Chantal E. Stern

Chantal E. Stern

Boston University

H-index: 53

North America-United States

About Chantal E. Stern

Chantal E. Stern, With an exceptional h-index of 53 and a recent h-index of 32 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at Boston University, specializes in the field of Cognitive Neuroscience, Memory, Learning, Neuroimaging.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

(Don't) look where you are going: Evidence for a travel direction signal in humans that is independent of head direction.

Gated transformations from egocentric to allocentric reference frames involving retrosplenial cortex, entorhinal cortex, and hippocampus

Navigational systems in the human brain dynamically code for past, present, and future trajectories

Combining imitation and deep reinforcement learning to human-level performance on a virtual foraging task

Functional network reconfiguration supporting memory-guided attention

Functional reconfiguration of task-active frontoparietal control network facilitates abstract reasoning

Theta oscillations support active exploration in human spatial navigation

Mechanisms for maintaining information in working memory

Chantal E. Stern Information

University

Position

Professor Center for Memory and Brain Dept. of Psychological and Brain Sciences

Citations(all)

12679

Citations(since 2020)

3204

Cited By

10635

hIndex(all)

53

hIndex(since 2020)

32

i10Index(all)

93

i10Index(since 2020)

78

Email

University Profile Page

Google Scholar

Chantal E. Stern Skills & Research Interests

Cognitive Neuroscience

Memory

Learning

Neuroimaging

Top articles of Chantal E. Stern

Title

Journal

Author(s)

Publication Date

(Don't) look where you are going: Evidence for a travel direction signal in humans that is independent of head direction.

Journal of Experimental Psychology: General

You Cheng

Sam Ling

Chantal E Stern

Andrew Huang

Elizabeth R Chrastil

2024/4

Gated transformations from egocentric to allocentric reference frames involving retrosplenial cortex, entorhinal cortex, and hippocampus

Andrew S Alexander

Jennifer C Robinson

Chantal E Stern

Michael E Hasselmo

2023/5

Navigational systems in the human brain dynamically code for past, present, and future trajectories

bioRxiv

You Cheng

Sam Ling

Chantal E Stern

Elizabeth R Chrastil

2023

Combining imitation and deep reinforcement learning to human-level performance on a virtual foraging task

Adaptive Behavior

Vittorio Giammarino

Matthew F Dunne

Kylie N Moore

Michael E Hasselmo

Chantal E Stern

...

2023/9

Functional network reconfiguration supporting memory-guided attention

Cerebral Cortex

Kylie Isenburg

Thomas M Morin

Maya L Rosen

David C Somers

Chantal E Stern

2023/6/15

Functional reconfiguration of task-active frontoparietal control network facilitates abstract reasoning

Cerebral Cortex

Thomas M Morin

Kylie N Moore

Kylie Isenburg

Weida Ma

Chantal E Stern

2023/5/15

Theta oscillations support active exploration in human spatial navigation

NeuroImage

Elizabeth R Chrastil

Caroline Rice

Mathias Goncalves

Kylie N Moore

Syanah C Wynn

...

2022/11/15

Mechanisms for maintaining information in working memory

Cognitive neuroscience

Chantal E Stern

Michael E Hasselmo

2022/10/2

Evidence for a travel direction signal in humans that is independent of head direction

bioRxiv

You Cheng

Sam Ling

Chantal E Stern

Andrew Huang

Elizabeth R Chrastil

2022/8/22

Dynamic network analysis demonstrates the formation of stable functional networks during rule learning

Cerebral Cortex

Thomas M Morin

Allen E Chang

Weida Ma

Joseph T McGuire

Chantal E Stern

2021/12

Evidence for a gradient within the medial temporal lobes for flexible retrieval under hierarchical task rules

Hippocampus

Thackery I Brown

Qiliang He

Irem Aselcioglu

Chantal E Stern

2021/9

Cardiorespiratory fitness and mnemonic discrimination across the adult lifespan

Learning & Memory

Rachel K Nauer

Karin Schon

Chantal E Stern

2020/3/1

Cognitive Sciences

Nicole M Long

Brice A Kuhl

2020

Improving fitness increases dentate gyrus/CA3 volume in the hippocampal head and enhances memory in young adults

Hippocampus

Rachel K Nauer

Matthew F Dunne

Chantal E Stern

Thomas W Storer

Karin Schon

2020/5

The cognitive neurosciences

David Poeppel

George R Mangun

Michael S Gazzaniga

2020/4/21

A neural circuit model for a contextual association task inspired by recommender systems

Hippocampus

Henghui Zhu

Ioannis Ch Paschalidis

Allen Chang

Chantal E Stern

Michael E Hasselmo

2020/4

See List of Professors in Chantal E. Stern University(Boston University)

Co-Authors

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