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1 ivisions such as attention, expectation, and imagination).
2 ing nature continue to stretch the limits of imagination.
3 bility, agreeableness, conscientiousness, or imagination.
4 innovation and a larger social epidemiologic imagination.
5 condition that has long captured the public imagination.
6 notion that has long captivated the popular imagination.
7 isions, influence public policy, and inspire imagination.
8 operations such as prediction, attention and imagination.
9 s a private experience that plays out in our imagination.
10 ncies of HD demands our greatest resolve and imagination.
11 of past remembering and marginally to future imagination.
12 mmon brain network underlies both memory and imagination.
13 oviding unlimited opportunities beyond one's imagination.
14 tive problem solving, critical thinking, and imagination.
15 h audio media such as radio, also stimulates imagination.
16 aspect of life that has long captured human imagination.
17 rces is limited only by human creativity and imagination.
18 cells may allow us to move our viewpoint in imagination [13], a useful function for goal-directed na
23 which has rapidly expanded and captured the imagination and energy of millions of creators and users
26 lity has, over the past decade, captured the imagination and interest of many investigators in basic
27 s by which high-level processes that support imagination and memory retrieval may shape low-level sen
29 f a common neuronal substrate for memory and imagination and provide evidence suggesting that mental
30 anatomically modern humans has captured our imagination and stimulated research for more than a cent
32 crystallography nonetheless captured both my imagination and the ensuing 15 years of my scientific li
33 ave to form a vivid picture that fires their imaginations and enables intuition to play a full role i
34 psychological relationships between memory, imagination, and dreams in accordance with current state
38 a neurobiological measure of primary reward imagination are significantly correlated with discountin
39 al circuits activated during the generation, imagination, as well as observation of one's own and oth
41 oven that these are not just figments of the imagination but distinct components of a large and compl
42 lf-replicating machines have long caught the imagination but have yet to acquire the sophistication o
43 Moreover, our neurobiological measure of imagination can be used to accurately predict choice beh
44 king higher orders of theory of mind via the imagination, conveying attributes of people in broad net
48 a human eye or a radar has captured people's imagination for centuries, current attempts towards real
54 These results suggest that improving reward imagination may be a useful therapeutic target for indiv
55 e results suggest that the quality of reward imagination may impact the degree to which future outcom
57 ene family has captured the interest and the imagination of an increasing number of scientists workin
59 chemistry, such materials have attracted the imagination of both material scientists and chemists.
61 highlighting cerebral areas involved in the imagination of exercise and contrast B (III minus I) hig
62 rrelates underlying 'central command' during imagination of exercise under hypnosis, in order to unco
63 te, HR, or ventilation, V(I)): condition II, imagination of exercise, cycling uphill (increased HR by
64 ommon process underlying episodic memory and imagination of fictitious experiences, and suggest it ma
65 cognitive conditions were used: condition I, imagination of freewheeling downhill on a bicycle (no ch
68 tedly create more of itself has captured the imagination of many thinkers from von Neumann to Vonnegu
71 at humans produce pheromones has excited the imagination of scientists and the public, leading to wid
72 em cell (SC) concepts to cancer captured the imagination of scientists for many years, only the last
74 ontributed to explain recall of the past and imagination of the future, underscoring the benefits of
75 or navigation, recollection of the past, and imagination of the future, which depend on this function
78 e distorting potential of suggestibility and imagination on the nature of the emerging clinical pictu
79 ialists engage these problems with vigor and imagination, our pinnacle may be nothing more than an in
80 ventromedial prefrontal cortex during reward imagination predicted temporal discounting behavior both
82 rills by creating puzzles that stimulate the imagination, scientists get their kicks by solving puzzl
84 utic practice occupies is closer to literary imagination than "hard science." The use of such imagina
85 was yet another demonstration of the fertile imagination that had contributed so much to histology an
86 ontemporal factors in analyses of memory and imagination, the nature of differences between rememberi
87 ination than "hard science." The use of such imagination was presented 25 years ago by John Nemiah in
88 After centuries of wistful poetry and wild imagination, we are now getting answers, often unexpecte
91 present in periods of active navigation and imagination, with a similar orientation in both and with
92 se metaphors to the forefront of the popular imagination, with the natural extension of the notion of
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