2008
DOI: 10.1126/science.1155466
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Transfer of Learning After Updating Training Mediated by the Striatum

Abstract: MRE11 by either MRN component or by MDC1 (Fig. 3C). However, upon immobilization of NBS1 or MRE11, the accumulation of the downstream factors MDC1 and 53BP1 was strongly impaired in the absence of H2AX (Fig. 3C). Recruitment of MDC1 by ATM 1300-3060 was similarly decreased, suggesting that phosphorylation of H2AX is an important step in recruiting and maintaining these factors at sites of damage (17, 19).To finally test whether individual repair factors are sufficient to induce a physiological DDR, we assessed… Show more

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Cited by 775 publications
(889 citation statements)
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“…Another possible transfer model can be derived from the neuronal overlap hypothesis, which posits that transfer can only be expected if trained task and transfer task share some overlap in neuronal activation (e.g., Dahlin et al 2008;Jonides et al, 2004;Kuwajima & Sawaguchi, 2010;Lustig, et al, 2009;Thorell et al, 2009). As a test of the model, this overlap has to be shown to be sensitive and specific to the process or ability of interest.…”
Section: Transfer Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Another possible transfer model can be derived from the neuronal overlap hypothesis, which posits that transfer can only be expected if trained task and transfer task share some overlap in neuronal activation (e.g., Dahlin et al 2008;Jonides et al, 2004;Kuwajima & Sawaguchi, 2010;Lustig, et al, 2009;Thorell et al, 2009). As a test of the model, this overlap has to be shown to be sensitive and specific to the process or ability of interest.…”
Section: Transfer Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One example is the reading span task (Daneman & Carpenter, 1980;Rönnberg, Arlinger, Lyxell & Kinnefors, 1989) which taps parallel storage and processing capacity by requiring participants to read and semantically process sentences while at the same time retaining their content in memory. However, when to-be-remembered items have no existing representations in long-term memory, another approach is needed; one candidate is the nback task (Cohen, Forman, Braver, Casey, Servan-Schreiber, Noll, 1994;Dahlin, Stigsdotter Neely, Larsson, Bäckman & Nyberg, 2008).…”
Section: Working Memory For Manual Gesturesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therefore, the selective effect of training format may reflect the relative functional overlap between the trained divided attention task and the outcome measures, with working memory showing the greatest sensitivity and overlap, memory and processing speed showing non-specific improvement after training (some functional overlap), and inhibition showing no improvement (little functional overlap). Similarly, one can consider the principle of neural overlap (Dahlin et al 2008;Lustig et al 2009), in that the brain regions showing increased neural efficiency in prefrontal cortex after the same DT training (Erickson et al 2007a, b) are also associated with a variety of working memory tasks (e.g., Braver et al 1997;D'Esposito et al 2000;Kane and Engle 2002). The advantage observed in the sequential training group for the working memory outcomes may reflect the benefits of training under full attention (i.e., without concurrent exercise).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…From the array of cognitive outcome measures chosen (measuring response inhibition, switching, working memory, immediate and delayed recall), we anticipated that the training-related benefits would be more pronounced for outcome measures with the greatest functional and neural overlap with the trained dual task (Dahlin et al 2008), namely measures of divided attention or working memory. Based upon the literature on age-related increases in cognitive-motor DT costs (Li et al 2001), we hypothesized that sequential training would confer greater cognitive benefits than simultaneous training, due to the cognitive advantage of training under full attention.…”
Section: The Current Studymentioning
confidence: 99%
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