By definition, lying involves withholding the truth. Response inhibition may therefore be the cognitive function at the heart of deception. Neuroimaging research has shown that the same brain region that is activated during response inhibition tasks, namely the inferior frontal region, is also activated during deception paradigms. This led to the hypothesis that the inferior frontal region is the neural substrate critically involved in withholding the truth. In the present study, we critically examine the functional necessity of the inferior frontal region in withholding the truth during deception. We experimentally manipulated the neural activity level in right inferior frontal sulcus (IFS) by means of neuronavigated continuous theta-burst...
Deception is a foundational part of everyday interactions, and everyone will be deceived and will be...
Communication based on informational asymmetries abounds in politics, business, and almost any other...
Deception is a cognitive-demanding process that entails more than one executive function and is thus...
By definition, lying involves withholding the truth. Response inhibition may therefore be the cognit...
Background. By definition, lying involves withholding the truth. Response inhibition may therefore b...
10noLies are intentional distortions of event knowledge. No experimental data are available on manip...
Lies are intentional distortions of event knowledge. No experimental data are available on manipulat...
Contains fulltext : 169972.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access)Rationale and...
“Truth” has been used as a baseline condition in several functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI...
Deception is a clinically important behavior with poorly understood neurobiological correlates. Publ...
Neural circuits associated with response conflict are active during deception. Here we use transcran...
Previous neuroimaging studies have implicated the prefrontal cortex (PFC) and nearby brain regions i...
Neuroimaging studies have indicated a correlation between dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) act...
Despite intensive research into ways of detecting deception in legal, moral and clinical contexts, f...
The neural correlates of lying about affective information were studied using a functional magnetic ...
Deception is a foundational part of everyday interactions, and everyone will be deceived and will be...
Communication based on informational asymmetries abounds in politics, business, and almost any other...
Deception is a cognitive-demanding process that entails more than one executive function and is thus...
By definition, lying involves withholding the truth. Response inhibition may therefore be the cognit...
Background. By definition, lying involves withholding the truth. Response inhibition may therefore b...
10noLies are intentional distortions of event knowledge. No experimental data are available on manip...
Lies are intentional distortions of event knowledge. No experimental data are available on manipulat...
Contains fulltext : 169972.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access)Rationale and...
“Truth” has been used as a baseline condition in several functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI...
Deception is a clinically important behavior with poorly understood neurobiological correlates. Publ...
Neural circuits associated with response conflict are active during deception. Here we use transcran...
Previous neuroimaging studies have implicated the prefrontal cortex (PFC) and nearby brain regions i...
Neuroimaging studies have indicated a correlation between dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) act...
Despite intensive research into ways of detecting deception in legal, moral and clinical contexts, f...
The neural correlates of lying about affective information were studied using a functional magnetic ...
Deception is a foundational part of everyday interactions, and everyone will be deceived and will be...
Communication based on informational asymmetries abounds in politics, business, and almost any other...
Deception is a cognitive-demanding process that entails more than one executive function and is thus...