scholarly article | Q13442814 |
P50 | author | David Bryce Yaden | Q42268707 |
P2093 | author name string | Chelsea Helion | |
John D Medaglia | |||
David Bryce Yaden | |||
Madeline Haslam | |||
P2860 | cites work | Early adopters of the magical thinking cap: a study on do-it-yourself (DIY) transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) user community | Q37278280 |
The promise of Mechanical Turk: how online labor markets can help theorists run behavioral experiments | Q37852831 | ||
Substances used and prevalence rates of pharmacological cognitive enhancement among healthy subjects | Q38248567 | ||
The practices of do-it-yourself brain stimulation: implications for ethical considerations and regulatory proposals. | Q41436070 | ||
Pyramidal tract side effects induced by deep brain stimulation of the subthalamic nucleus | Q46956873 | ||
Brain state expression and transitions are related to complex executive cognition in normative neurodevelopment | Q47359845 | ||
The role of moral commitments in moral judgment | Q50077562 | ||
A 2 year multidomain intervention of diet, exercise, cognitive training, and vascular risk monitoring versus control to prevent cognitive decline in at-risk elderly people (FINGER): a randomised controlled trial. | Q50578805 | ||
Moral hypocrisy: appearing moral to oneself without being so | Q73050846 | ||
An open letter concerning do-it-yourself users of transcranial direct current stimulation | Q89267830 | ||
Research efficiency: Perverse incentives | Q24496194 | ||
Safety, ethical considerations, and application guidelines for the use of transcranial magnetic stimulation in clinical practice and research | Q24606718 | ||
Academic Research in the 21st Century: Maintaining Scientific Integrity in a Climate of Perverse Incentives and Hypercompetition | Q27033640 | ||
Recurrent themes in the history of the home use of electrical stimulation: Transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) and the medical battery (1870–1920) | Q28119397 | ||
Long-term enhancement of brain function and cognition using cognitive training and brain stimulation | Q30453717 | ||
Amazon's Mechanical Turk: A New Source of Inexpensive, Yet High-Quality, Data? | Q30979637 | ||
The Social Context of "Do-It-Yourself" Brain Stimulation: Neurohackers, Biohackers, and Lifehackers. | Q33653808 | ||
Regression analyses of repeated measures data in cognitive research | Q33834970 | ||
Neuroaesthetics: a coming of age story | Q34100060 | ||
Is psychology suffering from a replication crisis? What does "failure to replicate" really mean? | Q34493028 | ||
How (and where) does moral judgment work? | Q34529708 | ||
Rethinking the thinking cap: ethics of neural enhancement using noninvasive brain stimulation | Q34536327 | ||
Technology insight: noninvasive brain stimulation in neurology-perspectives on the therapeutic potential of rTMS and tDCS. | Q34646129 | ||
The challenge of crafting policy for do-it-yourself brain stimulation | Q35605421 | ||
Cognition and mood in Parkinson's disease in subthalamic nucleus versus globus pallidus interna deep brain stimulation: the COMPARE trial | Q37217333 | ||
P433 | issue | 1 | |
P407 | language of work or name | English | Q1860 |
P304 | page(s) | 44-53 | |
P577 | publication date | 2018-09-26 | |
P1433 | published in | Brain Stimulation | Q15716729 |
P1476 | title | Moral attitudes and willingness to enhance and repair cognition with brain stimulation | |
P478 | volume | 12 |
Q68209445 | Hacking the Brain: Dimensions of Cognitive Enhancement. | cites work | P2860 |
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