نتایج جستجو برای: insula

تعداد نتایج: 5980  

Journal: :NeuroImage 2012
Franco Cauda Tommaso Costa Diana M. E. Torta Katiuscia Sacco Federico D'Agata Sergio Duca Giuliano Carlo Geminiani Peter T. Fox Alessandro Vercelli

The human insula has been parcellated on the basis of resting state functional connectivity and diffusion tensor imaging. Little is known about the organization of the insula when involved in active tasks. We explored this issue using a novel meta-analytic clustering approach. We queried the BrainMap database asking for papers involving normal subjects that recorded activations in the insular c...

Journal: :Journal of neurophysiology 1998
K D Davis C L Kwan A P Crawley D J Mikulis

Positron emission tomography studies have provided evidence for the involvement of the thalamus and cortex in pain and temperature perception. However, the involvement of these structures in pain and temperature perception of individual subjects has not been studied in detail with high spatial resolution imaging. As a first step toward this goal, we have used functional magnetic resonance imagi...

2009
D. G. Owen C. F. Clarke S. Ganapathy F. S. Prato

increases during the HS infusion. Corrected for multiple comparisons (FDR, p < 0.05). Fig. 2 Right insula time courses: CBF changes (relative to baseline) as a function of time in the right insula for the purely tonic stimulus (black) and the bolus stimulus (purple) (ref. 4). Smoothed and raw data shown. Acute vs. Tonic Muscular Pain: Changes in Cerebral Blood Flow as Imaged by Arterial Spin La...

Journal: :Journal of neurophysiology 2010
Elia Valentini

The understanding of others' feelings and emotional states is commonly defined by the term empathy. Here, I discuss recent findings regarding the differential contribution of anterior insula and anterior cingulate cortices to this function. For the first time, Gu and colleagues (2010) showed no direct involvement of the anterior cingulate during observation of another's pain and proposed the an...

Journal: :Journal of neurophysiology 2009
Massieh Moayedi Irit Weissman-Fogel

The perception of all sensations includes some sort of magnitude estimate used to calibrate behavior. However, it is not known whether unique intensity coding mechanisms exist for specific modalities or whether a common, centralized magnitude estimator operates for all sensations. Here, we discuss findings regarding pain intensity coding and the role of the insula in pain in light of the recent...

2013
Lena Palaniyappan Molly Simmonite Thomas P. White Elizabeth B. Liddle Peter F. Liddle

For effective information processing, two large-scale distributed neural networks appear to be critical: a multimodal executive system anchored on the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) and a salience system anchored on the anterior insula. Aberrant interaction among distributed networks is a feature of psychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia. We used whole-brain Granger causal modeling...

2008
Krista M. Rodgers Alexander M. Benison Andrea Klein Daniel S. Barth

Compared with other areas of the forebrain, the function of insular cortex is poorly understood. This study examined the unisensory and multisensory function of the rat insula using high-resolution, whole-hemisphere, epipial evoked potential mapping. We found the posterior insula to contain distinct auditory and somatotopically organized somatosensory fields with an interposed and overlapping r...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2013
Andrea N Goldstein Stephanie M Greer Jared M Saletin Allison G Harvey Jack B Nitschke Matthew P Walker

Anticipation is an adaptive process, aiding preparatory responses to potentially threatening events. However, excessive anticipatory responding and associated hyper-reactivity in the amygdala and insula are integral to anxiety disorders. Despite the co-occurrence of sleep disruption and anxiety disorders, the impact of sleep loss on affective anticipatory brain mechanisms, and the interaction w...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2012
Elizabeth Castle Naomi I Eisenberger Teresa E Seeman Wesley G Moons Ian A Boggero Mark S Grinblatt Shelley E Taylor

Older adults are disproportionately vulnerable to fraud, and federal agencies have speculated that excessive trust explains their greater vulnerability. Two studies, one behavioral and one using neuroimaging methodology, identified age differences in trust and their neural underpinnings. Older and younger adults rated faces high in trust cues similarly, but older adults perceived faces with cue...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید