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BACKGROUND: The underlying neurobiological mechanisms that account for the onset and maintenance of binge-eating disorder (BED) are not sufficiently understood. This functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study explored the neural correlates of visually induced food reward and loathing. METHOD: Sixty-seven female participants assigned to one of four groups (overweight BED patients, overweight healthy control subjects, normal-weight healthy control subjects, and normal-weight patients with bulimia nervosa) participated in the experiment. After an overnight fast, the participants' brain activation was recorded during each of the following three conditions: visual exposure to high-caloric food, to disgust-inducing pictures, and to affectively neutral pictures. After the fMRI experiment, the participants rated the affective value of the pictures. RESULTS: Each of the groups experienced the food pictures as very pleasant. Relative to the neutral pictures, the visual food stimuli provoked increased activation in the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC), anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), and insula across all participants. The BED patients reported enhanced reward sensitivity and showed stronger medial OFC responses while viewing food pictures than all other groups. The bulimic patients displayed greater arousal, ACC activation, and insula activation than the other groups. Neural responses to the disgust-inducing pictures as well as trait disgust did not differ between the groups. CONCLUSIONS: This study provides first evidence of differential brain activation to visual food stimuli in patients suffering from BED and bulimia nervosa.
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This study investigated differences in brain activation during meditation between meditators and non-meditators. Fifteen Vipassana meditators (mean practice: 7.9 years, 2h daily) and fifteen non-meditators, matched for sex, age, education, and handedness, participated in a block-design fMRI study that included mindfulness of breathing and mental arithmetic conditions. For the meditation condition (contrasted to arithmetic), meditators showed stronger activations in the rostral anterior cingulate cortex and the dorsal medial prefrontal cortex bilaterally, compared to controls. Greater rostral anterior cingulate cortex activation in meditators may reflect stronger processing of distracting events. The increased activation in the medial prefrontal cortex may reflect that meditators are stronger engaged in emotional processing.
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Cognitive disturbances are common in Parkinson's disease (PD). Examination of cognitive function often reveals deficits in executive functions, including maintenance and inhibition of attention, flexibility in thinking, and planning. The involvement of the dopaminergic system in cognitive executive functions has been suggested by numerous studies. The aim of the present study was to analyze the effect of cognitive training on cognitive performance of PD-patients (N=26). Half of the patients participated in a cognitive training regimen, while the other patients only received standard treatment. The outcome showed improved performance of the group with cognitive treatment in two executive tasks after the training period, while no improvement was seen in the standard-treatment group. The results indicate that specific training is required for improvement of executive functions, while general rehabilitation is not sufficient. Thus, PD-patients might benefit from a short-term cognitive executive function training program that is tailored to the individual patient's needs.
Erkunden
Team
Eintragsart
Sprache
- Englisch (3)
Thema
- Case-Control Studies
- Adult (2)
- Affect/*physiology (1)
- Aged (1)
- Analysis of Variance (1)
- Arousal (1)
- *Brain Mapping (1)
- Brain Mapping (1)
- Brain/physiopathology (1)
- Bulimia Nervosa/*physiopathology/*psychology (1)
- Cerebral Cortex/*physiopathology (1)
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy/*methods (1)
- Female (3)
- Food (1)
- Frontal Lobe/blood supply/*physiology (1)
- Functional Laterality/physiology (1)
- Gyrus Cinguli/blood supply/*physiology (1)
- Humans (3)
- Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods (1)
- Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods (1)
- Male (2)
- Mathematics (1)
- *Meditation (1)
- Mental Processes/*physiology (1)
- Neuropsychological Tests/statistics & numerical data (1)
- Oxygen/blood (1)
- Parkinson Disease/*physiopathology/*therapy (1)
- *Photic Stimulation (1)
- Problem Solving/*physiology (1)
- Reproducibility of Results (1)
- *Reward (1)