You are on page 1of 12

HBM 2009 Oral Sessions

FRIDAY, JUNE 19, 2009


17:15 - 18:30

ORAL SESSIONS
Oral session presentations are chosen by the Program Committee from submitted abstracts using criteria of
quality and timeliness; a wide spectrum of investigative is represented.
Yerba Buena Ballroom, Salons 7-8 (Lower B2 Level)
O-F1 Cognition & Attention: Attention
Chair: Jim Haxby, Department of Psychology and Brain Sciences, Center for Cognitive Neuroscience,
Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH, USA
17:15

73 F-AM: Spatial Selection of Features within Perceived and Remembered Objects


Duncan Astle, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK

17:30

55 F-AM: Perceptual Learning Modifies Resting Directional Interaction between Visual


Cortex and Dorsal Attention Network
Chris Lewis, Institute for Advanced Biomedical Technologies, Chieti, Italy

17:45

28 F-PM: Attention Reduces Variability of Goal-Relevant Perceptual Representations within


Visual Association Cortex
Shawn Song, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA

18:00

21 F-AM: Facilitation and Inhibition Mechanisms in Auditory Selective Attention: Scalp


EEG and ECoG Data
Aurlie Bidet-Caulet, Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute, University of California, Berkeley,
Berkeley, CA, USA

18:15

23 F-AM: Dynamic Large-Scale Cortical Networks for Complex Auditory Tasks Identified
with MEG
Gregory Simpson, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA

Yerba Buena Ballroom, Salons 1-6 (Lower B2 Level)


O-F2 Modeling & Analysis: Neuroinformatics
Chair: Martin Lindquist, Department of Statistics, Columbia University, New York, NY, USA
17:15

296 M-PM: NIPY: An Open Library and Development Framework for FMRI Data Analysis
Matthew Brett, Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute, University of California, Berkeley, CA,
United States

17:30

426 SU-PM: Brain Connectivity Toolbox: A Collection of Complex Network Measurements


and Brain Connectivity Datasets
Mikail Rubinov, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia

17:45

222 SU-PM: BrainVISA: An Extensible Software Environment for Sharing Multimodal


Neuroimaging Data and Processing Tools
Denis Rivire, IFR 49, Gif-sur-Yvette, France

18:00

290 F-PM: Neuroelectromagnetic Forward Modeling Toolbox


Zeynep Akalin Acar, University of California San Diego, San Diego, CA, USA

18:15

495 F-AM A Toolbox for the Visualization and Meta-Analysis of Functional Brain

Organization of the Cortical Surface Using an Anatomical Database.


Timothy Herron, Neurology, Veterans Affairs, Martinez, CA, USA
Yerba Buena Ballroom, Salons 10-15 (Lower B2 Level)
O-F3 Psychiatric Disorders
Chair: Karen Berman, National Institutes of Health, NIMH, Bethesda, MD, USA
17:15

188 F-PM: Classification Methods for Identifying the Neural Characteristics of


Antidepressant Treatment
Shuo Chen, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA

17:30

89 F-AM: Cingulate and Insula Activity Predict Relapse in Recovering Stimulant Addicts
Vincent Clark, Mind Research Network, Albuquerque, NM, USA

17:45

187 F-AM: Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI) Demonstrates that Prefrontal-Amygdala


White-Matter Tracts Relate to Anxious Temperament and Amygdala Metabolism
Andrew Fox, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USA

18:00

435 SU-AM: An fMRI Functional Connectivity Study of Face Perception System in Social
Phobic Patients and Healthy Controls
Sabrina Danti, Department of Human and Environmental Sciences, University of Pisa, Pisa, Italy
218 F-PM: Relationship Between Depression and Anxiety and Visual Processing in Body
Dysmorphic Disorder
Jamie Feusner, UCLA Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior, Los Angeles, CA,
USA

18:15

SATURDAY, JUNE 20, 2009


9:30 - 10:45

ORAL SESSIONS
Oral session presentations are chosen by the Program Committee from submitted abstracts using criteria of
quality and timeliness; a wide spectrum of investigative is represented.
Yerba Buena Ballroom, Salons 7-8 (Lower B2 Level)
O-SA1 Memory & Learning
Chair: Charan Ranganath, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA, USA
9:30

332 F-PM: Early Parietal Response in Episodic Retrieval Revealed with MEG
Tyler Seibert, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA

9:45

342 F-PM: Memory Consolidation Increases the Involvement Of and the Connectivity
Between Neocortical Memory Areas; an MEG study
Ingrid Nieuwenhuis, Radboud University, Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour,
Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging, Nijmegen, Netherlands

10:00

331 SU-AM: Practice Induces a Gradual Decline in Cognitive Control; an fMRI-guided


TMS Study
Tamar Van Raalten, Rudolf Magnus Institute of Neuroscience, Department of Neurology and
Neurosurgery, University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands

10:15

365 F-AM: Striatal Prediction Error Activity Drives Cortical Connectivity Changes During
Associative Learning
Hanneke den Ouden, Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging, UCL, London, UK

10:30

374 F-PM: High Resolution MRI of Enriched Environment Induced Brain Changes
Ory Levy, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel

Yerba Buena Ballroom, Salons 1-6 (Lower B2 Level)


O-SA2 Neurological Disorders 1
Chair: Stephane Lehericy, Department of Neuroradiology, Center for Neuroimaging Research, PitiSalptrire Hospital, Paris, France
9:30

170 SA-PM: Neural Response and Gambling Strategies Differ Between Parkinsons Disease
Patients With and Without Impulse Control Disorders: An fMRI Study
Crystal Erickson, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada

9:45

162 SA-PM: Release Your Horses: Deep Brain Stimulation of the Subthalamic Nucleus
Improves Motor Functions at the Expense of Response Inhibition. A H215O PET Study
Antonio Strafella, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada

10:00

194 SA-PM: Effects of Low Frequency rTMS on Cortical Connectivity in Stroke Patients
Assessed with fMRI and Dynamic Causal Modeling
Christian Grefkes, Neuromodulation & Neurorehabilitation, Max Planck Institute for Neurological
Research, Cologne, Germany

10:15

205 SA-AM: Behavioral and Neural Effects of Bihemispheric Brain Stimulation on Stroke
Recovery
Robert Lindenberg, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA,
USA

10:30

210 SA-PM: Dynamics of Language Reorganization in Left Temporal Stroke


Dorothee Saur, Neurology, University Medical Center, Freiburg, Germany

Yerba Buena Ballroom, Salons 10-15 (Lower B2 Level)


O-SA3 Modeling & Analysis: Computational Neuroanatomy
Chair: Bruce Fischl, MGH, Boston, MA, USA

17:45 - 19:00

9:30

381 SA-AM: Disco: DIffeomorphic Sulcal-Based COrtical Registration


Guillaume Auzias, Cognitive Neuroscience & Brain Imaging Laboratory, CNRS UPR 640
LENA, Hpital de la Salptrire, UPMC Univ. Paris6, Paris, France

9:45

364 SA-PM: Segmenting the Subregions of the Human Hippocampus at 7 Tesla


Marie Chupin, UPMC Paris6, UMR S975 CNRS, Paris, France

10:00

504 F-PM: Automatic Model-Based Fetal Brain Parcellation to Quantify In Vivo Fetal Brain
Development
Nicolas Guizard, Pediatric Neurology Montreal Children Hospital, Montreal, QC, Canada

10:15

375 SA-AM: Modeling the Relationship between Cortical Geometry and Cytoarchitectonics
via Image Registration
Thomas Yeo, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, USA

10:30

388 SA-PM: Creating Functional Probabilistic Maps Using Structurally and Functionally
Driven Multi-Subject Alignment
Martin Frost, Department of Cognitive Neuroscience, Faculty of Psychology and Neuroscience,
Maastricht, Netherlands

ORAL SESSIONS
Oral session presentations are chosen by the Program Committee from submitted abstracts using criteria of
quality and timeliness; a wide spectrum of investigative is represented.
Yerba Buena Ballroom, Salons 7-8 (Lower B2 Level)
O-SA4 Sensory Systems
Chair: Emiliano Ricciardi, Laboratory of Clinical Biochemistry, University of Pisa, Pisa, Italy
17:45

570 F-PM: Comparison of fMRI Responses to Noxious and Innocuous Stimuli in the Human
Spinal Cord
Carlo A. Porro, University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Modena, Italy, University of Oxford,
Oxford, UK

18:00

616 SA-PM: Parietal TMS Reveals Excitatory Interhemispheric Interactions During


Somatosensory Processing
Neir Eshel, UCL Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, University College London, London, UK

18:15

592 F-PM: The Processing of Internally-Generated Interoceptive Sensation


Craig Bennett, University of California, Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA, USA

18:30

615 F-AM: Visualizing Internal Representations from Behavioral and Brain Imaging Data
Marie Smith, MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, Cambridge, UK

18:45

652 F-PM: Population Receptive Fields: Optimizing Stimuli for Mapping Different Cortical
Regions

Rory Sayres, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA


Yerba Buena Ballroom, Salons 1-6 (Lower B2 Level)
O-SA5 Emotion Motivation: Reward
Chair: Sam McClure, Department of Pyschology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA
17:45

139 SU-AM: Parsing the Role of Dopamine in Human Reward and its Cognitive
Consequences Using Genetic Imaging
Esther Aarts, Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Nijmegen, Netherlands

18:00

148 SU-PM: The Rewarding Aspects of Music Listening Involve the Dopaminergic Striatal
Reward Systems of the Brain: An Investigation with [C11]Raclopride PET and fMRI
Valorie Salimpoor, Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada

18:15

168 SU-PM: Striatal Prediction Error Activity in Dopamine Agonist-induced Compulsive


Behaviors
Valerie Voon, NINDS/NIH, Bethesda, MD, USA

18:30

166 SU-PM: Subgenual Cingulate Dopamine Release Predicts Reduced Positive Affect
Following Amphetamine
Michael Treadway, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, USA

18:45

151 SU-AM: Nicotine Does Not Differentially Affect the Valence-Dependent Striatal
Response to Rewarding and Punishing Monetary Outcomes
Emma Rose, NIDA-IRP, Baltimore, MD, USA

Yerba Buena Ballroom, Salons 10-15 (Lower B2 Level)


O-SA6 Neuroanatomy
Chair: Jean-Francois Mangin, Service Hospitalier Frdric Joliot, Commissariat l'Energie Atomique,
Orsay Cedex, France
17:45

249 SU-AM: Visualization of Fiber Tracts in the Postmortem Human Brain by Means of
Polarized Light
Marcus Axer, Institute of Neurosciences and Medicine, INM-3, Research Center Jlich, Jlich,
Germany

18:00

526 SA-PM: Multi-Subject Diffusion MRI Tractography via a Hough Transform Global
Approach
Iman Aganj, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Minnesota,
Minneapolis, MN, USA

18:15

519 SA-AM: White Matter Imaging with Virtual Klingler Dissection


Alfred Anwander, Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig,
Germany

18:30

523 SA-AM: Multivariate Diffeomorphic Analysis of Longitudinal Increase in White Matter


Directionality and Decrease in Cortical Thickness between Ages 14 and 18
Brian Avants, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA

18:45

580 SU-PM: Imaging of Cortical Layers with Inversion Recovery MRI'


Daniel Barazany, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel

SUNDAY, JUNE 21, 2009


9:30 - 10:45

ORAL SESSIONS
Oral session presentations are chosen by the Program Committee from submitted abstracts using criteria of
quality and timeliness; a wide spectrum of investigative is represented.
Yerba Buena Ballroom, Salons 7-8 (Lower B2 Level)
O-SU1 Cognition & Attention: Perception, Imagery, and Awareness
Chair: Alumit Ishai, Institute of Neuroradiology, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
9:30

43 SU-AM: Within- and Between-Networks Resting State fMRI Connectivity Reflects the
Level of Consciousness During Anesthesia
Pierre Boveroux, Coma Science Group, Cyclotron Research Center, University of Lige, Lige,
Belgium

9:45

10 SU-PM: Antagonistic Contributions of Distributed Ongoing Activity Fluctuations to


Auditory Stimulus Detection
Sepideh Sadaghiani, INSERM, CEA/DSV/I2BM, NeuroSpin, Gif-sur-Yvette, France

10:00

4 SU-PM: Taking up a dialogue' with the Brain: Automated Letter Decoding from SingleTrial BOLD Responses in Real-Time
Bettina Sorger, Faculty of Psychology and Neuroscience, Maastricht University, Maastricht,
Netherlands

10:15

34 SU-PM: Visible is Fast: Human Intracranial Recordings Reveal Early Sweep of


Conscious Perception in Medial Temporal Gyrus
Juan Vidal, INSERM U821, Lyon, France

10:30

30 SU-PM: Spatially and Frequency Specific Biasing of Visual Detection Through Rhythmic
TMS over Occipito-Parietal Sites: Preliminary Evidence for a Causal Role of Posterior
Alpha-Oscillations in Sensory Selection
Gregor Thut, Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging (CCNi), Department of Psychology, University
of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK

Yerba Buena Ballroom, Salons 1-6 (Lower B2 Level)


O-SU2 Neurological Disorders 2
Chair: Elizabeth Sowell, David Geffen School of Medicine, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, USA
9:30

147 F-AM: Early Detection of Focal Cortical Gyration Anomalies: Prenatal MR Imaging
Andrea Righini, Childrens Hospital V. Buzzi, Milan, Italy

9:45

172 F-PM: Visuospatial Processing in Relation to Gray Matter Volume of the Parietal Lobe
in a Neurodevelopmental Disease with Model Function
Miriam Sach, University of California San Diego, Deptartment of Neuroscience, San Diego, CA,
USA

10:00

128 SA-PM: Impaired Small-World Structural Brain Networks in Chronic Epilepsy


Maarten Vaessen, Department of Radiology, Maastricht University Medical Centre, Maastricht,
Netherlands

10:15

123 SA-AM: Structural and Functional Brain Changes in Asymptomatic Individuals at


Genetic Risk for Alzheimers Disease
Susan Bassett, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA

10:30

101 SA-AM: Amyloid Aggregations and Tau Pathology Reflected by Cortical Thickness in
the Default Network of MCI and AD
Tianzi Jiang, LIAMA Center for Computational Medicine, National Laboratory of Pattern
Recognition, Institute of Automation, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, Peoples Republic of
China

Yerba Buena Ballroom, Salons 10-15 (Lower B2 Level)


O-SU3 Modeling & Analysis: Brain Connectivity
Chair: Anthony McIntosh, Rotman Research Institute of Baycrest Centre, Toronto, ON, Canada

17:15 - 18:30

9:30

386 SU-PM: FMRI Dynamic Causal Modelling with Inferred Regions of Interest
Mark Woolrich, FMRIB Centre, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK

9:45

385 SU-AM: A Simulation Study Validating DCM using POSSUM Generated Data
Bjorn Roelstraete, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium

10:00

415 SU-AM: Segregated Cerebellar-Cortical Circuits Revealed by Intrinsic Functional


Connectivity
Fenna Krienen, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA

10:15

430 SU-PM: Integration and Comparison of Resting-state Functional and Structural


Connectivity Analyses of Human Brain
David Zhu, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, USA

10:30

444 SA-PM: Assessing EEG Spectral Comodulation in a Realistic Driving Experiment using
Independent Components Analysis
Li-Wei Ko, National Chiao Tung University, Hsinchu, Taiwan

ORAL SESSIONS
Oral session presentations are chosen by the Program Committee from submitted abstracts using criteria of
quality and timeliness; a wide spectrum of investigative is represented.
Yerba Buena Ballroom, Salons 7-8 (Lower B2 Level)
O-SU4 Language
Chair: Steve Small, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA
17:15

253 SA-AM: Functional Networks in the Infant Brain Activated by Presentation of Spoken
Sentences
Fumitaka Homae, Department of Language Sciences, Tokyo Metropolitan University, Tokyo,
Japan

17:30

272 SA-PM: Scanning Speech: Semantic, Lexical and Syntactic Repetition Suppression in
Sentence Production
Laura Menenti, Radboud University Nijmegen, Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and
Behaviour, Nijmegen, Netherlands

17:45

277 SA-AM: From Hand to Mouth: Verb Embodiment in Action Naming


Dirk Den Ouden, Aphasia and Neurolinguistics Research Laboratory, Department of
Communication Sciences and Disorders, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA

18:00

289 SU-AM: Damage to Dorsal and Ventral Frontotemporal White Matter Pathways
Impairs Syntactic Aspects of Language Comprehension: A DTI Tractography Study
John Griffiths, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK

18:15

289 SA-AM: An Investigation of Verbal Fluency Network Changes Following Temporal


Lobectomy for Epilepsy
Joseph Tracy, Thomas Jefferson University/Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, PA,
USA

Yerba Buena Ballroom, Salons 1-6 (Lower B2 Level)


O-SU5 Imaging Techniques & Contrast Mechanism: Structure
Chair: Karin Shmueli, National Institutes of Mental Health, Bethesda, MD, USA
17:15

240 F-PM: R2* Variations within Grey and White Matter Correlate with Histochemical
Iron Stain of the Human Brain
Masaki Fukunaga, Advanced MRI/LFMI/NINDS/National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD,
USA

17:30

254 F-PM: High Resolution Diffusion-Weighted Imaging in Human at 7T


Robin Heidemann, Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig,
Germany

17:45

239 F-AM: Fast Whole-Brain T1 Mapping at 1 mm Resolution with RF Bias Correction


Antoine Lutti, Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging, UCL Institute of Neurology, UCL,
London, UK

18:00

230 SU-PM: Bound Pool Fractions Complement Diffusion Measurements in Characterizing


White Matter Pathways
Nikola Stikov, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA

18:15

224 F-PM: Multi-Site Single-Subject t1-Weighted Phantom Reveals How Tissue-Specific


Non-Biological Intensity Non-Uniformity Biases Tissue Segmentation in SPM5 and CIVET
Oliver Lyttelton, McConnell Brain Imaging Center, McGill University , Montreal, QC, Canada

Yerba Buena Ballroom, Salons 10-15 (Lower B2 Level)


O-SU6 Modeling & Analysis: Machine Learning
Chair: Janaina Mourao-Miranda, Centre for NeuroImaging Sciences, Institute of Psychiatry, De Crespigny
Park, London, UK
17:15

450 F-PM: Particle Swarm Voxel Clustering for Multivariate fMRI Mapping
Malin Bjrnsdotter berg, Institute of Neuroscience and Physiology, Goteborg, Sweden

17:30

345 SU-AM: Multivariate Bayesian Decoding of Multiple States


Adrian Groves, FMRIB Centre, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK

17:45

402 SA-PM: A Novel Test Statistic for Local Canonical Correlation Analysis of fMRI Data
Mingwu Jin, University of Colorado Denver, Aurora, CO, USA

18:00

363 SU-AM: Sparse Bayesian Methods for Neuroimaging


David Wipf, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA

18:15

462 F-PM: Disease State Prediction from Resting State FMRI


Richard Craddock, School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Georgia Institute of
Technology, Atlanta, GA, USA

MONDAY, JUNE 22, 2009


9:30 - 10:45

ORAL SESSIONS
Oral session presentations are chosen by the Program Committee from submitted abstracts using criteria of
quality and timeliness; a wide spectrum of investigative is represented.
Yerba Buena Ballroom, Salon 7 (Lower B2 Level)
O-M1 Cognition & Attention: Executive Function
Chair: Jean-Claude Dreher, Centre de Neurosciences Cognitives, Bron, France
9:30

79 M-AM: Motivational Incentives Underlying Human Intentions in the Prefrontal Cortex


Sylvain Charron, Institut National de la Sant et de la Recherche Mdicale - cole Normale
Suprieure, Paris, France

9:45

13 M-AM: Top-Down Modulation of Task-Relevant Perceptual Brain Areas After Errors


Claudia Danielmeier, Max Planck Institute for Neurological Research, Cologne, Germany

10:00

66 M-PM: Individual Differences in Cognition: How a Persons Hormonal State and Genetic
Background Impacts Prefrontal Cortical Function
Emily Jacobs, UC Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, USA

10:15

72 M-PM: Dopaminergic Regulation of Flexible Switching Processes in the Lateral


Prefrontal Cortex
Christine Stelzel, Departments of Psychology, Neurology and Neuroradiology, University of
Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany

10:30

87 M-AM: Intracranial EEG Shows Primary Motor and Prefrontal Signatures of Stop
Signal Response Inhibition
Nicole Swann, Neuroscience Department, University of California, San Diego, San Diego, CA,
USA

Yerba Buena Ballroom, Salon 1-6 (Lower B2 Level)


O-M2 Emotion & Motivation: Emotion Perception
Chair: Tor Wager, Department of Psychology, Columbia University, New York, NY, USA
9:30

155 M-AM: Neural Correlates of Olfactory-Visual Interactions in Emotion Processing


Janina Seubert, Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, RWTH Aachen University,
Aachen, Germany

9:45

217 M-AM: A Representation of Self as Revealed via Priming of Self-Esteem: Effects on


Responses to Error
Sara Bengtsson, Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging, University College London, London,
UK

10:00

146 M-PM: Early Visual Sensitivity to Diagnostic Information During the Processing of
Facial Expressions
Lucy Petro, Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging, Department of Psychology, University of
Glasgow, Glasgow, UK

10:15

130 M-PM: Audiovisual Integration of Emotional Information: A Magnetoencephalography


(MEG) Study
Yu-Han Chen, Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, RWTH Aachen University, Aachen,
Germany

10:30

166 M-PM: Regional Brain Synchronization During Natural Viewing of Aversive Movies
Predicts Physiological Stress Responses: A Model-Free fMRI Approach
Erno Hermans, Radboud University Nijmegen, Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and
Behaviour, Nijmegen, Netherlands

Nob Hill A-D (Lower B2 Level)


O-M3 Imaging Techniques & Contrast Mechanism: Function
Chair: Krish Singh, School of Psychology, Cardiff University, Cardiff, UK

15:00 - 16:15

9:30

511 SU-AM: BOLD Imaging of Inhibition and Facilitation Induced by Paired-Pulse


Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation: Feasibility and Reproducibility
Jrgen Baudewig, University of Goettingen, Goettingen, Germany

9:45

224 SU-PM: Investigating the Neurophysiology of the Human BOLD fMRI Signal During a
Visual Attention Task with Simultaneously Recorded EEG and fMRI
Ren Scheeringa, Radboud University Nijmegen, Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and
Behaviour, Nijmegen, Netherlands

10:00

239 SU-AM: High-Density Diffuse Optical Imaging Improves Brain-Specificity and


Resolution of Functional Neuroimaging
Brian White, Department of Radiology, Washington University, St. Louis, MO, USA

10:15

246 M-PM: Morphine and Ethanol Alter Functional Connectivity of the Brain At Rest
Evelinda Baerends, Leiden University Medical Centre, Deptartment of Radiology, Leiden,
Netherlands

10:30

248 SU-PM: Using MR Spectroscopy to Measure Cortical Changes in a Pharmacological


Agent in Real-Time
John VanMeter, Center for Functional and Molecular Imaging, Georgetown University Medical
Center, Washington, DC, USA

ORAL SESSIONS
Oral session presentations are chosen by the Program Committee from submitted abstracts using criteria of
quality and timeliness; a wide spectrum of investigative is represented.
Yerba Buena Ballroom, Salon 7 (Lower B2 Level)
O-M4 Emotion & Motivation: Decision Making and Social Behavior
Chair: Hauke Heekeren, Berlin NeuroImaging Center, Berlin, Germany
15:00

200 M-PM: Anterior Cingulate Cortex: Monitoring the Outcomes of Others' Decisions
Matthew Apps, Royal Holloway University of London, London, UK

15:15

224 SA-PM: Distinct Neural Correlates for the Processing of Magnitude, Probability and
Uncertainty of Potential Monetary Wins and Losses
Nicola Canessa, 1Universit Vita-Salute San Raffaele, Milan, Italy

15:30

204 M-PM: Neural Substrates of Controlled and Automatic Processes Involved in Empathy
for Pain
Xiaosi Gu, Department of Neuroscience, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY, USA

15:45

216 SA-PM: The Neurobiology of Reference-Dependent Value Computation


Benedetto De Martino, Caltech, Pasadena, CA, USA

16:00

233 SA-AM: Early EEG Signals Predict Choices Several Seconds Before They Are Made:
Further Evidence for Unconscious Determinants of "Free" Decisions
Thomas Christophel, Bernstein Center for Computational Neuroscience, Berlin, Germany

Yerba Buena Ballroom, Salon 1-6 (Lower B2 Level)


O-M5 Motor Behavior
Chair: Marie-Helene Grosbras, Department of Psychology, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, Scotland, UK
15:00

477 SU-AM: Near-Infrared Imaging of Changes in Cortical Activation During Motor


Sequence Learning
Benjamin Schmidt, University of Pittsburgh Department of Bioengineering, Pittsburgh, PA,
USA

15:15

497 SU-AM: Probing Ipsilateral Connectivity Between Dorsal Premotor and Motor Cortex
at High Temporal Resolution with Dual-Site TMS
Sergiu Groppa, Christian Albrechts University, Department of Neurology, Kiel , Germany

15:30

476 SA-PM: Disruption of Cerebellar-Thalamo-Cortical Connections Correlate Closely with


Motor Activation
Miklos Argyelan, Center for Neuroscience, Feinstein Institute for Medical Research, Manhasset,
NY, USA

15:45

488 SA-PM: High Gamma Parietal and Prefrontal Activity During Saccade Decision and
Preparation Revealed by Depth Electrode Recordings in Humans
Karim Jerbi, INSERM U821, Brain Dynamics and Cognition, Lyon, France

16:00

531 SU-AM: Developmental Tuning and Decay in Senescence of Oscillations Linking the
Corticomotoneuronal System
Sara Graziadio, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK

Nob Hill A-D (Lower B2 Level


O-M6 Genetics
Chair: JB Poline, Neurospin, CEA, Gif-Sur-Yvette, France
15:00

189 SU-AM: Mapping Genetic Influences on Brain Fiber Architecture and Intellectual
Performance - A High Angular Resolution Diffusion Imaging (HARDI) Study
Ming-Chang Chiang, Laboratory of Neuro Imaging, Department of Neurology, UCLA School of
Medicine, Los Angeles, CA, USA

15:15

173 SU-AM: Genetics of DTI-Derived Parameters of Cerebral White Matter. A Track-Based


Heritability and Linkage Study in Extended Pedigree
Peter Kochunov, Research Imaging Center, University of Texas Health Science Center at San
Antonio, San Antonio, TX, USA

15:30

186 SU-PM: The COMT Val158Met Polymorphism and Temporal Lobe Volumetry in
Patients with Schizophrenia and Healthy Adults
Stefan Ehrlich, Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical
School, Charlestown, MA, USA

15:45

204 SU-PM: New Method for Using Tagging Imaging Genetic Phenotypes to Validate
Proline Cycle Genes Associated with Risk and Protection for Schizophrenia
Lucas Kempf, Genes, Cognition and Psychosis Program, National Institute of Mental Health, NIH,
Bethesda, MD, USA

16:00

201 SU-AM: Building an Imaging Genomic Browsing System for Examining Genetic Effects
on Brain
Li Shen, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN, USA

You might also like