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Dr. Martin Imhof
Dr. Martin Imhof
Verified email at uni-konstanz.de
Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
How real-life health messages engage our brains: Shared processing of effective anti-alcohol videos
MA Imhof, R Schmälzle, B Renner, HT Schupp
Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience 12 (7), 1188-1196, 2017
392017
Implicit and explicit attention to pictures and words: An fMRI-study of concurrent emotional stimulus processing
T Flaisch, M Imhof, R Schmälzle, KU Wentz, B Ibach, HT Schupp
Frontiers in Psychology 6, 136573, 2015
302015
Strong health messages increase audience brain coupling
MA Imhof, R Schmälzle, B Renner, HT Schupp
NeuroImage 216, 116527, 2020
262020
Reliability of fMRI time series: Similarity of neural processing during movie viewing
R Schmälzle, MA Imhof, C Grall, T Flaisch, HT Schupp
Biorxiv, 158188, 2017
142017
Strong health messages increase audience brain coupling. NeuroImage, 216, Article 116527
MA Imhof, R Schmälzle, B Renner, HT Schupp
52020
Visual cues that predict intuitive risk perception in the case of HIV
R Schmälzle, FM Hartung, A Barth, MA Imhof, A Kenter, B Renner, ...
Plos one 14 (2), e0211770, 2019
52019
Impressions of HIV risk online: Brain potentials while viewing online dating profiles
R Schmälzle, MA Imhof, A Kenter, B Renner, HT Schupp
Cognitive, Affective, & Behavioral Neuroscience 19, 1203-1217, 2019
22019
Dyadic cooperation with human and artificial agents: Event‐related potentials trace dynamic role taking during an interactive game
KP Flösch, T Flaisch, MA Imhof, HT Schupp
Psychophysiology 61 (1), e14433, 2024
12024
Alpha/beta oscillations reveal cognitive and affective brain states associated with role taking in a dyadic cooperative game
KP Flösch, T Flaisch, MA Imhof, HT Schupp
Cerebral Cortex 34 (1), bhad487, 2024
2024
Health communication and risk perception: A neuroscientific perspective
MA Imhof
2020
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Articles 1–10