Search results for " imaging."

showing 10 items of 6165 documents

Clock genes beyond the clock: CLOCK genotype biases neural correlates of moral valence decision in depressed patients

2007

Gene polymorphisms in the mammalian biological clock system influence individual rhythms. A single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) in the 3' flanking region of CLOCK (3111 T/C; rs1801260) influenced diurnal preference in healthy humans and caused sleep phase delay and insomnia in patients affected by bipolar disorder. Genes of the biological clock are expressed in many brain structures other than in the 'master clock' suprachiasmatic nuclei. These areas, such as cingulate cortex, are involved in the control of many human behaviors. Clock genes could then bias 'nonclock' functions such as information processing and decision making. Thirty inpatients affected by a major depressive episode under…

AdultMaleCingulate cortexGenotypeDecision MakingCLOCK ProteinsMotor ActivityNeuropsychological TestsMoralsGyrus CinguliDevelopmental psychologyArousalBehavioral NeuroscienceImage Processing Computer-AssistedGeneticsmedicineHumansCircadian rhythmAllelesAgedDepressive Disorder MajorNeural correlates of consciousnessmedicine.diagnostic_testGenetic Carrier ScreeningHomozygoteNeuropsychologyMiddle AgedImage EnhancementMagnetic Resonance ImagingCircadian RhythmSemanticsOxygenCLOCKNeurologyTrans-ActivatorsFemaleMaster clockArousalFunctional magnetic resonance imagingPsychologyNeuroscienceGenes, Brain and Behavior
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Spatial resolution of fMRI in the human parasylvian cortex: Comparison of somatosensory and auditory activation

2005

Abstract In spite of its outstanding spatial resolution, the biological resolution of functional MRI may be worse because it depends on the vascular architecture of the brain. Here, we compared the activation patterns of the secondary somatosensory and parietal ventral cortex (SII/PV) with that of the primary auditory cortex and adjacent areas (AI/AII). These two brain regions are located immediately adjacent to each other on opposite banks of the Sylvian fissure, and are anatomically and functionally distinct. In 12 healthy subjects, SII/PV was activated by pneumatic tactile stimuli applied to the index finger (0.5 cm 2 contact area, 4 bar pressure), and AI/AII by amplitude-modulated tones…

AdultMaleCognitive NeuroscienceAuditory cortexSomatosensory systemcomputer.software_genreSensitivity and SpecificityFingersImaging Three-DimensionalReference ValuesVoxelEvoked Potentials SomatosensoryParietal LobeCortex (anatomy)Image Processing Computer-AssistedmedicineHumansDominance CerebralAuditory CortexAnalysis of VarianceBrain MappingSecondary somatosensory cortexCerebral AqueductSomatosensory CortexAnatomyIndex fingerSulcusImage EnhancementMagnetic Resonance Imagingmedicine.anatomical_structureAcoustic StimulationNeurologyTouchSpatial normalizationEvoked Potentials AuditoryFemalePsychologyNeurosciencecomputerNeuroImage
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Automatic numerical-spatial association in synaesthesia: An fMRI investigation

2016

A horizontal mental number line (MNL) is used to describe how quantities are represented across space. In humans, the neural correlates associated with such a representation are found in different areas of the posterior parietal cortex, especially, the intraparietal sulcus (IPS). In a phenomenon known as number-space synaesthesia, individuals visualise numbers in specific spatial locations. The experience of a MNL for number-space synaesthetes is explicit, idiosyncratic, and highly stable over time. It remains an open question whether the mechanisms underlying numerical-spatial association are shared by synaesthetes and nonsynaesthetes. We address the neural correlates of number-space assoc…

AdultMaleCognitive NeuroscienceAutomaticityPosterior parietal cortexExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyIntraparietal sulcusNeuropsychological TestsBrain mapping050105 experimental psychologyDevelopmental psychologyAssociationPerceptual Disorders03 medical and health sciencesBehavioral Neuroscience0302 clinical medicineSupramarginal gyrusReaction TimemedicineHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesAssociation (psychology)Brain MappingNeural correlates of consciousnessmedicine.diagnostic_test05 social sciencesBrainMathematical ConceptsMagnetic Resonance ImagingPattern Recognition VisualSpace PerceptionFunctional magnetic resonance imagingPsychologySynesthesia030217 neurology & neurosurgeryCognitive psychologyNeuropsychologia
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A ventral striatal prediction error signal in human fear extinction learning.

2021

Animal studies have shown that the prediction error (PE) signal that drives fear extinction learning is encoded by phasic activity of midbrain dopamine (DA) neurons. Thus, the extinction PE resembles the appetitive PE that drives reward learning. In humans, fear extinction learning is less well understood. Using computational neuroimaging, a previous study from our group reported hemodynamic activity in the left ventral putamen, a subregion of the ventral striatum (VS), to correlate with a PE function derived from a formal associative learning model. The activity was modulated by genetic variation in a DA-related gene. To conceptually replicate and extend this finding, we here asked whether…

AdultMaleCognitive NeuroscienceBiology050105 experimental psychologylcsh:RC321-571Extinction PsychologicalMidbrain03 medical and health sciencesYoung Adult0302 clinical medicineNeuroimagingDopaminemedicineHumansLearning0501 psychology and cognitive scienceslcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryPutamen05 social sciencesVentral striatumExtinction (psychology)FearGalvanic Skin ResponseMagnetic Resonance ImagingElectric StimulationAssociative learningmedicine.anatomical_structureNeurologyVentral StriatumFemaleAnimal studiesNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgeryPhotic Stimulationmedicine.drugForecastingNeuroImage
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Distributed BOLD-response in association cortex vector state space predicts reaction time during selective attention.

2006

Human cortical information processing is thought to be dominated by distributed activity in vector state space (Churchland, P.S., Sejnowski, T.J., 1992. The Computational Brain. MIT Press, Cambridge.). In principle, it should be possible to quantify distributed brain activation with independent component analysis (ICA) through vector-based decomposition, i.e., through a separation of a mixture of sources. Using event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) during a selective attention-requiring task (visual oddball), we explored how the number of independent components within activated cortical areas is related to reaction time. Prior to ICA, the activated cortical areas were d…

AdultMaleCognitive NeuroscienceBrain mappingImaging Three-DimensionalCortex (anatomy)medicineImage Processing Computer-AssistedReaction TimeHumansAttentionPrefrontal cortexDominance CerebralOddball paradigmCerebral CortexNeuronsBrain MappingPrincipal Component AnalysisBasis (linear algebra)medicine.diagnostic_testImage EnhancementIndependent component analysisEvent-Related Potentials P300Magnetic Resonance ImagingOxygenmedicine.anatomical_structureNeurologyPattern Recognition VisualCerebral cortexLinear ModelsFemaleNerve NetPsychologyFunctional magnetic resonance imagingNeuroscienceNeuroImage
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Disentangling common and specific neural subprocesses of response inhibition.

2012

article i nfo Response inhibition is disturbed in several disorders sharing impulse control deficits as a core symptom. Since response inhibition is a cognitively and neurally multifaceted function which has been shown to rely on differing neural subprocesses and neurotransmitter systems, further differentiation to define neurophys- iological endophenotypes is essential. Response inhibition may involve at least three separable cognitive sub- components, i.e. interference inhibition, action withholding, and action cancelation. Here, we introduce a novel paradigm - the Hybrid Response Inhibition task - to disentangle interference inhibition, action withholding and action cancelation and their…

AdultMaleCognitive NeuroscienceDecision MakingInferior frontal gyrusNeurotransmitter systemsYoung AdultmedicineHumansResponse inhibitionCerebral CortexCommunicationMotor areaArtificial neural networkmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryCognitionNeural InhibitionMagnetic Resonance ImagingInhibition PsychologicalNeurologyEndophenotypeFemaleNerve NetFunctional magnetic resonance imagingPsychologybusinessNeuroscienceNeuroImage
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Does the left inferior parietal lobule contribute to multiplication facts?

2005

We report a single case, who presents with a selective and severe impairment for multiplication and division facts. His ability to retrieve subtraction and addition facts was entirely normal. His brain lesion affected the left superior temporal and to lesser extent in the left middle temporal gyri and the left precentral gyrus extending inferiorly to the pars opercularis of the left frontal lobe. Interestingly, the left supramarginal and angular gyri (SMG/AG) were spared. This finding realised a double dissociation with a previously reported patient, who despite lesions in the SMG/AG did not have a multiplication impairment (van Harskamp et al., 2002). The previously suggested crucial role …

AdultMaleCognitive NeuroscienceExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyLeft frontal lobeNeuropsychological Testsbehavioral disciplines and activitiesFunctional LateralityMental ProcessesLeft precentral gyrusParietal LobeHumansNeurologic ExaminationSettore M-PSI/02 - Psicobiologia E Psicologia FisiologicaLeft inferior parietal lobuledyscalculia arithmetical fact retrieval multiplication and division impairment left inferior parietal lobulesupramarginal and angular gyriParietal lobeSubtractionAnatomyMagnetic Resonance ImagingNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyReadingBrain InjuriesMultiplicationLeft superiorPsychologyMathematicsCognitive psychologyPars opercularisCortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior
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Neuroanatomical basis of number synaesthesias: A voxel-based morphometry study

2016

In synaesthesia, a specific sensory dimension leads to an involuntary sensation in another sensory dimension not commonly associated with it; for example, synaesthetes may experience a specific colour when listening or thinking of numbers or letters. Large-scale behavioural studies provide a rich description of different synaesthesia phenotypes, and a great amount of research has been oriented to uncovering whether a single or multiple brain mechanisms underlie these various synaesthesia phenotypes. Interestingly, most of the synaesthetic inducers are conceptual stimuli such as numbers, letters, and months. However, the impact of these concepts on the synaesthetic brain remains largely unex…

AdultMaleCognitive NeuroscienceExperimental and Cognitive PsychologySensory systemGrey mattercomputer.software_genre050105 experimental psychologyPerceptual DisordersYoung Adult03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineVoxelCerebellumParietal LobeSensationNeuroplasticitymedicineHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesGray MatterFunctional Neuroimaging05 social sciencesRight amygdalaVoxel-based morphometryAmygdalaMagnetic Resonance ImagingWhite MatterLeft angular gyrusTemporal LobeNeuropsychology and Physiological Psychologymedicine.anatomical_structureFemaleNerve NetPsychologyNeurosciencecomputerSynesthesia030217 neurology & neurosurgeryCortex
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The Neural Correlates of Grammatical Gender: An fMRI Investigation

2002

Abstract In an fMRI experiment, subjects saw a written noun and made three distinct decisions in separate sessions: Is its grammatical gender masculine or feminine (grammatical feature task)? Is it an animal or an artifact (semantic task)? Does it contain a /tch/ or a /k/ sound (phonological task)? Relative to the other experimental conditions, the grammatical feature task activated areas of the left middle and inferior frontal gyrus and of the left middle and inferior temporal gyrus. These activations fit in well with neuropsychological studies that document the correlation between left frontal lesions and damage to morphological processes in agrammatism, and the correlation between left t…

AdultMaleCognitive NeuroscienceInferior frontal gyrusbehavioral disciplines and activitiesMental ProcessesPhoneticsInferior temporal gyrusAgrammatismNounmedicineHumansSpeechLanguageBrain MappingGrammatical genderVerbal BehaviorBrainPhonologyMagnetic Resonance ImagingSemanticsFrontal lobeLateralityAdult; Brain; Brain Mapping; Female; Humans; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Male; Mental Processes; Phonetics; Semantics; Speech; Verbal Behavior; Language; SexPhoneticMental ProcesseFemaleSexmedicine.symptomPsychologySemanticHumanCognitive psychologyJournal of Cognitive Neuroscience
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Numbers and time doubly dissociate

2011

The magnitude dimensions of number, time and space have been suggested to share some common magnitude processing, which may imply symmetric interaction among dimensions. Here we challenge these suggestions by presenting a double dissociation between two neuropsychological patients with left (JT) and right (CB) parietal lesions and selective impairment of number and time processing respectively. Both patients showed an influence of task-irrelevant number stimuli on time but not space processing. In JT otherwise preserved time processing was severely impaired in the mere presence of task-irrelevant numbers, which themselves could not be processed accurately. In CB, impaired temporal estimatio…

AdultMaleCognitive NeuroscienceIntelligenceNumbers and timeMagnitude (mathematics)Experimental and Cognitive PsychologyNeuropsychological TestsCombinatoricsExecutive FunctionBehavioral NeuroscienceDiscrimination PsychologicalHumansAttentionTime processingProblem SolvingSize PerceptionAgedIntelligence TestsSettore M-PSI/02 - Psicobiologia E Psicologia FisiologicaParietal lobeInfarction Middle Cerebral ArteryNumerosity adaptation effectMiddle AgedMagnitude processingMagnetic Resonance ImagingData Interpretation StatisticalSpace PerceptionMental RecallTime PerceptionFemaleNumerical estimationPsychologySocial psychologyPhotic StimulationPsychomotor PerformanceNeuropsychologia
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