Follow
Max Garagnani
Max Garagnani
Senior Lecturer in Computer Science, Goldsmiths, University of London
Verified email at gold.ac.uk - Homepage
Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
A neuroanatomically grounded Hebbian‐learning model of attention–language interactions in the human brain
M Garagnani, T Wennekers, F Pulvermüller
European Journal of Neuroscience 27 (2), 492-513, 2008
1722008
Brain connections of words, perceptions and actions: A neurobiological model of spatio-temporal semantic activation in the human cortex
R Tomasello, M Garagnani, T Wennekers, F Pulvermüller
Neuropsychologia 98, 111-129, 2017
1192017
Thinking in circuits: toward neurobiological explanation in cognitive neuroscience
F Pulvermüller, M Garagnani, T Wennekers
Biological cybernetics 108, 573-593, 2014
1152014
Language models based on Hebbian cell assemblies
T Wennekers, M Garagnani, F Pulvermüller
Journal of Physiology-Paris 100 (1-3), 16-30, 2006
1052006
Conceptual grounding of language in action and perception: a neurocomputational model of the emergence of category specificity and semantic hubs
M Garagnani, F Pulvermüller
European Journal of Neuroscience 43 (6), 721-737, 2016
992016
Effects of attention on what is known and what is not: MEG evidence for functionally discrete memory circuits
M Garagnani, Y Shtyrov, F Pulvermüller
Frontiers in human neuroscience 3 (10), 2009
792009
Auditory processing and sensory behaviours in children with autism spectrum disorders as revealed by mismatch negativity
A Ludlow, B Mohr, A Whitmore, M Garagnani, F Pulvermüller, R Gutierrez
Brain and cognition 86, 55-63, 2014
752014
Recruitment and consolidation of cell assemblies for words by way of Hebbian learning and competition in a multi-layer neural network
M Garagnani, T Wennekers, F Pulvermüller
Cognitive computation 1, 160-176, 2009
692009
From sensorimotor learning to memory cells in prefrontal and temporal association cortex: a neurocomputational study of disembodiment
F Pulvermüller, M Garagnani
Cortex 57, 1-21, 2014
672014
Neurocomputational consequences of evolutionary connectivity changes in perisylvian language cortex
MR Schomers, M Garagnani, F Pulvermüller
Journal of Neuroscience 37 (11), 3045-3055, 2017
572017
A neuronal model of the language cortex
M Garagnani, T Wennekers, F Pulvermüller
Neurocomputing 70 (10-12), 1914-1919, 2007
552007
From sounds to words: a neurocomputational model of adaptation, inhibition and memory processes in auditory change detection
M Garagnani, F Pulvermüller
Neuroimage 54 (1), 170-181, 2011
502011
A neurobiologically constrained cortex model of semantic grounding with spiking neurons and brain-like connectivity
R Tomasello, M Garagnani, T Wennekers, F Pulvermüller
Frontiers in Computational Neuroscience 12, 88, 2018
492018
Neuronal correlates of decisions to speak and act: Spontaneous emergence and dynamic topographies in a computational model of frontal and temporal areas
M Garagnani, F Pulvermüller
Brain and language 127 (1), 75-85, 2013
422013
A spiking neurocomputational model of high-frequency oscillatory brain responses to words and pseudowords
M Garagnani, G Lucchese, R Tomasello, T Wennekers, F Pulvermüller
Frontiers in computational neuroscience 10, 145, 2017
362017
Persuasion as a form of inter-agent negotiation
C Reed, D Longe, M Fox, M Garagnani
Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence 1286, 120-136, 1997
361997
Visual cortex recruitment during language processing in blind individuals is explained by Hebbian learning
R Tomasello, T Wennekers, M Garagnani, F Pulvermüller
Scientific reports 9 (1), 3579, 2019
312019
A Connectionist model of Planning via Back-chaining Search
M Garagnani, L Shastri, C Wendelken
Proceedings of the Twenty-Fourth Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science …, 2019
222019
Pre-processing planning domains containing language axioms
M Davidson, M Garagnani
Open University., 2007
202007
Model-based planning for object-rearrangement problems
M Garagnani, Y Ding
Proceedings of the International Conference on Automated Planning and …, 2003
112003
The system can't perform the operation now. Try again later.
Articles 1–20