Abstracts
Hakimi, S, MacInnes, JJ, Dickerson, KC, McDonald, K, & Adcock, RA. Encoded temporal representations predict VTA neurofeedback-mediated learning to self-regulate motivation. 2019 DIBS Distinguished Lecture & Symposium, Durham, NC, 2019.
Hsiung, A., Hakimi, S., Adcock, R. A., Pearson, J. M., & Huettel, S. A. The effects of evidence accumulation on incidental memory. 2019 DIBS Distinguished Lecture & Symposium, Durham, NC, 2019.
Wright, R, Faul, L, Hoscheidt, SM, Adcock, RA, & LaBar, KS. Reward rescues navigation performance from the impairing effects of stress. 2019 DIBS Distinguished Lecture & Symposium, Durham, NC, 2019.
Thorp, JN, Hakimi, S, Dickerson, KC, MacInnes, J, Adcock, RA. Mesolimbic connectivity during neurofeedback training predicts learning to volitionally activate the ventral tegmental area. Society for Neuroscience, San Diego, 2018.
Hakimi, S, MacInnes, JJ, Dickerson, KC, & Adcock, RA. Encoded temporal representations predicting VTA neurofeedback-mediated learning to self-regulate motivation. Annual Meeting of the Society for Neuroeconomics, Philadelphia, PA, 2018.
Hsiung, A., Hakimi, S., Adcock, R. A., Pearson, J. M., & Huettel, S. A. The effects of evidence accumulation on incidental memory. Society for Neuroeconomics Annual Meeting, Philadelphia, PA 2018.
Hakimi S, MacInnes J, Dickerson K, & Adcock RA. Temporal structure of learning to regulate ventral tegmental area using real-time neurofeedback. Cognitive Computational Neuroscience, Philadelphia, PA, 2018.
Dickerson, KC, MacDuffie, KE, MacInnes, J, Eddington, KM, Strauman, TJ, Adcock RA. Real-time fMRI as a CBT adjunct: predicting the behavioral impact of neurofeedback American College of Neuropsychopharmachology, Hollywood, FL, 2018.
Dickerson, KC, MacDuffie, KE, MacInnes, J, Eddington, KM, Strauman, TJ, Adcock RA. Using real-time neurofeedback as a tool for demonstrating therapeutic efficacy. Translational Science, Washington, DC, 2018
Dickerson, KC, MacDuffie, KE, MacInnes, J, Eddington, KM, Strauman, TJ, Adcock RA. Using real-time neurofeedback as a tool for demonstrating therapeutic efficacy. Society for Biological Psychiatry, New York, NY, 2018.
Thorp, JN, Hakimi, S, Dickerson, KC, MacInnes, J, Adcock, RA. Functional Connectivity Between the VTA and Hippocampus Predicts Learning to Volitionally Activate the VTA. Triangle Society for Neuroscience, Raleigh, NC, 2018.
Dickerson, KC, Biswas, S, Thorp, JN, Shrestha, S, Hakimi, S, & Adcock, RA. Neurofeedback of the dopamine system using EEG and fMRI. Duke CTSA Symposium, Durham, NC, 2018.
Chandrasherkeran, SV, Hakimi, S, Thorp, JN, Shrestha, S, Dickerson, KC, & Adcock, RA. The effects of labeling volitional motivation during real-time EEG Neurofeedback. Duke Undergraduate Neuroscience Graduation with Distinction Poster Session, Durham, NC, 2018.
Hakimi S, MacInnes J, Dickerson KC, & Adcock RA. Modeling learning from real-time fMRI neurofeedback. Real-Time Functional Imaging and Neurofeedback Conference, Nara, Japan, 2017.
Dickerson, KC, MacDuffie, KE, MacInnes, J, Eddington, KM, Strauman, TJ, Adcock RA. Using real-time neurofeedback as a tool for demonstrating therapeutic efficacy. Real-time Functional Imaging and Neurofeedback Conference, Nara, Japan, 2017.
Biswas, S†, Hakimi, S, Kollins, S, Adcock, RA, & Dickerson, KC. Evaluating real-time fMRI neurofeedback as an ADHD treatment. Duke Psychology Vertical Integration Program Poster Session, Durham, NC, 2017.
Dickerson, KC*, MacInnes, J*, Chen, N, Adcock, RA. Cognitive neurostimulation of the dopamine system. American College of Neuropsychopharmacology, Hollywood, FL, 2016.
MacDuffie, KE, MacInnes, J, Dickerson, KC, Scult, MA, Beaty, RE, Eddington, KM, Strauman, TJ, Adcock RA. Motivating engagement in cognitive therapy strategies using real-time fMRI neurofeedback. Association for Psychological Science, Chicago, IL, 2016.
Dickerson, K., MacInnes, J., Chen, N., Adcock, RA. Cognitive Neurostimulation: Learning to volitionally sustain ventral tegmental area activation. Organization for Human Brain Mapping, Honolulu, HI, 2015.
Clement, N.J., Stanek, J.K., & Adcock, R.A. Validity of cues predicting reward delivery influences recognition memory for associated novel scenes. Entertainment Software and Cognitive Neurotherapeutics Society, San Francisco, CA, 2015.
Chiew, K.S., Hashemi, J., Lerebours, L., Clement, N.J., Vu, M.A., Sapiro, G., Heller, N.E., Adcock, R.A. Motivational framing and individual differences modulate exploration behaviour and subsequent memory for a museum exhibit on human responses to environmental issues. Annual Meeting of the Association for Psychological Science, New York, NY, 2015.
MacInnes, J., Dickerson, K.,Chen, N., Adcock, RA. Cognitive Neurostimulation: Learning to volitionally sustain ventral tegmental area activation. Real-time Functional Imaging and Neurofeedback, Gainesville, Fl, 2015.
MacInnes, J., Dickerson, K.,Chen, N., Adcock, RA. Cognitive Neurostimulation: Learning to volitionally sustain ventral tegmental area activation. Cell Symposia: Translational Neuroscience, Washington, D.C., 2014.
Murty VP, Adcock RA, Davachi L. Reward Specifically Enhances Declarative Consolidation. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, Washington DC, 2014.
Vu MT, Sumner EB, Ballard IC, Murty VP, Chee MWL, Chong SA, Subramaniam M, Keong JLC, Keefe RSE, Kraus MS, Poh J, Yaakub S, Dorairaj K, Adcock RA. How Reward Information Reaches VTA Depends on Task Context: A DCM Study. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, Washington DC, 2014.
Hoscheidt SM, Adcock RA, LaBar KS. Stressed and motivated: Reward rescues performance from impairing effects of stress. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, Washington DC, 2014.
Rainey CA, Dickerson KC, Adcock RA. Interoceptive Signals for Encoding. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, Washington DC, 2014.
Stanek JK, Clement NJ, Adcock RA. Reward uncertainty benefits declarative memory encoding at long but not short latencies following probabilistic cue presentation. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, Washington DC, 2014.
Clement NJ, Stanek JK, Adcock RA. Certainty benefits declarative memory encoding during probabilistic cue learning. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, Washington DC, 2014.
Murty VP, Shermohammed M, Smith DV, Carter RM, Huettel SA, Adcock RA. Resting-state networks distinguish human ventral tegmental area from substantia nigra. Society for Affective Science. Washington DC, 2014.
Dickerson KC*, MacInnes JJ*, Adcock RA. Behavioral neurostimulation: Sustained activation of the human dopaminergic midbrain using real-time fMRI. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, San Diego, CA, 2013.
Loiotile RE, Adcock RA, Courtney SM. Test date expectancy affects memory performance. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, San Diego, CA, 2013.
Dickerson KC*, MacInnes JJ*, Adcock RA. Sustained activation of the human dopaminergic midbrain using real-time fMRI. Mechanisms of Motivation, Cognition, and Aging Interactions, Washington, D.C. 2013.
Clement NJ, Adcock RA. Move faster to learn better: Exploration speed impacts learning about objects and their locations. Mechanisms of Motivation, Cognition, and Aging Interactions, Washington, DC, 2013.
Sumner EJ, Wilson, JK, Poh JS, Yaakub SN, Dorairaj K, Rapisarda A, Chee MWL, Chong SA, Subramaniam M, Keefe RSE, Kraus MS, Bong YL, Keong JLC, Adcock RA. Midbrain Modulation of Hippocampus-Dependent Learning Predicts Performance and Clinical Status in Individuals at Risk for Psychosis. International Congress on Schizophrenia Research, Grande Lakes, Florida 2013.
Sumner EJ, Duffy KB, Adcock RA. Dopaminergic modulation of Reward-Motivated Memory. Cognitive Neuroscience Society, San Francisco, CA, 2013.
Murty VP, LaBar KS, Adcock RA. The active avoidance of threat enhances neural sensitivity to expectancy violation. Cognitive Neuroscience Society, San Francisco, CA, 2013.
Ballard IC, Murty VP, Adcock RA. Distinct hippocampal signals predict fast and slow ventral tegmental area responses to novelty. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA, 2012.
Wood S, Foerde K, Pincus M, Adcock RA, Shohamy DS. The influence of gains and losses on learning and hippocampal generalization in humans. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA, 2012.
Randhawa J. Murty VP, Adcock RA, Bohbot VD. Immediate financial rewards are detrimental to spatial learners and beneficial to response learners tested in a virtual navigation task. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA, 2012.
Wilson JK, Murty VP, Adcock RA. Dissociable hippocampal mechanisms for encoding of novelty and expectancy violation. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA, 2012.
Murty VP, LaBar, KS, Adcock RA. How motivational context shapes mnemonic content: Reward and punishment motivation drive different medial temporal substrates for encoding expectancy violations. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA, 2012.
Johnson EB, Wilson J, Poh J, Yaakub S, Dorairaj K, Rapisarda A, Chee M, Chong SA, Subramaniam M, Keefe R, Kraus MS, Lee J, Bong YL, Adcock RA. Midbrain modulation of hippocampus dependent learning in Singaporeans at ultra high risk for the development of schizophrenia. Society of Biological Psychiatry Annual Meeting, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 2012.
Murty VP, Adcock RA. Reward motivation increases hippocampal sensitivity to and memory for expectancy violations (GSA Winner). Cognitive Neuroscience Society, Chicago, Il, 2012.
Shermohammed M, Murty VP, Smith DV, Carter RM, Huettel SA, Adcock RA. Resting-state analysis of the ventral tegmental area and substantia nigra reveals differential connectivity with the prefrontal cortex. Cognitive Neuroscience Society, Chicago, Il, 2012.
Murty VP, Ballard IC, Krebs RM, MacDuffie K, Rainey C, Adcock RA. Habituation of the human hippocampus to trial-unique, novel scenes. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, Washington DC, 2011.
Foerde KE, Pincus M, Wood S, Adcock RA, Shohamy D. Neural mechanisms of flexible generalization of past gains and losses. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, Washington DC, 2011.
MacInnes, J, MacDuffie, KE, Adcock RA. Instructed salience modulates reward motivated enhancements in item and relational memory. Cognitive Neuroscience Society, San Francisco, CA 2011.
MacDuffie KE, Johnson EB, Iyengar T, Addis DR, Adcock RA. Reward facilitates construction and later memory of autobiographical episodes. Cognitive Neuroscience Society, San Francisco, CA 2011.
Murty VP, Chong SA, Subramaniam M, Keefe RSE, Kraus MS, Poh J, Dorairaj K, Thong J, Bong YL, Chee MW, Adcock RA. Amygdala reactivity in Singaporeans at ultra-high risk for the development of schizophrenia. Biological Psychiatry, San Francisco, CA, 2011.
Adcock RA. Catalyzing Behavioral Change. National Academy of Sciences Kavli Frontiers of Science Meeting, Irvine, CA 2011.
Adcock RA. Motivated Memory: Reward Anticipation Increases Hippocampal Sensitivity to and Memory for Expectancy Violations. Memory Disorders Research Society, Barcelona, Spain, 2011.
MacInnes J, MacDuffie K, Adcock RA. Differential impact of reward on item versus source memory. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, San Diego CA 2010.
Murty VP, LaBar, KS, Adcock RA. Threat of shock facilitates scene encoding: A neuroimaging study of instrumental declarative learning. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, San Diego CA 2010.
Johnson EB, Adcock RA. Generalized enhancement of episodic memory by prior reward experience. Society of Biological Psychiatry, New Orleans, LA, 2010.
Murty V, LaBar K, Rainey C, Hamilton D, Adcock RA. The impact of approach and avoidance motivation on spatial learning in humans. Cognitive Neuroscience Society, Montreal, Canada 2010.
MacDuffie K, Murty V, Adcock RA. Dissociable effects of reward and punishment motivation on memory precision for semantically-related word lists. Cognitive Neuroscience Society, Montreal, Canada 2010.
Ballard IB, Murty V, MacInnes J, Carter RM, Huettel S, Adcock RA. Network dynamics of the mesolimbic dopamine system during human reward anticipation: A DCM study. Cognitive Neuroscience Society, Montreal, Canada 2010.
Murty VP, LaBar KS, Hamilton DA, Adcock RA. The Impact of Negative Reinforcement on Spatial Learning in Humans During a Modified Morris Water Maze. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, Chicago, October 2009.
Johnson EB, Adcock RA. Enhancement of Episodic Memory by Prior Reward Experience. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, Chicago, October 2009.
Nagarajan SS, Hinkley L, Guggisberg AG, Findlay AM, Khatibi K, Adcock RA, Vinogradov S. Deviations In Alpha-Band Functional Connectivity Between Brain Regions In Patients With Schizophrenia During Magnetoencepahlogram (MEG) Recordings At Rest. Cognitive Neuroscience Society Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA April 2009.
Dale CL, Adcock RA, Findlay AM, Genevsky A, Vertinski M, Luks TL, Simpson GV, Nagarajan SS, Vinogradov S. Abnormal Response Dynamics During Cognition-relevant Auditory Information Processing In Schizophrenia. Cognitive Neuroscience Society Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA April 2009.
MacInnes J, Carter RM, Adcock RA, Huettel, SA. Rewards Earned for Others – An fMRI Study of the Neural Correlates of Altruism. Cognitive Neuroscience Society Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA April 2009.
Murty VP, Whitfield-Gabrieli S, Gabrieli JDE, Adcock RA. Effective Connectivity of Mesolimbic Regions during Reward-Motivated Learning as Assessed by fMRI. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, Washington DC, October 2008.
MacInnes J, Rouse E, Figueroa S, Ely S, Adcock RA. Pupillary Indices of Successful Reward-Motivated Learning. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, Washington DC, October 2008.
Hinkley LB, Guggisberg AG, Findlay AM, Khatibi K, Adcock RA, Vinogradov S, Nagarajan S. Deviations in Alpha-band Functional Connectivity between Brain Regions of Schizophrenia Patients during Magnetoencepahlogram (MEG) Recordings at Rest. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, Washington DC, October 2008.
Han S, Huettel SA, Raposo A, Adcock RA, Dobbins IG. Memory as Reward: Goal Directed Reward Processes during Episodic Recognition. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, Washington DC, October 2008.
Khatibi K, Findlay AM, Adcock RA, Subramaniam K, Aldebot S, Hearst A, Vertinski M, Marco EJ, Nagarajan S, Vinogradov S. Neuroplasticity-Based Cognitive Training in Schizophrenia Normalizes Magnetoencephalography Auditory Duration Mismatch Responses in Cortex. Cognitive Neuroscience Society Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA, April 2008.
Adcock RA, Thangavel A, Hearst A, Merzenich M, Vinogradov S. Impaired Temporal and Preserved Spectral Processing of Speech Sounds in Noise in Patients with Schizophrenia. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, San Diego, CA 2007.
Adcock RA, Desain P, Merzenich M, Vinogradov S. Impaired Temporal and Preserved Spectral Processing of Speech Sounds in Noise in Patients with Schizophrenia. Cognitive Neuroscience Society Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA, April 2006.
Adcock RA, Thangavel A, Knutson B, Whitfield-Gabrieli S, Gabrieli JDE. Reward Motivated Learning: Mesolimbic Activation Precedes Memory Formation. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, Atlanta, 2006.
Adcock RA, Lutomski K, MacLeod S, Soneji DJ, Gabrieli JDE, Glover G, Pauly J, deCharms RC. Real-Time fMRI During the Psychotherapy Session: Toward a Methodology to Augment Therapeutic Benefit, Exemplary Data. Human Brain Mapping Annual Meeting, Toronto, 2005.
Adcock RA, Thangavel A, Knutson B, Gabrieli JDE. Motivation Modulates Memory: Neurally Linking Affect and Cognition. Neuroeconomics Annual Meeting, Kiawah Island, SC 2005.
Adcock RA, Thangavel A., Gabrieli JDE. Functional Architecture of Reward Motivated Learning as Revealed by Event-Related fMRI. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, San Diego, CA 2004.
Adcock RA, Constable RT, Gore JC, Goldman-Rakic P. Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging of Frontal Cortex During Performance of Non-spatial Associative Memory Tasks. 2nd Intl. Conf. on Functional Mapping of the Human Brain, Neuroimage, 3(3), S526, 1996.
Adcock RA, Friedman HR, Goldman-Rakic PS. Co-activation of Hippocampus and Prefrontal Cortex During Working Memory: A 2-deoxyglucose Study of Behaving Rhesus Monkeys. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, San Diego, CA 1992.