
Ventre-Dominey J, Dominey PF, Broussolle E. (2001) Asymmetric influences of pointing on saccade latency in Hemi-Parkinson’s disease. Neurospychologia, 39(5):470-7.
Hoen M, Dominey PF (2000) ERP analysis of cognitive sequencing: a left anterior negativity related to structural transformation processing. Neuroreport. Sep 28;11(14):3187-91
Lelekov T, Franck N, Dominey PF, Georgieff N. (2000) Cognitive sequence processing and syntactic comprehension in schizophrenia. NeuroReport, 11(10):2145-9.
Dominey P.F., Ramus F. (2000) Neural network processing of natural language: I. Sensitivity to serial, temporal and abstract structure of language in the infant. Language and Cognitive Processes, 15(1)87-127.
Procyk E., Dominey P.F., Amiez C., Joseph J.P. (2000) The effects of sequence structure and reward schedule on serial reaction time learning in the monkey. Cognitive Brain Res, 9, 239-248.
Dominey P.F., Lelekov T. (2000) Non-linguistic transformation processing in agrammatic aphasia, comment on grodzinsky: the neurology of syntax: language use with and without Broca’s area. Beh Brain Sci, (in press).
Lelekov T., Dominey P.F., Garcia-Larrea L. (2000) Dissociable ERP profiles for processing rules vs. instances in a cognitive sequencing task. NeuroReport, 5(7) : 1129-1132.
Thobois S., Dominey P.F., Decety J., Pollak P., Gregoire M.C., Broussolle E. (2000) Overactivation of primary motor cortex is asymetric in hemiparkinsonian patients. Neuroreport, 11: 785-789.
Thobois S., Dominey P.F., Decety J., Pollak P., Gregoire M.C., Le Bars D., Broussolle E. (2000) Motor imagery in normal subjects and in parkinsonian patients with asymmetric akinesia: a PET study, Neurology 10;55(7):996-1002.
Israël I., Ventre-Dominey J., Denise P. (1999) Vestibular information contributes to update retinotopic maps. NeuroReport, , 10: 3479- 3483.
Ventre-Dominey J. , Vighetto A., Denise P. (1999) Vestibulo-ocular dysfunction induced by cortical damage in man: a case report. Neuropsychologia, 37: 715-721.
Dentresangle C., Veyre L., Le Bars D., Pollak P., Guerin J., Pierre C., Lavenne F., Froment J.C., Broussolle E. (1999) Striatal D2 dopamine receptor status in Parkinson's disease. A [18F]Dopa and [11C]raclopride PET study. Movement Disord, 14: 1025-1030.
Broussolle E., Dentresangle C., Landais P., Garcia-Larrea L., Pollak P., Croisile B., Hibert O., Bonnefoi F., Galy G., Froment J.C., Comar D. (1999) The relation of putamen and caudate nucleus 18F-Dopa uptake to motor and cognitive performances in Parkinson's disease. J Neurol Sci, 166: 141-151.
Dominey P.F. (1998) A shared system for learning serial and temporal structure of sensori-motor sequences? Evidence from simulation and human experiments. Cognitive Brain Res, 6: 163-172.
Karoumi B., Ventre-Dominey J., Vighetto A., Dalery J., d’Amato T. (1998) Saccadic eye movements in schizophrenic patients. Psychiat. Res., 77: 9-19.
Karoumi B., Ventre-Dominey J., Dalery J. (1998) Predictive saccade behavior is enhanced in schizophrenia. Cognition, 68: B81-B91.
The French Parkinson’s Disease Genetics Study group (dont E. Broussolle). Alpha-synuclein gene and Parkinson’s disease. (1998) Science, 279: 1116-1117.
Dominey P.F. (1998) Influences of temporal organization on transfer in sequence learning: comments on Stadler (1995) and Curran and Keele (1993) J. Exp Psychol: Learn Mem Cognition, 24: 234-248.
Dominey P.F., Lelekov T., Ventre-Dominey J, Jeannerod M. (1998) Dissociable processes for learning surface structure and abstract structure of sensorimotor sequences. J. Cognitive Neurosci., 10: 734-751.
Dominey P.F. (1997) Reducing problem complexity by analogical transfer, Behav Brain Sci, 20:71-72.
Dominey P.F. (1997) From double-step and colliding saccades to pointing in abstract space: Towards a basis for analogical transfer. Beh. Brain Sci, 20: 71-77.
Dominey P.F., Boussaoud D. (1997) Encoding behavioral context in recurrent networks of the frontostriatal system: a simulation study. Cognitive Brain Res, 6: 53-65.
Dominey P.F., Schlag J., Schlag-Rey M., Arbib M.A. (1997) Colliding saccades evoked by frontal eye field stimulation: artifact or evidence for an oculomotor compensatory mechanism? Biol Cybern, 76: 41-52.
Dominey P.F. (1997) An anatomically structured sensory-motor sequence learning system displays some general linguistic capacities. Brain Lang, 59: 50-75.
Dominey P.F., Ventre-Dominey J., Broussolle E., Jeannerod M. (1997) Analogical transfer is effective in a serial reaction time task in Parkinson’s disease. Evidence for a dissociable sequence learning mechanism. Neuropsychologia, 35: 1-9.
Dominey P.F., Jeannerod M. (1997) Contribution of frontostriatal function to sequence learning in parkinson's disease: evidence for dissociable systems. NeuroReport, 8: r3-r9.
Dominey P.F., Georgieff N. (1997) Schizophrenics learn surface but not abstract structure in a serial reaction time task. NeuroReport, 8: 2877-2882.
Karoumi B., Ventre-Dominey J., Dalery J. (1996) Intérêt de l’étude des antisaccades chez les schizophrènes. Ann. Psychiatr., 11: 238-243.
Ventre-Dominey J., Dominey P.F., Sindou M. (1996) Extraocular proprioception is required for spatial localization in man. NeuroReport, 7: 1531-1535.
Schweighofer N., Arbib M.A., Dominey P.F. (1996) A model of the cerebellum in adaptive control of saccade gain II. Simulation results, Biol Cybern, 75: 29-36.
Schweighofer N., Arbib M.A., Dominey P.F. (1996) A model of the cerebellum in adaptive control of saccade gain I. The model and its biological substrate, Biol Cybern, 75:19-28.
Tiliket C., Ventre-Dominey J., Vighetto A., Grochowicki M. (1996)
Room tilt illusion: a central otolith dysfunction. Arch. Neurol., 53: 1259-1264.
voir également, en ligne :
ISC Working paper 2000-03 Peter Ford Dominey (Sequential Cognition and
Language Group (ICS)) Michael A. Arbib (University of Southern California
- Brain Simulation Laboratory)
Dopaminergic Neuromodulation
in Multiple Time-scales
99-2 William Clower, Peter Ford Dominey
Organization vs. Attention
Effects in Serial Reactions Time Learning
99-9 Peter F. Dominey
Neural
Network Processing of Natural Language: II.
Syntactic
Comprehension via Dissociable Processing Streams for Content and Function
Words in the Normal and Agrammatic Adult
99-10 Taïssia Lelekov (1), Peter F. Dominey (1), Luis Garcia-Larrea
(2)
1. Institut de Sciences Cognitives, CNRS UPR 9075, BRON, France
Human Neurophysiology Lab, CERMEP, UPR-EA 1880, Université Claude
Bernard, Lyon I, Lyon, France
Human Brain Potentials
Reveal Dissociable Processing of Surface vs. Abstract Sequential Structure
Peter Ford Dominey
Evolution
of dissociable processing of function vs. content words for syntactic
comprehension
3rd Conference The
Evolution of Language April 3rd - 6th , 2000