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Dav Clark

Researcher at University of California, Berkeley

Publications -  22
Citations -  2822

Dav Clark is an academic researcher from University of California, Berkeley. The author has contributed to research in topics: Global warming & Climate change. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 22 publications receiving 2254 citations. Previous affiliations of Dav Clark include Kennedy Krieger Institute & Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

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Nipype: A Flexible, Lightweight and Extensible Neuroimaging Data Processing Framework in Python

TL;DR: Nipype solves issues by providing Interfaces to existing neuroimaging software with uniform usage semantics and by facilitating interaction between these packages using Workflows, and provides an environment that encourages interactive exploration of algorithms, eases the design of Workflows within and between packages, and reduces the learning Curve.
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Enhanced intersubject correlations during movie viewing correlate with successful episodic encoding.

TL;DR: Analysis of encoding data for intersubject correlations based on subjects' subsequent memory performance identifies brain regions whose BOLD response is significantly more correlated across subjects during portions of the movie that are successfully as compared to unsuccessfully encoded.
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Climate Change Conceptual Change: Scientific Information Can Transform Attitudes.

TL;DR: This article's seven experiments demonstrate that virtually no Americans know the basic global warming mechanism, and finds that 2-45 min of physical-chemical climate instruction durably increased such understandings, and introduces HowGlobalWarmingWorks.org--a website designed to directly enhance public "climate-change cognition."
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Assembling and encoding word representations: fMRI subsequent memory effects implicate a role for phonological control

TL;DR: Results revealed that left inferior prefrontal cortex (LIPC) and bilateral parietal cortices were differentially engaged during the processing of novel words, suggesting that this circuit is recruited during phonological assembly.