January 2014

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372 Reads

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173 Citations

BMC Neuroscience

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André Tadi

The processing of verbal fluency tasks relies on the coordinated activity of a number of brain areas, particularly in the frontal and temporal lobes of the left hemisphere. Recent studies using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to study the neural networks subserving verbal fluency functions have yielded divergent results especially with respect to a parcellation of the inferior frontal gyrus for phonemic and semantic verbal fluency. We conducted a coordinate-based activation likelihood estimation (ALE) meta-analysis on brain activation during the processing of phonemic and semantic verbal fluency tasks involving 28 individual studies with 490 healthy volunteers. For phonemic as well as for semantic verbal fluency, the most prominent clusters of brain activation were found in the left inferior/middle frontal gyrus (LIFG/MIFG) and the anterior cingulate gyrus. BA 44 was only involved in the processing of phonemic verbal fluency tasks, BA 45 and 47 in the processing of phonemic and semantic fluency tasks. Our comparison of brain activation during the execution of either phonemic or semantic verbal fluency tasks revealed evidence for spatially different activation in BA 44, but not other regions of the LIFG/LMFG (BA 9, 45, 47) during phonemic and semantic verbal fluency processing.

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Citations (1)


... See Fig. 1 for more details. As previously recommended, such adaptation of the neuropsychological test for the magnetic resonance environment aimed to prioritize or isolate functions related to the SVF task (Binder et al. 2009;Wagner et al. 2014a). ...

Reference:

Functional and Effective Connectivity Underlying Semantic Verbal Fluency
A coordinate-based ALE functional MRI meta-analysis of brain activation during verbal fluency tasks in healthy control subjects

BMC Neuroscience