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1
Adaptive and aberrant reward prediction signals in the human brain
2010-04-01

AbstractTheories of the positive symptoms of schizophrenia hypothesize a role for aberrant reinforcement signaling driven by dysregulated dopamine transmission. Recently, we provided evidence of aberrant reward learning in symptomatic, but not asymptomatic patients with schizophrenia, using a novel paradigm, the Salience Attribution ...

PubMed Central

2
Response inhibition or salience detection in the right ventrolateral prefrontal cortex?
2011-10-26

This study addresses the question of whether frontal activation in response-inhibition tasks is specifically associated with the suppression of a motor response. An alternative model suggests a role in the detection of behaviorally relevant or salient events. For this purpose, we used functional MRI with an auditory go/no-go paradigm. This paradigm allowed the disentangling of inhibition-related ...

PubMed

3
Assessing the Construct Validity of Aberrant Salience
2009-12-23

We sought to validate the psychometric properties of a recently developed paradigm that aims to measure salience attribution processes proposed to contribute to positive psychotic symptoms, the Salience Attribution Test (SAT). The �aberrant salience� measure from the SAT showed good face validity in previous ...

PubMed Central

4
Dopaminergic Dysfunction in Schizophrenia: Salience Attribution Revisited
2010-05-07

A dysregulation of the mesolimbic dopamine system in schizophrenia patients may lead to aberrant attribution of incentive salience and contribute to the emergence of psychopathological symptoms like delusions. The dopaminergic signal has been conceptualized to represent a prediction error that indicates the difference between received and predicted reward. ...

PubMed Central

5
Aberrant Effective Connectivity in Schizophrenia Patients during Appetitive Conditioning
2011-01-17

It has recently been suggested that schizophrenia involves dysfunction in brain connectivity at a neural level, and a dysfunction in reward processing at a behavioral level. The purpose of the present study was to link these two levels of analyses by examining effective connectivity patterns between brain regions mediating reward learning in patients with schizophrenia and healthy, age-matched ...

PubMed Central

6
The misattribution of salience in delusional patients with schizophreniaB

prefrontal systems in paranoid schizophrenia. Am. J. Psychiatry 161, 480�489. Woods, S.W., 2003. ChlorpromazineThe misattribution of salience in delusional patients with schizophreniaB Daphne J. Holt a,*, Debra perception. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that delusional schizophrenia patients are more likely

E-print Network

7
The Aberrant Salience Inventory: a new measure of psychosis proneness.
2010-09-01

Aberrant salience is the unusual or incorrect assignment of salience, significance, or importance to otherwise innocuous stimuli and has been hypothesized to be important for psychosis and psychotic disorders such as schizophrenia. Despite the importance of this concept in psychosis research, no questionnaire measures are available to ...

PubMed

8
The Aberrant Salience Inventory: A New Measure of Psychosis Proneness
2010-09-01

Aberrant salience is the unusual or incorrect assignment of salience, significance, or importance to otherwise innocuous stimuli and has been hypothesized to be important for psychosis and psychotic disorders such as schizophrenia. Despite the importance of this concept in psychosis research, no questionnaire measures are available to ...

ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

9
Aberrant supplementary motor complex and limbic activity during motor preparation in motor conversion disorder.
2011-09-20

Conversion disorder (CD) is characterized by unexplained neurological symptoms presumed related to psychological issues. The main hypotheses to explain conversion paralysis, characterized by a lack of movement, include impairments in either motor intention or disruption of motor execution, and further, that hyperactive self-monitoring, limbic processing or top-down regulation from higher order ...

PubMed

10
Negative and Nonemotional Interference with Visual Working Memory in Schizophrenia.
2011-08-20

BACKGROUND: Schizophrenia (SCZ) results in abnormalities affecting both working memory (WM) and emotional processing. Prior work suggests that individuals with SCZ exhibit increased effects of distraction on WM-a deficit that might be exacerbated via emotional interference. However, no study characterized effects of negative and nonemotional interference on visual WM in SCZ with functional ...

PubMed

11
Illusions and delusions: relating experimentally-induced false memories to anomalous experiences and ideas.
2009-11-24

The salience hypothesis of psychosis rests on a simple but profound observation that subtle alterations in the way that we perceive and experience stimuli have important consequences for how important these stimuli become for us, how much they draw our attention, how they embed themselves in our memory and, ultimately, how they shape our beliefs. We put forward the idea that a ...

PubMed

12
Illusions and Delusions: Relating Experimentally-Induced False Memories to Anomalous Experiences and Ideas
2009-11-24

The salience hypothesis of psychosis rests on a simple but profound observation that subtle alterations in the way that we perceive and experience stimuli have important consequences for how important these stimuli become for us, how much they draw our attention, how they embed themselves in our memory and, ultimately, how they shape our beliefs. We put forward the idea that a ...

PubMed Central

13
Local Government Video Catalog

. et al. Evidence for striatal dopamine release during a video game. Nature 393, 266�268 (1998). 24 amygdala has been emphasized in `associative learning' or `incen- tive salience' theories of drug addiction in prefrontal cortex. Nature 376, 572�575 (1995). 3. Everitt, B. J. et al. Associative processes in addiction

E-print Network

14
Dopamine Modulation in a Basal Ganglio-Cortical Network Implements Saliency-Based Gating of
2003-01-01

Dopamine exerts two classes of effect on the sustained neural activity in prefrontal cortex that underlies working memory. Direct release in the cortex increases the contrast of prefrontal neurons, enhancing the robustness of storage. Release of dopamine in the striatum is associated with salient stimuli and makes medium spiny neurons bistable; this ...

E-print Network

15
The Incentive Salience of Alcohol
2008-07-01

ContextThe gene that codes for cannabinoid receptor 1 (CNR1) represents an important target for investigations designed to elucidate individual differences in the etiology of alcohol dependence.ObjectiveTo achieve a better understanding of the role of the CNR1 gene in the etiology and treatment of alcohol dependence.DesignThe present investigation spans multiple levels of analysis, including ...

PubMed Central

16
Know Your Place: Neural Processing of Social Hierarchy in Humans
2008-04-24

SummarySocial hierarchies guide behavior in many species, including humans, where status also has an enormous impact on motivation and health. However, little is known about the underlying neural representation of social hierarchies in humans. In the present study, we identify dissociable neural responses to perceived social rank using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) in an interactive ...

PubMed Central

17
Low dopamine striatal D2 receptors are associated with prefrontal metabolism in obese subjects: Possible contributing factors
2008-06-13

Dopamine's role in inhibitory control is well recognized and its disruption may contribute to behavioral disorders of discontrol such as obesity. However, the mechanism by which impaired dopamine neurotransmission interferes with inhibitory control is poorly understood. We had previously documented a reduction in dopamine D2 receptors in morbidly obese subjects. To assess if the reductions in ...

PubMed Central

18
Aberrant salience network (bilateral insula and anterior cingulate cortex) connectivity during information processing in schizophrenia.
2010-08-17

A salience network, comprising bilateral insula and anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), is thought to play a role in recruiting relevant brain regions for the processing of sensory information. Here, we present a functional network connectivity (FNC) analysis of spatial networks identified during somatosensation, performed to test the hypothesis that salience ...

PubMed

19
Temporally anticorrelated brain networks during working memory performance reveal aberrant prefrontal and hippocampal connectivity in patients with schizophrenia.
2009-08-08

Functional neuroimaging studies on cognitive dysfunction in schizophrenia have suggested regional brain activation changes in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and the medial temporal lobe. However, less is known about the functional coupling of these areas during cognitive performance. In this study, we used functional magnetic resonance imaging, a verbal working memory (WM) ...

PubMed

20
Large-scale brain networks and psychopathology: a unifying triple network model.
2011-09-01

The science of large-scale brain networks offers a powerful paradigm for investigating cognitive and affective dysfunction in psychiatric and neurological disorders. This review examines recent conceptual and methodological developments which are contributing to a paradigm shift in the study of psychopathology. I summarize methods for characterizing aberrant brain networks and ...

PubMed

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21
Cortical activation during delay discounting in abstinent methamphetamine dependent individuals
2008-08-07

BackgroundMethamphetamine (MA)-dependent individuals prefer smaller immediate over larger delayed rewards in delay discounting (DD) tasks. Human and animal data implicate ventral (amygdala, ventral striatum, ventrolateral prefrontal cortex insula) and dorsal (dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, dorsal anterior cingulate cortex and posterior parietal cortex) ...

PubMed Central

22
Exposure to the Taste of Alcohol Elicits Activation of the Mesocorticolimbic Neurocircuitry
2007-07-25

A growing number of imaging studies suggest that alcohol cues, mainly visual, elicit activation in mesocorticolimbic structures. Such findings are consistent with the growing recognition that these structures play an important role in the attribution of incentive salience and the pathophysiology of addiction. The present study investigated whether the presentation of alcohol ...

PubMed Central

23
At the Heart of the Ventral Attention System: the Right Anterior Insula
2009-08-01

The anterior insula has been hypothesized to provide a link between attention-related problem solving and salience systems during the coordination of and evaluation of task performance. Here we test the hypothesis that the anterior insula/medial frontal operculum (aI/fO) provides linkage across systems supporting task demands and attention systems by examining patterns of ...

PubMed Central

24
The neural architecture of music-evoked autobiographical memories.
2009-02-24

The medial prefrontal cortex (MPFC) is regarded as a region of the brain that supports self-referential processes, including the integration of sensory information with self-knowledge and the retrieval of autobiographical information. I used functional magnetic resonance imaging and a novel procedure for eliciting autobiographical memories with excerpts of popular music dating ...

PubMed

25
The Neural Architecture of Music-Evoked Autobiographical Memories
2009-11-24

The medial prefrontal cortex (MPFC) is regarded as a region of the brain that supports self-referential processes, including the integration of sensory information with self-knowledge and the retrieval of autobiographical information. I used functional magnetic resonance imaging and a novel procedure for eliciting autobiographical memories with excerpts of popular music dating ...

PubMed Central

26
Imaging dopamine�s role in drug abuse and addiction
2008-06-03

Dopamine is involved in drug reinforcement but its role in addiction is less clear. Here we describe PET imaging studies that investigate dopamine�s involvement in drug abuse in the human brain. In humans the reinforcing effects of drugs are associated with large and fast increases in extracellular dopamine, which mimic those induced by physiological dopamine cell firing but are more intense and ...

PubMed Central

27
Medial prefrontal cortical synapsin II knock-down induces behavioral abnormalities in the rat: Examining synapsin II in the pathophysiology of schizophrenia.
2011-08-01

Synapsin II is a synaptic vesicle-associated phosphoprotein that has been implicated in the pathophysiology of schizophrenia. Studies have demonstrated reductions in synapsin II mRNA and protein in medial prefrontal cortical post-mortem samples from patients with schizophrenia, genetic associations between synapsin II and schizophrenia, and synapsin II protein regulation by ...

PubMed

28
Aberrant frontoparietal function during recognition memory in schizophrenia: a multimodal neuroimaging investigation
2009-09-09

Prefrontal-parietal networks are essential to many cognitive processes, including the ability to differentiate new from previously presented items. As patients with schizophrenia exhibit structural abnormalities in these areas along with well-documented decrements in recognition memory, we hypothesized that these patients would demonstrate memory-related abnormalities in ...

PubMed Central

29
Aberrant Frontal Lobe Maturation in Adolescents with Fragile X Syndrome is Related to Delayed Cognitive Maturation.
2011-07-28

BACKGROUND: Fragile X syndrome (FXS) is the most common known heritable cause of intellectual disability. Prior studies in FXS have observed a plateau in cognitive and adaptive behavioral development in early adolescence, suggesting that brain development in FXS may diverge from typical development during this period. METHODS: In this study, we examined adolescent brain development using ...

PubMed

30
Functional resting-state networks are differentially affected in schizophrenia.
2011-03-31

Neurobiological theories posit that schizophrenia relates to disturbances in connectivity between brain regions. Resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging is a powerful tool for examining functional connectivity and has revealed several canonical brain networks, including the default mode, dorsal attention, executive control, and salience networks. The purpose of ...

PubMed

31
Developmental effects of reward on sustained attention networks.
2011-02-04

Adolescence is typified by significant maturation in higher-level attention functions coupled with less developed control over motivation, and enhanced sensitivity to novelty and reward. This study used event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) in seventy male and female participants aged between 10 and 43 years to identify age-related linear changes in cognitive sustained ...

PubMed

32
How antidepressant drugs act: A primer on neuroplasticity as the eventual mediator of antidepressant efficacy

Depression is conventionally viewed as a state of chemical imbalance, and antidepressants are suggested to act through increasing monoaminergic neurotransmission. These views are currently considered simplistic. This article examines the animal and human literature on the neurohistological mechanisms underlying stress, depression and antidepressant treatment. Pathological stress and depression are ...

PubMed Central

33
Feature Saliency in Artificial Neural Networks with Application to Modeling Workload.
1998-01-01

This dissertation research extends the current knowledge of feature saliency in artificial neural networks (ANN). Feature saliency measures allow for the user to rank order the features based upon the saliency, or relative importance, of the features. Sel...

National Technical Information Service (NTIS)

34
Contour salience descriptors for effective image retrieval and analysis
2007-01-01

This work exploits the resemblance between content-based image retrieval and image analysis with respect to the design of image descriptors and their effectiveness. In this context, two shape descriptors are proposed: contour saliences and segment saliences. Contour saliences revisits its original definition, where the location of ...

E-print Network

35
Alterations of fronto-temporal connectivity during word encoding in schizophrenia
2007-03-13

Cognitive deficits, including impaired verbal memory, are prominent in schizophrenia and lead to increased disability. Functional neuroimaging of patients with schizophrenia performing memory tasks has revealed abnormal activation patterns in prefrontal cortex and temporo-limbic regions. Aberrant fronto-temporal interactions thus represent a potential ...

PubMed Central

36
Salience Assignment for Multiple-Instance Regression
2007-01-01

We present a Multiple-Instance Learning (MIL) algorithm for determining the salience of each item in

NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

37
Affective context interferes with cognitive control in unipolar depression: An fMRI investigation
2008-08-15

BackgroundUnipolar major depressive disorder (MDD) is characterized by aberrant amygdala responses to sad stimuli and poor cognitive control, but the interactive effects of these impairments are poorly understood.AimTo evaluate brain activation in MDD in response to cognitive control stimuli embedded within sad and neutral contexts.MethodFourteen adults with MDD and fifteen ...

PubMed Central

38
Maternal Neural Responses to Infant Cries and Faces: Relationships with Substance Use
2011-06-15

Substance abuse in pregnant and recently post-partum women is a major public health concern because of effects on the infant and on the ability of the adult to care for the infant. In addition to the negative health effects of teratogenic substances on fetal development, substance use can contribute to difficulties associated with the social and behavioral aspects of parenting. Neural circuits ...

PubMed Central

39
Arithmetic Word-Problem-Solving in Huntington's Disease
2005-02-01

The purpose of this study was to examine executive functioning in patients with Huntington's disease using an arithmetic word-problem-solving task including eight solvable problems of increasing complexity and four aberrant problems. Ten patients with Huntington's disease and 12 normal control subjects matched by age and education were tested. Patients with Huntington's ...

ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

40
Converging evidence for abnormalities of the prefrontal cortex and evaluation of midsagittal structures in pediatric PTSD: an MRI study
2009-04-05

ObjectiveVolumetric imaging research has shown abnormal brain morphology in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) when compared to controls. We present results on a study of brain morphology in the prefrontal cortex (PFC) and midline structures, via indices of gray matter volume and density, in pediatric PTSD. We hypothesized that both methods would demonstrate ...

PubMed Central

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41
What does the amygdala contribute to social cognition?
2010-03-01

The amygdala has received intense recent attention from neuroscientists investigating its function at the molecular, cellular, systems, cognitive, and clinical level. It clearly contributes to processing emotionally and socially relevant information, yet a unifying description and computational account have been lacking. The difficulty of tying together the various studies stems in part from the ...

PubMed Central

42
The Contribution of Emotion and Cognition to Moral Sensitivity: A Neurodevelopmental Study.
2011-05-26

Whether emotion is a source of moral judgments remains controversial. This study combined neurophysiological measures, including functional magnetic resonance imaging, eye-tracking, and pupillary response with behavioral measures assessing affective and moral judgments across age. One hundred and twenty-six participants aged between 4 and 37 years viewed scenarios depicting intentional versus ...

PubMed

43
Testing the reward prediction error hypothesis with an axiomatic model.
2010-10-01

Neuroimaging studies typically identify neural activity correlated with the predictions of highly parameterized models, like the many reward prediction error (RPE) models used to study reinforcement learning. Identified brain areas might encode RPEs or, alternatively, only have activity correlated with RPE model predictions. Here, we use an alternate axiomatic approach rooted in economic theory to ...

PubMed

44
Testing the Reward Prediction Error Hypothesis with an Axiomatic Model
2010-10-06

Neuroimaging studies typically identify neural activity correlated with the predictions of highly parameterized models, like the many reward prediction error (RPE) models used to study reinforcement learning. Identified brain areas might encode RPEs or, alternatively, only have activity correlated with RPE model predictions. Here we use an alternate axiomatic approach rooted in economic theory to ...

PubMed Central

45
Secure attachment partners attenuate neural responses to social exclusion: an fMRI investigation.
2011-05-05

Research has shown that social exclusion has devastating psychological, physiological, and behavioral consequences. However, little is known about possible ways to shield individuals from the detrimental effects of social exclusion. The present study, in which participants were excluded during a ball-tossing game, examined whether (reminders of) secure attachment relationships could attenuate ...

PubMed

46
Resting state fMRI in Alzheimer's disease: beyond the default mode network.
2011-08-01

Using resting state (RS) functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), the connectivity patterns of the default mode (DMN), frontoparietal, executive, and salience networks were explored in 13 Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients, 12 amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI) patients, and 13 healthy controls. Compared with controls and aMCI, AD was associated with opposing ...

PubMed

47
Representation of perceived sound valence in the human brain.
2011-08-01

Perceived emotional valence of sensory stimuli influences their processing in various cortical and subcortical structures. Recent evidence suggests that negative and positive valences are processed separately, not along a single linear continuum. Here, we examined how brain is activated when subjects are listening to auditory stimuli varying parametrically in perceived valence (very ...

PubMed

48
Individual Differences in the Spontaneous Recruitment of Brain Regions Supporting Mental State Understanding When Viewing Natural Social Scenes.
2011-04-28

People are able to rapidly infer complex personality traits and mental states even from the most minimal person information. Research has shown that when observers view a natural scene containing people, they spend a disproportionate amount of their time looking at the social features (e.g., faces, bodies). Does this preference for social features merely reflect the biological ...

PubMed

49
An acute psychosocial stress enhances the neural response to smoking cues
2009-07-24

Stress plays an important role in drug addiction. It can trigger relapse in abstinent addicts, and both in the everyday world and in the laboratory, a stressor can induce drug craving. Drug cues, such as the sight of drug, can also trigger subjective craving and relapse, and this effect may be amplified by stress. Underpinning this interaction may be the fact that stress and reward-predicting drug ...

PubMed Central

50
Food seeking in spite of harmful consequences is under prefrontal cortical noradrenergic control
2010-02-08

BackgroundEating disorders are multifactorial psychiatric disorders. Chronic stressful experiences and caloric restriction are the most powerful triggers of eating disorders in human and animals. Although compulsive behavior is considered to characterize pathological excessive food intake, to our knowledge, no evidence has been reported of continued food seeking/intake despite its possible harmful ...

PubMed Central

51
Amphetamine sensitization alters dendritic morphology in prefrontal cortical pyramidal neurons in the non-human primate.
2006-08-16

Amphetamine (AMPH) sensitization in the nonhuman primate induces persistent aberrant behaviors reminiscent of the hallmark symptoms of schizophrenia, including hallucinatory-like behaviors, psychomotor depression, and profound cognitive impairment. The present study examined whether AMPH sensitization induces similarly long-lasting morphologic alterations in ...

PubMed

52
Aberrant social and cerebral responding in a competitive reaction time paradigm in criminal psychopaths.
2009-12-04

In a previous study (Lotze et al., 2007) we described dorsal medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) activation in healthy subjects during retaliation in a competitive reaction time task. Interestingly, the less callous the subjects were, the more they responded with ventral mPFC-activation when watching the opponent suffering. In this study we used this paradigm to investigate ...

PubMed

53
Enhancing the salience of dullness: Behavioral and pharmacological strategies to facilitate extinction of drug-cue associations in adolescent rats
2010-08-25

Extinction of drug-seeking is an integral part of addiction treatment, and can profoundly reverse or ameliorate the harmful consequences of drug use. These consequences may be the most deleterious during adolescence. The studies presented here build from recent evidence that adolescent rats are more resistant to extinction training than adults, and therefore may require unique treatment ...

PubMed Central

54
Distinct functional contributions of primary sensory and association areas to audiovisual integration in object categorization.
2010-02-17

Multisensory interactions have been demonstrated in a distributed neural system encompassing primary sensory and higher-order association areas. However, their distinct functional roles in multisensory integration remain unclear. This functional magnetic resonance imaging study dissociated the functional contributions of three cortical levels to multisensory integration in object categorization. ...

PubMed

55
Disruption of Maternal Parenting Circuitry by Addictive Process: Rewiring of Reward and Stress Systems
2011-07-06

Addiction represents a complex interaction between the reward and stress neural circuits, with increasing drug use reflecting a shift from positive reinforcement to negative reinforcement mechanisms in sustaining drug dependence. Preclinical studies have indicated the involvement of regions within the extended amygdala as subserving this transition, especially under stressful conditions. In the ...

PubMed Central

56
Altered functional connectivity in asymptomatic MAPT subjects: A comparison to bvFTD.
2011-08-17

OBJECTIVE: To determine whether functional connectivity is altered in subjects with mutations in the microtubule associated protein tau (MAPT) gene who were asymptomatic but were destined to develop dementia, and to compare these findings to those in subjects with behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD). METHODS: In this case-control study, we identified 8 asymptomatic subjects with ...

PubMed

57
Aberrant visual circuitry associated with normal spatial match-to-sample accuracy in schizophrenia.
2011-07-22

A goal of this study was to evaluate the function of the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) in medicated patients with schizophrenia (SZ), a small group of first-degree relatives, and healthy controls using a visual delayed match-to-sample task in conjunction with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). To mitigate ...

PubMed

58
NMDA Receptor Hypofunction Leads to Generalized and Persistent Aberrant ? Oscillations Independent of Hyperlocomotion and the State of Consciousness
2009-08-25

BackgroundThe psychotomimetics ketamine and MK-801, non-competitive NMDA receptor (NMDAr) antagonists, induce cognitive impairment and aggravate schizophrenia symptoms. In conscious rats, they produce an abnormal behavior associated with a peculiar brain state characterized by increased synchronization in ongoing ? (30�80 Hz) oscillations in the frontoparietal (sensorimotor) electrocorticogram ...

PubMed Central

59
Multi-scale Saliency Search in Image Analysis.
2005-01-01

Saliency detection in images is an important outstanding problem both in machine vision design and the understanding of human vision mechanisms. Recently, seminal work by Itti and Koch resulted in an effective saliency-detection algorithm. We reproduce th...

National Technical Information Service (NTIS)

60
Computation of Intrinsic Perceptual Saliency in Visual Environments and Applications.
2006-01-01

Detection of image salience in a visual display of an image. The image is analyzed at multiple spatial scales and over multiple feature channels to determine the likely salience of different portions of the image. One application for the system is in an a...

National Technical Information Service (NTIS)

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61
Phase Diversity and Polarization Augmented Techniques for ...
2007-03-01

... dynamic aberrations. For the dynamic aberration case, elimination of ... dynamic aberrations. For the dynamic aberration case, elimination of ...

DTIC Science & Technology

62
The effects of gender on grey matter abnormalities in major psychoses: a comparative voxelwise meta-analysis of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder.
2011-08-11

BACKGROUND: Recent evidence from genetic and familial studies revitalized the debate concerning the validity of the distinction between schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. Comparing brain imaging findings is an important avenue to examine similarities and differences and, therefore, the validity of the distinction between these conditions. However, in contrast to bipolar disorder, most patient ...

PubMed

63
Switching between executive and default mode networks in posttraumatic stress disorder: alterations in functional connectivity
2010-07-01

BackgroundWorking memory processing and resting-state connectivity in the default mode network are altered in patients with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Because the ability to effortlessly switch between concentration on a task and an idling state during rest is implicated in both these alterations, we undertook a functional magnetic resonance imaging study with a block design to analyze ...

PubMed Central

64
Divergent Plasticity of Prefrontal Cortex Networks
2007-10-03

The �executive� regions of the prefrontal cortex (PFC) such as the dorsolateral PFC (dlPFC) and its rodent equivalent medial PFC (mPFC) are thought to respond in concert with the �limbic� regions of the PFC such as the orbitofrontal (OFC) cortex to orchestrate behavior that is consistent with context and expected outcome. Both groups of regions have been implicated in ...

PubMed Central

65
Cannabinoid transmission in the basolateral amygdala modulates fear memory formation via functional inputs to the prelimbic cortex.
2011-04-01

The cannabinoid CB1 receptor system is critically involved in the control of associative fear memory formation within the amygdala-prefrontal cortical pathway. The CB1 receptor is found in high concentrations in brain structures that are critical for emotional processing, including the basolateral amygdala (BLA) and the prelimbic division (PLC) of the medial ...

PubMed

66
Unclas - NASA Technical Report Server (NTRS)

Chromatic aberrations arise as a consequence of the disper- ..... Chromatic aberrations are divided into chromatic aberration ...

NASA Website

67
CHROMATIC AND SPHERICAL ABERRATION IN ...

... superior to electrostatic systems with respect to total aberration, but their ... The two limiting aberrations, spherical and chromatic, are analyzed in this ...

DTIC Science & Technology

68
ABERRATIONS OF THIN HOLOGRAMS PRODUCED ON A ...
1974-12-01

... KNOWN EXPRESSIONS FOR THE ABERRATIONS OF PLANE ... CAN CONSIDERABLY REDUCE THE SPHERICAL ABERRATION AND COMA ...

DTIC Science & Technology

69
The Neurobiological Foundations of Giftedness
2009-12-01

Case studies of extremely gifted individuals often reveal unique patterns of intellectual precocity and associated abnormalities in development and behavior. This article begins with a review of current neurophysiological and neuroanatomical findings related to the gifted population. The bulk of scientific inquiries provide evidence of unique patterns of right prefrontal ...

ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

70
Evidence for a Structure-Mapping Theory of Analogy and ...
1986-12-01

... "Billboards are like warts.", the shared features (such as ugly) are of high salience in the base (warts) and of low salience in the target (billboards). ...

DTIC Science & Technology

71
An epigenetic hypothesis of aging-related cognitive dysfunction.
2010-03-12

This brief review will focus on a new hypothesis for the role of epigenetic mechanisms in aging-related disruptions of synaptic plasticity and memory. Epigenetics refers to a set of potentially self-perpetuating, covalent modifications of DNA and post-translational modifications of nuclear proteins that produce lasting alterations in chromatin structure. These mechanisms, in turn, result in ...

PubMed

72
An Epigenetic Hypothesis of Aging-Related Cognitive Dysfunction
2010-03-12

This brief review will focus on a new hypothesis for the role of epigenetic mechanisms in aging-related disruptions of synaptic plasticity and memory. Epigenetics refers to a set of potentially self-perpetuating, covalent modifications of DNA and post-translational modifications of nuclear proteins that produce lasting alterations in chromatin structure. These mechanisms, in turn, result in ...

PubMed Central

73
Inverse association between BMI and prefrontal met... [Obesity...
2011-08-20

Off Turn On Inverse association between BMI and prefrontal metabolic activity in healthy adu... Inverse association between BMI and prefrontal metabolic activity in healthy adults....

Science.gov Websites

74
Damage to the prefrontal cortex increases utilitarian moral judgements

Functional Specializations in Lateral Prefrontal Cortex Associated with the Integration neuroscience research has provided clear evidence that the prefrontal cortex (PFC), in concert with posterior

E-print Network

75
Modeling "psychosis" in vitro by inducing disordered neuronal network activity in cortical brain slices.
2009-02-25

INTRODUCTION: Dysregulation of neuronal networks has been suggested to underlie the cognitive and perceptual abnormalities observed schizophrenia. DISCUSSIONS: An in vitro model of psychosis is proposed based on the two different approaches to cause aberrant network activity in layer V pyramidal cells of prefrontal brain slices: (1) psychedelic ...

PubMed

76
Affective dysregulation and reality distortion: a 10-year prospective study of their association and clinical relevance.
2009-09-30

Evidence from clinical patient populations indicates that affective dysregulation is strongly associated with reality distortion, suggesting that a process of misassignment of emotional salience may underlie this connection. To examine this in more detail without clinical confounds, affective regulation-reality distortion relationships, and their clinical relevance, were ...

PubMed

77
Visual misperceptions and hallucinations in Parkinson's disease: Dysfunction of attentional control networks?
2011-09-23

Visual misperceptions and hallucinations are a major cause of distress in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD), particularly in the advanced stages of the condition. Recent work has provided a framework for understanding the pathogenesis of these symptoms, implicating impairments from the retina to the integration of external information with preformed internal images. In this article, we ...

PubMed

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