Jacqueline Liederman
Professor
Psychology & Brain Science
Boston University
United States of America
Biography
"Dr. Liederman is interested in the neural mechanisms underlying behavior and how these change in the context of development and/or disease. Dr. Liederman training is primarily in physiological psychology. Dr. Liederman interests include: The use of transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) to make inferences about whether a particular region of cortex is necessary for a specific function. I have several projects planned that have to do with visual attention and reading. This work takes place at the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. Examination of the mechanisms underlying reading with adults with reading disability (in cooperation with the Learning Disabilities Center at BU) as well as with neurologically intact individuals. The effect of exposure to xenoestrogens during the prenatal period; how it affects brain development in general and the development of sexually dimorphic behaviors, in particular. One population that Dr. Liederman working with are Faroese Islanders that eat whale blubber during pregancy, thereby exposing their offspring to very high levels of PCBs. Examination of factors underlying male vulnerability to neurodevelopmental disorder which may derive from events during the prenatal period."
Research Interest
Developmental Neuropsychology, Neuropsychology, Physiological Psychology (with an emphasis on the human brain)
Publications
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Watanabe T, Náñez JE, Koyama S, Mukai I, Liederman J, Sasaki Y. Greater plasticity in lower-level than higher-level visual motion processing in a passive perceptual learning task. Nature neuroscience. 2002 Oct 1;5(10):1003.
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Buehler DM, Als H, Duffy FH, McAnulty GB, Liederman J. Effectiveness of individualized developmental care for low-risk preterm infants: behavioral and electrophysiologic evidence. Pediatrics. 1995 Nov 1;96(5):923-32.
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Healey JM, Liederman J, Geschwind N. Handedness is not a unidimensional trait. Cortex. 1986 Mar 31;22(1):33-53.