His primary areas of study are Cognitive psychology, Cognition, Neuroscience, Electroencephalography and Anxiety. His work deals with themes such as Neglect, Affect, Stroop effect and Eye movement, which intersect with Cognitive psychology. His study in the field of Verbal memory and Neuropsychology is also linked to topics like Service delivery framework.
His Electroencephalography research incorporates elements of Artificial intelligence, Word error rate, Laterality and Pattern recognition. His work carried out in the field of Anxiety brings together such families of science as Developmental psychology, Arousal, Brain activity and meditation and Depression. Gregory A. Miller has researched Magnetoencephalography in several fields, including Checklist, Guideline and Medical physics.
Gregory A. Miller mainly investigates Neuroscience, Cognitive psychology, Cognition, Developmental psychology and Anxiety. His Magnetoencephalography, Electroencephalography, Prefrontal cortex, Stroop effect and Sensory gating study are his primary interests in Neuroscience. His Magnetoencephalography study combines topics in areas such as Schizophrenia and Superior temporal gyrus.
His research investigates the link between Cognitive psychology and topics such as Brain mapping that cross with problems in Dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. His Cognition research is multidisciplinary, incorporating perspectives in Neuroplasticity, Brain activity and meditation and Anhedonia. Gregory A. Miller interconnects Arousal, Psychopathology, Clinical psychology and Depression in the investigation of issues within Anxiety.
Gregory A. Miller mainly focuses on Neuroscience, Cognitive psychology, Clinical psychology, Psychopathology and Schizophrenia. In most of his Neuroscience studies, his work intersects topics such as Alpha. The concepts of his Cognitive psychology study are interwoven with issues in Categorical variable, Inhibitory control and Emotional processing.
The various areas that Gregory A. Miller examines in his Schizophrenia study include Effects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performance, First admission, Audiology and Magnetoencephalography. Gregory A. Miller combines subjects such as Cognition and Electroencephalography with his study of Audiology. His Cognition study combines topics from a wide range of disciplines, such as Resting state fMRI and Anxiety.
His primary areas of study are Neuroscience, Schizophrenia, Audiology, Electroencephalography and Cognition. His Neuroscience study combines topics in areas such as Predictive analytics and Alpha. His work deals with themes such as Developmental psychology, Sensory processing, Sensory system and Magnetoencephalography, which intersect with Schizophrenia.
His work carried out in the field of Developmental psychology brings together such families of science as Chronic schizophrenia, Gating, Sensory gating and First admission. His research in Electroencephalography intersects with topics in Precuneus, Neuroimaging, Stroop effect and Set. Gregory A. Miller interconnects Resting state fMRI, Apprehension, Brain mapping and Anxiety in the investigation of issues within Cognition.
This overview was generated by a machine learning system which analysed the scientist’s body of work. If you have any feedback, you can contact us here.
Misunderstanding analysis of covariance.
Gregory A. Miller;Jean P. Chapman.
Journal of Abnormal Psychology (2001)
Guidelines for using human event-related potentials to study cognition: Recording standards and publication criteria
Terence W. Picton;S. Bentin;P. Berg;E. Donchin.
Psychophysiology (2000)
Patterns of regional brain activity differentiate types of anxiety.
Wendy Heller;Jack B. Nitschke;Marci A. Etienne;Gregory A. Miller.
Journal of Abnormal Psychology (1997)
Fear behavior, fear imagery, and the psychophysiology of emotion: the problem of affective response integration.
Peter J. Lang;Daniel N. Levin;Gregory A. Miller;Michael J. Kozak.
Journal of Abnormal Psychology (1983)
Committee report: Publication guidelines and recommendations for studies using electroencephalography and magnetoencephalography
Andreas Keil;Stefan Debener;Gabriele Gratton;Markus Junghöfer.
Psychophysiology (2014)
Paying attention to emotion: an fMRI investigation of cognitive and emotional stroop tasks.
Rebecca J. Compton;Marie T. Banich;Aprajita Mohanty;Michael P. Milham.
Cognitive, Affective, & Behavioral Neuroscience (2003)
Comparison of different cortical connectivity estimators for high-resolution EEG recordings.
Laura Astolfi;Febo Cincotti;Donatella Mattia;M. Grazia Marciani.
Human Brain Mapping (2007)
Cognitive control mechanisms, emotion and memory: A neural perspective with implications for psychopathology
Marie T. Banich;Kristen L. Mackiewicz;Brendan E. Depue;Anson J. Whitmer.
Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews (2009)
Contrasting patterns of brain activity in anxious apprehension and anxious arousal.
Jack B. Nitschke;Wendy Heller;Patrick A. Palmieri;Gregory A. Miller.
Psychophysiology (1999)
Differential engagement of anterior cingulate cortex subdivisions for cognitive and emotional function.
Aprajita Mohanty;Anna S. Engels;John D. Herrington;John D. Herrington;Wendy Heller.
Psychophysiology (2007)
If you think any of the details on this page are incorrect, let us know.
We appreciate your kind effort to assist us to improve this page, it would be helpful providing us with as much detail as possible in the text box below:
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
University of New Mexico
University of California, San Diego
University of New Mexico
University of Delaware
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
Mind Research Network
Mind Research Network
University of Colorado Boulder
University of Konstanz
Tongji University
PeckShield
Queensland University of Technology
University of Toronto
Texas A&M University
Southwest Bahia State University
University of Bremen
Pennsylvania State University
Norwegian Polar Institute
RWTH Aachen University
New York Blood Center
National Institutes of Health
University of Chicago
University of Bonn
Columbia University
École Normale Supérieure