. "Hor\u00E1\u010Dek, J." . "524736" . "54" . "Nov\u00E1k, T." . "Preiss, M." . . . "Brain imaging studies suggest localization of verbal working memory in the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) while face processing and memory is localized in the inferior temporal cortex and other brain areas. The goal of this study was to assess the effect of left DLPFC low-frequency repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) on verbal recall and face recognition. The study revealed a significant decrease of free recall in word encoding under rTMS (110/% of motor threshold, 0.9 Hz) in comparison with sham stimulation (p=0.03), while no significant difference was found with facial memory tests. Our findings support the essential role of the left DLPFC in word but not facial memory and confirm the content specific arrangement of cortical areas involved in semantic memory. As a non-invasive tool, rTMS is useful for cognitive brain mapping and the functional localization of the category specific memory system."@en . "Vliv n\u00EDzkofrekven\u010Dn\u00EDho p\u016Fsoben\u00ED repetitivn\u00ED transkrani\u00E1n\u00ED magnetick\u00E9 stimulace v lev\u00E9 prefront\u00E1ln\u00ED oblasti na pam\u011B\u0165 na slova ale ne na tv\u00E1\u0159e"@cs . "The influence of low-frequency left prefrontal repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation on memory for words but not for faces"@en . "1" . . "1"^^ . "RIV/68081740:_____/05:00325586!RIV09-AV0-68081740" . "Brain imaging studies suggest localization of verbal working memory in the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) while face processing and memory is localized in the inferior temporal cortex and other brain areas. The goal of this study was to assess the effect of left DLPFC low-frequency repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) on verbal recall and face recognition. The study revealed a significant decrease of free recall in word encoding under rTMS (110/% of motor threshold, 0.9 Hz) in comparison with sham stimulation (p=0.03), while no significant difference was found with facial memory tests. Our findings support the essential role of the left DLPFC in word but not facial memory and confirm the content specific arrangement of cortical areas involved in semantic memory. As a non-invasive tool, rTMS is useful for cognitive brain mapping and the functional localization of the category specific memory system." . "Z(AV0Z70250504)" . "Lukavsk\u00FD, Ji\u0159\u00ED" . . "\u0160krdlantov\u00E1, L." . "face memory; verbal memory; repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation"@en . "Kope\u010Dek, M." . . "0862-8408" . . . "The influence of low-frequency left prefrontal repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation on memory for words but not for faces"@en . "8"^^ . "V\u00FDsledky zobrazovac\u00EDch metod lokalizuj\u00ED slovn\u00ED pracovn\u00ED pam\u011B\u0165 v lev\u00E9m dorzolater\u00E1ln\u00EDm prefront\u00E1ln\u00EDm kortexu (DLPFC), zat\u00EDmco zpracov\u00E1n\u00ED tv\u00E1\u0159\u00ED je lokalizov\u00E1no ve spodn\u00ED \u010D\u00E1sti sp\u00E1nkov\u00E9ho laloku a dal\u0161\u00EDch oblastech. C\u00EDlem studie bylo ur\u010Dit vliv n\u00EDzkofrokven\u010Dn\u00ED repetitivn\u00ED transkrani\u00E1n\u00ED magnetick\u00E9 stimulace v DLPFC na slovn\u00ED vybaven\u00ED a pam\u011B\u0165 na tv\u00E1\u0159e. V\u00FDsledky ukazuj\u00ED na v\u00FDznamnou roli DLPFC p\u0159i zpracov\u00E1n\u00ED slov ale ne p\u0159i zpracov\u00E1n\u00ED tv\u00E1\u0159\u00ED."@cs . "RIV/68081740:_____/05:00325586" . . . . "6"^^ . "[47FFFD778520]" . . "Dockery, C." . "000227607100015" . . "Physiological Research" . . "Vliv n\u00EDzkofrekven\u010Dn\u00EDho p\u016Fsoben\u00ED repetitivn\u00ED transkrani\u00E1n\u00ED magnetick\u00E9 stimulace v lev\u00E9 prefront\u00E1ln\u00ED oblasti na pam\u011B\u0165 na slova ale ne na tv\u00E1\u0159e"@cs . "CZ - \u010Cesk\u00E1 republika" . "H\u00F6schl, C." . "The influence of low-frequency left prefrontal repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation on memory for words but not for faces" . "The influence of low-frequency left prefrontal repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation on memory for words but not for faces" . .