man

Merci de ne pas fumer / Biman Mullick.

London : Cleanair, [1988?]




man

Elle est classe, elle ne fume pas / Biman Mullick.

London (33 Stillness Road, London SE23 1NG) : Cleanair, [1989?]




man

We thank you for not smoking / design : Biman Mullick.

London (33 Stillness Rd, London, SE23 1NG) : Cleanair, Campaign for a Smoke-free Environment, [198-?]




man

No smoking is the norm / design : Biman Mullick.

London : Cleanair, Smoke-free Environment (33 Stillness Rd, London, SE23 1NG), [198-?]




man

Be nice to yourself and others / design : Biman Mullick.

London : Cleanair, Smoke-free Environment (33 Stillness Rd, London, SE23 1NG), [198-?]




man

दिल की जलन। = Heart burn. / design : Biman Mullick.

London : Cleanair (33 Stillness Rd, London, SE23 1NG), [1989?]




man

Dila jalana = Heart burn. / design : Biman Mullick.

London : Cleanair (33 Stillness Rd, London, SE23 1NG), [198-?]




man

Hārtabarna = Heart burn. / design : Biman Mullick.

London : Cleanair (33 Stillness Rd, London, SE23 1NG), [198-?]




man

Ha gubin wadnahaaga! = Heart burn. / design : Biman Mullick.

London : Cleanair (33 Stillness Rd, London, SE23 1NG), [198-?]




man

Hārta jbalē = Heart burn. / design : Biman Mullick.

London : Cleanair (33 Stillness Rd, London, SE23 1NG), [198-?]




man

Heat burn. / design : Biman Mullick.

London : Cleanair (33 Stillness Rd, London, SE23 1NG), [198-?]




man

Gracias por no fumar / deseño : Biman Mullick.

[London] : Cleanair, Campaña para un Medio Ambiente Libre de Humo, [198-?]




man

No fumar es la moda / deseño : Biman Mullick.

[London] : Cleanair, Campaña para un Medio Ambiente Libre de Humo, [198-?]




man

Muchas gracias por no fumar / Biman Mullick.

[London] : Cleanair, [1989?]




man

Tapadh leibh airson nach do smoc sibh / design: Biman Mullick.

London (33 Stillness Road London SE23 1NG) : Cleanair Campaign for a Smoke-free Environment, [198-?]




man

Zona de no fumar / deseño : Biman Mullick.

London : Cleanair Campaña para un Medio Ambiente Libre de Humo, [198-?]




man

Elle est classe, elle ne fume pas / Biman Mullick.

London (33 Stillness Rd, SE23 1NG) : Cleanair, [198-?]




man

Cleanair posters to create a smoke-free environment / designed by Biman Mullick ; published by Cleanair.

London (33 Stillness Road, London SE23 ING) : Cleanair, [198-?]




man

Smoking is bad for your image / design : Biman Mullick.

[London?], [199-?]




man

Each year in Britain 9,300 babies are killed by their smoking mums. / Biman Mullick.

[London?], [6th June 1990]




man

Pollution / Biman Mullick.

[London?], [199-?]




man

Cancer / design : Biman Mullick.

[London?], 6th November 1989.




man

How can the smoker and the nonsmoker be equally free in the same place? George Bernard Shaw / Biman Mullick.

[London?], [199-?]




man

Bisher Dhoa = Bāśāra dhōyā / design : Biman Mullick.

London, 26 January 2003.




man

[Silhouette of a pregant woman smoking with death skull inside womb, 29 January 1994] / design: Biman Mullick.

London, [29 January 1994]




man

Danny Smith from No Human Being Is Illegal (in all our glory). Collaged photograph by Deborah Kelly and collaborators, 2014-2018.

[London], 2019.




man

Allometric Analysis Detects Brain Size-Independent Effects of Sex and Sex Chromosome Complement on Human Cerebellar Organization

Catherine Mankiw
May 24, 2017; 37:5221-5231
Development Plasticity Repair




man

The Pain of Sleep Loss: A Brain Characterization in Humans

Adam J. Krause
Mar 20, 2019; 39:2291-2300
BehavioralSystemsCognitive




man

The Representation of Semantic Information Across Human Cerebral Cortex During Listening Versus Reading Is Invariant to Stimulus Modality

Fatma Deniz
Sep 25, 2019; 39:7722-7736
BehavioralSystemsCognitive




man

Social Laughter Triggers Endogenous Opioid Release in Humans

Sandra Manninen
Jun 21, 2017; 37:6125-6131
BehavioralSystemsCognitive




man

What Visual Information Is Processed in the Human Dorsal Stream?

Martin N. Hebart
Jun 13, 2012; 32:8107-8109
Journal Club




man

Nasal Respiration Entrains Human Limbic Oscillations and Modulates Cognitive Function

Christina Zelano
Dec 7, 2016; 36:12448-12467
Systems/Circuits




man

Interactions of Top-Down and Bottom-Up Mechanisms in Human Visual Cortex

Stephanie McMains
Jan 12, 2011; 31:587-597
BehavioralSystemsCognitive




man

The Encoding of Sound Source Elevation in the Human Auditory Cortex

Régis Trapeau
Mar 28, 2018; 38:3252-3264
BehavioralSystemsCognitive




man

The Fusiform Face Area: A Module in Human Extrastriate Cortex Specialized for Face Perception

Nancy Kanwisher
Jun 1, 1997; 17:4302-4311
Articles




man

Brain Activation during Human Male Ejaculation

Gert Holstege
Oct 8, 2003; 23:9185-9193
BehavioralSystemsCognitive




man

Broadband Shifts in Local Field Potential Power Spectra Are Correlated with Single-Neuron Spiking in Humans

Jeremy R. Manning
Oct 28, 2009; 29:13613-13620
BehavioralSystemsCognitive




man

High-Level Neuronal Expression of A{beta}1-42 in Wild-Type Human Amyloid Protein Precursor Transgenic Mice: Synaptotoxicity without Plaque Formation

Lennart Mucke
Jun 1, 2000; 20:4050-4058
Cellular




man

Linear Systems Analysis of Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Human V1

Geoffrey M. Boynton
Jul 1, 1996; 16:4207-4221
Articles




man

The analysis of visual motion: a comparison of neuronal and psychophysical performance

KH Britten
Dec 1, 1992; 12:4745-4765
Articles




man

The Fusiform Face Area: A Module in Human Extrastriate Cortex Specialized for Face Perception

Nancy Kanwisher
Jun 1, 1997; 17:4302-4311
Articles




man

La fiducia: l'anello mancante delle criptovalute attuali

Italian translation of the Press Release on the pre-release of two special chapters of the Annual Economic Report of the BIS, 17 June 2018. Trust is the missing link in today's cryptocurrencies - Cryptocurrencies' model of generating trust limits their potential to replace conventional money, the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) writes in its Annual Economic Report (AER), a new title launched this year.




man

Mantenere lo slancio

Italian translation of speech delivered by Mr Agustín Carstens, General Manager of the BIS, on the occasion of the Bank's Annual General Meeting, Basel, 24 June 2018. Buongiorno signore e signori, desidero darvi il mio più caloroso benvenuto alla presentazione della prima Relazione economica annuale BRI. I primi tre capitoli passano in rassegna gli andamenti, le prospettive e i rischi dell'economia mondiale, con particolare enfasi sulla politica monetaria e le riforme della regolamentazione finanziaria, e sui mercati e gli intermediari. Due capitoli speciali sono dedicati a questioni di attualità: gli assetti macroprudenziali e l'analisi economica delle criptovalute. ...




man

La confiance est le chaînon manquant des cryptomonnaies actuelles, selon la BRI

French translation of the Press Release on the pre-release of two special chapters of the Annual Economic Report of the BIS, 17 June 2018. Trust is the missing link in today's cryptocurrencies - Cryptocurrencies' model of generating trust limits their potential to replace conventional money, the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) writes in its Annual Economic Report (AER), a new title launched this year.




man

Mantener el impulso

Discurso pronunciado por Agustín Carstens, Director General del Banco de Pagos Internacionales, con motivo de la Asamblea General Anual del Banco celebrada en Basilea el 24 de junio de 2018.




man

Let's Talk Batman Guys - :nolan:




man

Keith Olbermann: If the Tea Party wins, America loses




man

Crisis management framework: what remains to be done?

Welcoming remarks by Mr Fernando Restoy, Chairman, Financial Stability Institute, Bank for International Settlements, at the FSI-IADI conference on crisis management, resolution and deposit insurance: what's next and how to prepare, Basel, 4 September 2019.




man

Cross Recruitment of Domain-Selective Cortical Representations Enables Flexible Semantic Knowledge

Knowledge about objects encompasses not only their prototypical features but also complex, atypical, semantic knowledge (e.g., "Pizza was invented in Naples"). This fMRI study of male and female human participants combines univariate and multivariate analyses to consider the cortical representation of this more complex semantic knowledge. Using the categories of food, people, and places, this study investigates whether access to spatially related geographic semantic knowledge (1) involves the same domain-selective neural representations involved in access to prototypical taste knowledge about food; and (2) elicits activation of neural representations classically linked to places when this geographic knowledge is accessed about food and people. In three experiments using word stimuli, domain-relevant and atypical conceptual access for the categories food, people, and places were assessed. Results uncover two principles of semantic representation: food-selective representations in the left insula continue to be recruited when prototypical taste knowledge is task-irrelevant and under conditions of high cognitive demand; access to geographic knowledge for food and people categories involves the additional recruitment of classically place-selective parahippocampal gyrus, retrosplenial complex, and transverse occipital sulcus. These findings underscore the importance of object category in the representation of a broad range of knowledge, while showing how the cross recruitment of specialized representations may endow the considerable flexibility of our complex semantic knowledge.

SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT We know not only stereotypical things about objects (an apple is round, graspable, edible) but can also flexibly combine typical and atypical features to form complex concepts (the metaphorical role an apple plays in Judeo-Christian belief). In this fMRI study, we observe that, when atypical geographic knowledge is accessed about food dishes, domain-selective sensorimotor-related cortical representations continue to be recruited, but that regions classically associated with place perception are additionally engaged. This interplay between categorically driven representations, linked to the object being accessed, and the flexible recruitment of semantic stores linked to the content being accessed, provides a potential mechanism for the broad representational repertoire of our semantic system.




man

Ultra-high-resolution fMRI of Human Ventral Temporal Cortex Reveals Differential Representation of Categories and Domains

Human ventral temporal cortex (VTC) is critical for visual recognition. It is thought that this ability is supported by large-scale patterns of activity across VTC that contain information about visual categories. However, it is unknown how category representations in VTC are organized at the submillimeter scale and across cortical depths. To fill this gap in knowledge, we measured BOLD responses in medial and lateral VTC to images spanning 10 categories from five domains (written characters, bodies, faces, places, and objects) at an ultra-high spatial resolution of 0.8 mm using 7 Tesla fMRI in both male and female participants. Representations in lateral VTC were organized most strongly at the general level of domains (e.g., places), whereas medial VTC was also organized at the level of specific categories (e.g., corridors and houses within the domain of places). In both lateral and medial VTC, domain-level and category-level structure decreased with cortical depth, and downsampling our data to standard resolution (2.4 mm) did not reverse differences in representations between lateral and medial VTC. The functional diversity of representations across VTC partitions may allow downstream regions to read out information in a flexible manner according to task demands. These results bridge an important gap between electrophysiological recordings in single neurons at the micron scale in nonhuman primates and standard-resolution fMRI in humans by elucidating distributed responses at the submillimeter scale with ultra-high-resolution fMRI in humans.

SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Visual recognition is a fundamental ability supported by human ventral temporal cortex (VTC). However, the nature of fine-scale, submillimeter distributed representations in VTC is unknown. Using ultra-high-resolution fMRI of human VTC, we found differential distributed visual representations across lateral and medial VTC. Domain representations (e.g., faces, bodies, places, characters) were most salient in lateral VTC, whereas category representations (e.g., corridors/houses within the domain of places) were equally salient in medial VTC. These results bridge an important gap between electrophysiological recordings in single neurons at a micron scale and fMRI measurements at a millimeter scale.