L
Laura Piccardi
Researcher at Sapienza University of Rome
Publications - 202
Citations - 4700
Laura Piccardi is an academic researcher from Sapienza University of Rome. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cognition & Working memory. The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 185 publications receiving 3737 citations. Previous affiliations of Laura Piccardi include University of L'Aquila.
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Neural bases of personal and extrapersonal neglect in humans
Giorgia Committeri,Sabrina Pitzalis,Gaspare Galati,Fabiana Patria,Gina Pelle,Umberto Sabatini,Alessandro Castriota-Scanderbeg,Laura Piccardi,Cecilia Guariglia,Luigi Pizzamiglio +9 more
TL;DR: The present investigation aimed at exploring the anatomical substrate of both extrapersonal and personal neglect by using different advanced methodological approaches to lesion-function correlation, which suggested a segregation of personal and extrapERSONal spatial awareness in humans.
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Where do bright ideas occur in our brain? Meta-analytic evidence from neuroimaging studies of domain-specific creativity.
TL;DR: Evidence suggests that creativity relies on multi-componential neural networks and that different creativity domains depend on different brain regions.
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Development of neuropsychiatric symptoms in poststroke patients: a cross‐sectional study
Paola Angelelli,Stefano Paolucci,Umberto Bivona,Laura Piccardi,Paola Ciurli,Anna Cantagallo,Gabriella Antonucci,Luciano Fasotti,A. Di Santantonio,Maria Grazia Grasso,Luigi Pizzamiglio +10 more
TL;DR: The study aimed to characterize neuropsychiatric symptomatology and its evolution in a large group of poststroke patients during their first year.
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Gender Effects in Young Road Users on Road Safety Attitudes, Behaviors and Risk Perception
Pierluigi Cordellieri,Francesca Baralla,Fabio Ferlazzo,Roberto Sgalla,Laura Piccardi,Anna Maria Giannini +5 more
TL;DR: This study investigated gender-related effects on road safety attitudes in 2681 young drivers who filled out several scales assessing attitudes toward road safety issues, driving behavior in specific hypothetical situations, accident risk perception, and concerns about such a risk.
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Walking in the Corsi test: which type of memory do you need?
Laura Piccardi,Giuseppe Iaria,Maura Ricci,Filippo Bianchini,Laura Zompanti,Cecilia Guariglia +5 more
TL;DR: Testing object locations and route memories with the Corsi Block-Tapping test (CBT), one of the non-verbal tasks most used in clinical settings, and its modified, large-scale version, showed a performance advantage for males in both tests and a more homogeneous pattern of memory in females.