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1 eech strategies (auditory imagination/visual imagination).
2 ivisions such as attention, expectation, and imagination).
3 rces is limited only by human creativity and imagination.
4 eality, as opposed to internal simulation or imagination.
5 o access transient states of matter captures imagination.
6 ed before tactile contact is made or even by imagination.
7 Her greatest contribution was her expansive imagination.
8 e Worlds Theory as a synthetic theory of the imagination.
9 association between MIND values and empathic imagination.
10 gration during sensory trick performance and imagination.
11 an abstract unit during both perception and imagination.
12 bulent, whirling water to guide his artistic imagination.
13 ture research on neural decoding of auditory imagination.
14 e immediate perceptual environment can shape imagination.
15 s of imagined events shaped by collaborative imagination.
16 pothetical events-what we call collaborative imagination.
17 The psychopath has long captured the imagination.
18 There is a limit to life but no limit to imagination.
19 e for event comprehension, recollection, and imagination.
20 ntation within time and space is retained in imagination.
21 tes motor-auditory connectivity during meter imagination.
22 nd "resourcefulness" [Merriam-Webster (2018) Imagination.
23 ng the structure of the mental states of the imagination.
24 itoring capabilities that are already beyond imagination.
25 oviding unlimited opportunities beyond one's imagination.
26 ing nature continue to stretch the limits of imagination.
27 bility, agreeableness, conscientiousness, or imagination.
28 acle in its implementation is probably one's imagination.
29 innovation and a larger social epidemiologic imagination.
30 condition that has long captured the public imagination.
31 notion that has long captivated the popular imagination.
32 isions, influence public policy, and inspire imagination.
33 operations such as prediction, attention and imagination.
34 s a private experience that plays out in our imagination.
35 ncies of HD demands our greatest resolve and imagination.
36 of past remembering and marginally to future imagination.
37 mmon brain network underlies both memory and imagination.
38 tive problem solving, critical thinking, and imagination.
39 h audio media such as radio, also stimulates imagination.
40 aspect of life that has long captured human imagination.
41 t how many objects can people track in their imagination?
42 cells may allow us to move our viewpoint in imagination [13], a useful function for goal-directed na
45 retability tools, we demonstrate that strong imagination ability is now possessed by our foundation m
46 s from beat perception to hierarchical meter imagination, adding supporting evidence to active engage
47 about risk are associated with vividness of imagination, affective evaluation and learning abilities
53 which has rapidly expanded and captured the imagination and energy of millions of creators and users
57 colloidal QDs that have captured scientific imagination and have been harnessed in optical applicati
58 lity has, over the past decade, captured the imagination and interest of many investigators in basic
59 s by which high-level processes that support imagination and memory retrieval may shape low-level sen
60 recall, mental simulation and planning, and imagination and opens up possibilities for high-level ne
63 f a common neuronal substrate for memory and imagination and provide evidence suggesting that mental
64 bridged survey, and subscores of the social, imagination and routine factors were found to be predict
65 anatomically modern humans has captured our imagination and stimulated research for more than a cent
66 cessing during sensory trick performance and imagination and suggest the IPS as a novel potential the
68 crystallography nonetheless captured both my imagination and the ensuing 15 years of my scientific li
69 ave to form a vivid picture that fires their imaginations and enables intuition to play a full role i
70 psychological relationships between memory, imagination, and dreams in accordance with current state
73 that the hippocampus might support planning, imagination, and navigation by forming cognitive maps th
74 and IQ-matched controls completed execution, imagination, and perception tasks using a Fitts' Law par
77 a neurobiological measure of primary reward imagination are significantly correlated with discountin
80 tudies provide a framework for investigating imagination as a collaborative process in which individu
81 vious research has conceptualized the act of imagination as a socially constructed process that affec
82 enefits from increasing our understanding of imagination, as well as non-invasive means of influencin
83 al circuits activated during the generation, imagination, as well as observation of one's own and oth
85 oven that these are not just figments of the imagination but distinct components of a large and compl
86 lf-replicating machines have long caught the imagination but have yet to acquire the sophistication o
87 man participants (both sexes) whether future imagination can be decomposed into two dissociable psych
88 Moreover, our neurobiological measure of imagination can be used to accurately predict choice beh
90 y and future possibility" [Manu A (2006) The Imagination Challenge: Strategic Foresight and Innovatio
91 re)constructed, share neural substrates with imagination, combine unique features with schema-based p
92 r never before wholly perceived in reality"; imagination combines "creative ability" and "resourceful
93 king higher orders of theory of mind via the imagination, conveying attributes of people in broad net
96 aily social living (e.g., "sad", "joy"), the imagination (e.g., "psychedelic", "mysterious"), profund
99 ognitive processes such as path-planning and imagination entail the recall of vector representations,
100 also provide mechanisms for semantic memory, imagination, episodic future thinking, relational infere
101 nding hypothesis for musicality, integrating imagination, episodic simulation, causal inference, and
103 a human eye or a radar has captured people's imagination for centuries, current attempts towards real
107 hanism through which the brain distinguishes imagination from reality is by monitoring the activity o
108 g blocks has had a long history in the human imagination, from the beautifully intricate shells assem
109 ct approaches have sought a solution to the "imagination gap" and have resulted in new research quest
112 est and during sensory trick performance and imagination in CD patients compared to healthy controls
113 nnectivity also increased with sensory trick imagination in CD patients, while it decreased in health
115 presentational changes for events linked via imagination, indicating impaired memory reconfiguration.
119 episodic thought (i.e., episodic memory and imagination) is a domain where the language-of-thought h
120 imulation over the motor cortex during motor imagination leads to enhanced motor output, which is sel
123 These results suggest that improving reward imagination may be a useful therapeutic target for indiv
124 e results suggest that the quality of reward imagination may impact the degree to which future outcom
125 244), we provide evidence that collaborative imagination of a shared future fosters social connection
127 ene family has captured the interest and the imagination of an increasing number of scientists workin
128 ry and motor functional sources reflects the imagination of binary and ternary meters in the absence
130 chemistry, such materials have attracted the imagination of both material scientists and chemists.
131 acid diethylamide (LSD) have recaptured the imagination of both science and popular culture, and may
133 vibrant and diverse community, capturing the imagination of developmental and evolutionary biologists
134 pecies interactions have long captivated the imagination of evolutionary biologists and inspired the
135 highlighting cerebral areas involved in the imagination of exercise and contrast B (III minus I) hig
136 rrelates underlying 'central command' during imagination of exercise under hypnosis, in order to unco
137 te, HR, or ventilation, V(I)): condition II, imagination of exercise, cycling uphill (increased HR by
138 ommon process underlying episodic memory and imagination of fictitious experiences, and suggest it ma
139 cognitive conditions were used: condition I, imagination of freewheeling downhill on a bicycle (no ch
141 The evolution of neurons has captured the imagination of generations of neuroscientists, developme
145 tedly create more of itself has captured the imagination of many thinkers from von Neumann to Vonnegu
147 lanation and understanding still capture the imagination of multiple researchers around the world.
149 ng contributions of acoustic features to the imagination of properties of movie scene settings, chara
152 at humans produce pheromones has excited the imagination of scientists and the public, leading to wid
154 em cell (SC) concepts to cancer captured the imagination of scientists for many years, only the last
157 a shot to the art world-a shot fired by the imagination of the artist and inspired by the color theo
158 ontributed to explain recall of the past and imagination of the future, underscoring the benefits of
159 or navigation, recollection of the past, and imagination of the future, which depend on this function
162 Gut microbiota research has captured the imagination of the scientific and lay community alike, y
165 e distorting potential of suggestibility and imagination on the nature of the emerging clinical pictu
167 ialists engage these problems with vigor and imagination, our pinnacle may be nothing more than an in
168 lity, and art-and show how in flights of the imagination people create new social realities shared wi
170 known to be involved in episodic memory and imagination, plays a pivotal role in the insight-driven
171 ventromedial prefrontal cortex during reward imagination predicted temporal discounting behavior both
173 non-CNP participants significantly used more imagination-related MS and reported more negative affect
174 ans that episodic memory retrieval and scene imagination rely on similar vmPFC-hippocampus neural dyn
178 rills by creating puzzles that stimulate the imagination, scientists get their kicks by solving puzzl
179 We conclude that episodic memory and scene imagination share fundamental neural dynamics and the pr
183 ne hundred participants performed a directed imagination task that required watching a video of a fig
188 guishes between concrete/perceptual forms of imagination termed the "mind's eye" and abstract/reflect
189 mind's eye" and abstract/reflective forms of imagination termed the "mind's mind." The protocol also
190 utic practice occupies is closer to literary imagination than "hard science." The use of such imagina
191 was yet another demonstration of the fertile imagination that had contributed so much to histology an
192 ontemporal factors in analyses of memory and imagination, the nature of differences between rememberi
195 evelopments in the cognitive neuroscience of imagination to provide a broad tool with which to charac
196 in medicine against all odds, given fearless imagination to pursue novel ideas that conflict with acc
197 ers as possible to apply their expertise and imagination to undertake research to prevent, diagnose,
200 ination than "hard science." The use of such imagination was presented 25 years ago by John Nemiah in
201 After centuries of wistful poetry and wild imagination, we are now getting answers, often unexpecte
203 ft how we view the structure and function of imagination with implications for better understanding i
209 present in periods of active navigation and imagination, with a similar orientation in both and with
210 l mechanisms underlying human navigation and imagination, with implications for understanding memory
211 se metaphors to the forefront of the popular imagination, with the natural extension of the notion of