Adam Hampshire

Publication List Details

Period

2006 - 2008

Number

7

Co-Authors

Neurobiology of Disease Catechol O-Methyltransferase val 158 met Genotype Influences Frontoparietal Activity during Planning in Patients with Parkinson’s Disease (2008)

Adam Hampshire, Trevor W. Robbins, Adrian M. Owen, Roger A. Barker

Cognitive dysfunction commonly occurs even in the early stages of Parkinson’s disease (PD). Impairment on frontostriatally based executive tasks is particularly well described but affects only a...

Attentional control in Parkinson's disease is dependent on COMT val158met genotype (2008)

Williams-Gray, Caroline H., Hampshire, Adam, Barker, Roger A., Owen, Adrian M.

Cognitive deficits occur even in the earliest stages of Parkinson's disease. Some such deficits are known to relate to dysfunction in dopaminergic frontostriatal networks, and may be influenced by a...

Fractionating Attentional Control Using Event-Related fMRI (2006)

Hampshire, Adam, Owen, Adrian M.

Despite numerous functional neuroimaging and lesion studies of human executive function, the precise neuroanatomical correlates of specific components of attentional control remain controversial....

Fractionating Attentional Control Using Event-Related fMRI (2006)

Hampshire, Adam, Owen, Adrian M.

Despite numerous functional neuroimaging and lesion studies of human executive function, the precise neuroanatomical correlates of specific components of attentional control remain controversial....

Fractionating Attentional Control Using Event-Related fMRI (2006)

Hampshire, Adam, Owen, Adrian M.

Despite numerous functional neuroimaging and lesion studies of human executive function, the precise neuroanatomical correlates of specific components of attentional control remain controversial....

The Target Selective Neural Response — Similarity, Ambiguity, and Learning Effects

Hampshire, Adam, Thompson, Russell, Duncan, John, Owen, Adrian M.

A network of frontal and parietal brain regions is commonly recruited during tasks that require the deliberate ‘top-down’ control of thought and action. Previously, using simple target detection,...

Connectivity from the ventral anterior cingulate to the amygdala is modulated by appetitive motivation in response to facial signals of aggression

Passamonti, Luca, Rowe, James B., Ewbank, Michael, Hampshire, Adam, Keane, Jill, Calder, Andrew J.

For some people facial expressions of aggression are intimidating, for others they are perceived as provocative, evoking an aggressive response. Identifying the key neurobiological factors that...