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1 e various ways in which mental processes are unconscious.
2 ed to be unconscious and superior are indeed unconscious.
3 eliable ways to be certain that a patient is unconscious.
4 nd skills that were previously automatic and unconscious.
5 the VLPO, but only when mice are sedated or unconscious.
6 ike the perceived objects are, but vague and unconscious.
7 ents and the former for events that remained unconscious.
8 hort of 103 comatose adult patients who were unconscious 48 hours after CA and underwent repeated mea
10 results provide evidence for spontaneous and unconscious access to grammatical gender in participants
13 s described and used to reliably demonstrate unconscious activation of meaning by subliminal (visuall
15 degrees C to 34 degrees C) for 12 to 24 h in unconscious adult patients with spontaneous circulation
16 nternational trial, we randomly assigned 950 unconscious adults after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest
17 0, through January 10, 2013, we enrolled 950 unconscious adults with cardiac arrest of presumed cardi
18 al processing specific to consciousness from unconscious afferent sensory signals, the issue has been
20 pulseless ventricular tachycardia and still unconscious after restoration of spontaneous circulation
21 ol of action because they disrupt the normal unconscious and automatic inhibition of alternative move
22 ses can be thought of as either conscious or unconscious and consequently gives a misleading analysis
27 tive processes that are fast, automatic, and unconscious and those that are slow, deliberative, and c
30 rting assumption that all decision making is unconscious, and that the onus should be on researchers
31 neurobiological or behavioral effect to be 'unconscious,' and provide a platform for rigorously inve
32 curacy of judgments does not necessitate the unconscious; and the prescriptive claim of UTT is unfoun
34 hich unseen disgust-cues induced unexpected, unconscious arousal just before participants discriminat
38 cortex, whereas experts are expected to use unconscious automation (habitual DM) in which decisions
39 cortex, whereas experts are expected to use unconscious automation (habitual DM) in which decisions
40 responses associated with the conscious and unconscious (backwardly masked) perception of fearful fa
46 Studies involving physicians suggest that unconscious bias may be related to clinical decision mak
47 tion of why dopamine agonists may lead to an unconscious bias towards risk in susceptible individuals
54 xplanation for blindsight need not appeal to unconscious brain processes, citing research indicating
56 e electrophysiological landmarks of distinct unconscious brain states, and could be used to help impr
58 ork has investigated sound processing by the unconscious brain; such investigations may provide a 'wi
59 view the psychological and neural science of unconscious (C0) and conscious computations (C1 and C2)
60 nscious control of behavior, but evidence of unconscious causation and automaticity has sustained the
67 imination task, and showed clear evidence of unconscious colour processing, consistent with previous
71 hat excluded people invest less attention in unconscious conflict detection, but more in unconscious
72 strate that native-language activation is an unconscious correlate of second-language comprehension.
74 nvestigated noninvasive neural signatures of unconscious cortical stimulus processing to understand m
75 t requires a process of motor simulation--an unconscious, covert imitation of the observed movements.
76 f these contextual cues provoke conscious or unconscious craving and enhance susceptibility to relaps
80 and static distinction between conscious and unconscious decisions, ignoring a process that dynamical
81 etheless were delayed significantly by these unconscious distractors in a directed saccade but not in
83 isions and actions between the conscious and unconscious domains of the mind: habitual decision makin
84 trous oxide could be used to render patients unconscious during surgical procedures, subsequent devel
85 ressed memories can continue to exert strong unconscious effects that may compromise mental health.
86 associative operations to rapid retrieval of unconscious emotional memories acquired during prior thr
87 findings provide a biological basis for the unconscious emotional vigilance characteristic of anxiet
88 ce emerged in reaction times recorded during unconscious encoding and in the outcome of decisions mad
89 Hippocampal activity increased during the unconscious encoding of overlapping versus nonoverlappin
92 uppression paradigm to titrate conscious and unconscious evidence, we show that unconscious informati
93 odel of how motivated forgetting affects the unconscious expression of memory that may be generalized
95 from three major bodies of research in which unconscious factors have been studied: multiple-cue judg
96 be unconscious; there can be true "zombies"--unconscious feed-forward systems that are functionally e
98 ost-hoc subset analysis of patients who were unconscious for more than 1 hour (n = 75) following TBI,
100 survive V1 damage, mediating residual, often unconscious functions known as "blindsight." Because som
101 oretical framework predicts the existence of unconscious goal processes capable of guiding behavior i
102 tructural similarities between conscious and unconscious goal pursuit (the similarity principle), and
108 isorders of compulsivity and impulsivity, an unconscious habit system may play a key role in explaini
109 the preparatory interventions, were sedated, unconscious, hemodynamically unstable, developmentally d
110 ichotomous view that separates noncognitive, unconscious (implicit) learning from cognitive, consciou
113 rticle convincingly argues that evidence for unconscious influence is limited by the quality of the m
115 r, it understates the empirical evidence for unconscious influences and overlooks considerations of c
116 with our intuitions have all contributed to unconscious influences being ascribed inflated and erron
117 anks' (N&S's) concerns regarding the role of unconscious influences in theories of decision making.
121 ead the unwary to conclude that there are no unconscious influences on decision making - and never co
122 a service for debates regarding the role of unconscious influences on decision making by offering so
123 ainst the idea that any significant role for unconscious influences on decision making has been estab
130 cious and unconscious evidence, we show that unconscious information can be accumulated over time and
136 esearchers should be aware of the dangers of unconscious investigator bias, all papers should provide
137 l & Shanks' (N&S's) conceptualization of the unconscious is overly restrictive, compared to standard
138 an interface for conscious (early-born) and unconscious (late-born) proprioceptive inputs to the cor
142 ntury-old assumption that suppression leaves unconscious memories intact should be reconsidered.
144 lts reveal a previously unknown mechanism of unconscious memory due to irreplaceable neuronal commitm
148 eflective consciousness and use of the term "unconscious mind" as a dumpster for all mental processes
152 ication of Huang & Bargh's (H&B's) theory of unconscious motivational processes to psychopathology.
153 the confrontation of two signals: a fast and unconscious motor code, based on a direct sensory-motor
156 unique opportunity to compare conscious and unconscious neural events in response to the same visual
158 onal load in a relevant task would determine unconscious neural processing of invisible stimuli.
161 ndividual presentation, as manifestations of unconscious or psychological distress-mediated behaviour
162 patients were severely cognitively impaired, unconscious, or unable to express a choice and were auto
163 circulation and inclusion <240 minutes, and unconscious patient after return of spontaneous circulat
164 ne clearance protocols are controversial for unconscious patients after blunt traumatic injury and ne
165 nutrition from terminally ill or permanently unconscious patients is illegal; (3) risk management per
166 ees C was initiated on November 18, 2002 for unconscious patients resuscitated from cardiac arrest.
167 ent (TTM) at 33 degrees C to 36 degrees C in unconscious patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest
169 infusion is still considered appropriate for unconscious patients without palpable blood pressure or
170 diagnosis, classification, and prognosis of unconscious patients, and will lead to a greater underst
173 ction (confidence), we found no evidence for unconscious perception; participants' behavior matched t
175 he Implicit Association Test (IAT) to assess unconscious preferences, direct questions regarding stud
179 gene theory) and overemphasizes the role of unconscious processes in decision making, it provides a
180 Conscious processes are partly produced by unconscious processes, and much information processing o
181 ated stimuli are influenced by conscious and unconscious processes, but the neural systems underlying
190 st threshold of this quality is required for unconscious processing and a second threshold for consci
192 determines neural representations related to unconscious processing of continuously suppressed stimul
193 activation of the right amygdala during the unconscious processing of emotionally expressive faces.
195 of saccadic eye movements, is mediating the unconscious processing of the transcranial magnetic stim
198 t signal complexity can affect the extent of unconscious processing without altering the subjective a
209 Specifically, the activity could reflect unconscious reactions to the last word in the command, n
211 e that melanopsin's influence extends beyond unconscious reflex functions to encompass cortical visio
214 gh conscious suppression and perhaps through unconscious repression, though whether such attempts are
215 with sedatives do not exhibit a stereotypic 'unconscious' response to direct cortical stimulation; in
216 sus nonoverlapping word pairs and during the unconscious retrieval of episodically related versus unr
217 win's conceptualization of domestication and unconscious selection provides valuable insight into the
220 s used to identify two additional markers of unconscious semantic activation: (i) the activation is v
223 induce the transition from an anesthetized, unconscious state to an awake state, suggesting critical
228 airing minimizes non-strategic influences of unconscious stimuli on task selection, insulating endoge
229 most cases, such activation is observed for unconscious stimuli that closely resemble other consciou
230 ety, activity in the basolateral amygdala to unconscious stimuli, and subjects' reaction times, were
232 owever, other studies have reported 'direct' unconscious-stimulus influences on task selection in the
233 ing is very narrow in its generalization and unconscious (subliminal) influences, if they occur at al
237 ommended to improve neurological outcomes in unconscious survivors of out-of-hospital ventricular fib
238 n self-insight did not emerge to explore the unconscious; the accuracy of judgments does not necessit
240 imally conscious; complicated systems can be unconscious; there can be true "zombies"--unconscious fe
248 framework, we clarify issues with regard to unconscious-thought theory (UTT) and self-insight studie
250 dentifiable and which are not, therefore the unconscious use of a nonidentifiable model is a consider
252 ted potential recordings of conscious versus unconscious visual phenomena generated by the very same
253 patients died after successful conversion of unconscious VT/VF (89.5% survival of VT/VF events).
256 planatory burden on an intelligent cognitive unconscious, with many theories assigning causally effec
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