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Disgust extinction is an important mechanism relevant for the treatment of psychiatric disorders. However, only a few studies have investigated disgust extinction. Moreover, because disgust sensitivity (DS) is considered as a relevant factor for learning processes, this study also investigated the potential relationship between DS and disgust extinction learning. The aim of this study was to explore the neuronal correlates of disgust extinction, as well as changes in skin conductance responses (SCRs) and evaluative conditioning. Twenty subjects were exposed to a differential extinction paradigm, in which a previous conditioned, and now unreinforced, stimulus (conditioned stimulus, CS+) was compared to a second stimulus (CS-), which was previously not associated with the unconditioned stimulus (UCS). Extinction learning was measured on three different response levels (BOLD responses, SCRs, and evaluative conditioning). Regarding evaluative conditioning, the CS+ was rated as more unpleasant than the CS-. Interestingly, significantly increased amygdala responses and SCRs toward to the CS- were observed. Finally, a (negative) trend was found between DS scores and BOLD responses of the prefrontal cortex. The present findings showed a dissociation of different response levels. The increased CS- responses could be explained by the assumption that the increased amygdala activity may reflect a safety learning signal during the first extinction trials and the subjective focus may therefore shift from the CS+ to the CS-. The correlation finding supports previous studies postulating that DS hampers extinction processes. The present results point toward dissociations between the response levels in context of extinction processes.
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Ambiguous figures induce sudden transitions between rivaling percepts. We investigated electroencephalogram frequency modulations of accompanying change-related de- and rebinding processes. Presenting the stimuli discontinously, we synchronized perceptual reversals with stimulus onset, which served as a time reference for averaging. The resultant gain in temporal resolution revealed a sequence of time-frequency correlates of the reversal process. Most conspicuous was a transient right-hemispheric gamma modulation preceding endogenous reversals by at least 200 ms. No such modulation occurred with exogenously induced reversals of unambiguous stimulus variants. Post-onset components were delayed for ambiguous compared to unambiguous stimuli. The time course of oscillatory activity differed in several respects from predictions based on binding-related hypotheses. The gamma modulation preceding endogenous reversals may indicate an unstable brain state, ready to switch.
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Facilitated detection of threatening visual cues is thought to be adaptive. In theory, detection of threat cues should activate the amygdala independently from allocation of attention. However, previous studies using emotional facial expressions as well as phobic cues yielded contradictory results. We used fMRI to examine whether the allocation of attention to components of superimposed spider and bird displays modulates amygdala activation. Nineteen spider-phobic women were instructed to identify either a moving or a stationary animal in briefly presented double-exposure displays. Amygdala activation followed a dose-response relationship: Compared to congruent neutral displays (two birds), amygdala activation was most pronounced in response to congruent phobic displays (two spiders) and less but still significant in response to mixed displays (spider and bird) when attention was focused on the phobic component. When attention was focused on the neutral component, mixed displays did not result in significant amygdala activation. This was confirmed in a significant parametric graduation of the amygdala activation in the order of congruent phobic displays, mixed displays with attention focus on the spider, mixed displays with focus on the bird and congruent neutral displays. These results challenge the notion that amygdala activation in response to briefly presented phobic cues is independent from attention.
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Theta increases with workload and is associated with numerous processes including working memory, problem solving, encoding, or self monitoring. These processes, in turn, involve numerous structures of the brain. However, the relationship between regional brain activity and the occurrence of theta remains unclear. In the present study, simultaneous EEG-fMRI recordings were used to investigate the functional topography of theta. EEG-theta was enhanced by mental arithmetic-induced workload. For the EEG-constrained fMRI analysis, theta-reference time-series were extracted from the EEG, reflecting the strength of theta occurrence during the time course of the experiment. Theta occurrence was mainly associated with activation of the insular cortex, hippocampus, superior temporal areas, cingulate cortex, superior parietal, and frontal areas. Though observation of temporal and insular activation is in accord with the theory that theta specifically reflects encoding processes, the involvement of several other brain regions implies that surface-recorded theta represents comprehensive functional brain states rather than specific processes in the brain. The results provide further evidence for the concept that emergent theta band oscillations represent dynamic functional binding of widely distributed cortical assemblies, essential for cognitive processing. This binding process may form the source of surface-recorded EEG theta.
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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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The present functional magnetic resonance imaging study investigated the fear and disgust reactivity of patients suffering from spider phobia. Ten phobics and 13 control subjects were scanned while viewing alternating blocks of phobia-relevant, generally fear-inducing, disgust-inducing and affectively neutral pictures. The patient group rated the spider pictures as being more disgust and fear evoking than the control group, and showed greater activation of the visual association cortex, the amygdalae, the right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and the right hippocampus. Specific phobia-related activation occurred in the supplementary motor area. The patients also showed greater amygdala activation during the presentation of generally disgust- and fear-inducing pictures. This points to an elevated sensitivity to repulsive and threatening stimuli in spider phobics and implicates the amygdala as a crucial neural substrate.
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The aim of this fMRI study was to explore brain structures that are involved in the processing of erotic and disgust-inducing pictures. The stimuli were chosen to trigger approach and withdrawal tendencies, respectively. By adding sadomasochistic (SM) scenes to the design and examining 12 subjects with and 12 subjects without sadomasochistic preferences, we introduced a picture category that induced erotic pleasure in one sample and disgust in the other sample. Since we also presented neutral pictures, all subjects viewed pictures of four different categories: neutral, disgust-inducing, erotic, and SM erotic pictures. The analysis indicated that several brain structures are commonly involved in the processing of disgust-inducing and erotic pictures (occipital cortex, hippocampus, thalamus, and the amygdala). The ventral striatum was specifically activated when subjects saw highly sexually arousing pictures. This indicates the involvement of the human reward system during the processing of visual erotica.
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We assessed the effect of size and localization of a brain lesion on patients' abilities to perceive the temporal order of two acoustic stimuli. In those patients who had performed with impaired order thresholds, local overlaps of lesions as analyzed with CT were found in specific left-hemispheric regions of the temporal and parietal lobe. However, a moderate association of lesion size and temporal-order threshold was found among all brain-injured patients (n = 30), a correlation that was most pronounced in patients with right-hemispheric lesions. This non-specific effect of lesion size has to be discussed critically with respect to behavioral findings of an association between temporal-processing abilities and language competence.
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- Englisch (8)
Thema
- Functional Laterality/physiology
- Acoustic Stimulation/methods (1)
- Adaptation, Physiological/physiology (1)
- Adult (8)
- *Affect (1)
- Aged (1)
- Amygdala/blood supply/metabolism (1)
- Amygdala/*physiology (1)
- Amygdala/physiology (1)
- Amygdala/*physiopathology (1)
- Analysis of Variance (1)
- Animals (2)
- Attention/*physiology (1)
- Auditory Perception/*physiology (1)
- Basal Ganglia/blood supply/metabolism (1)
- Biological Clocks/physiology (1)
- Brain/anatomy & histology/blood supply/*physiology (1)
- Brain/*blood supply/metabolism (1)
- Brain Injuries/pathology/*physiopathology (1)
- *Brain Mapping (2)
- Brain Mapping (2)
- Brain Mapping/methods (1)
- Brain/*physiology (1)
- Case-Control Studies (1)
- Cerebral Cortex/pathology/*physiopathology (1)
- Cerebrovascular Circulation/*physiology (1)
- Cognition/*physiology (1)
- Conditioning, Classical/*physiology (1)
- Data Interpretation, Statistical (1)
- *Electroencephalography (1)
- Electroencephalography/methods (1)
- Emotions/*physiology (1)
- *Erotica (1)
- Evoked Potentials/*physiology (1)
- Evoked Potentials, Visual (1)
- Extinction, Psychological/*physiology (1)
- Fear/*physiology (1)
- Female (8)
- Fourier Analysis (1)
- Frontal Lobe/blood supply/*physiology (1)
- Galvanic Skin Response/*physiology (1)
- Galvanic Skin Response/physiology (1)
- Gyrus Cinguli/blood supply/*physiology (1)
- Hemodynamics/physiology (1)
- Hippocampus/blood supply/metabolism (1)
- Hippocampus/physiology (1)
- Humans (8)
- Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods (1)
- Judgment/*physiology (1)
- Linear Models (1)
- Magnetic Resonance Imaging (4)
- Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods (2)
- Male (6)
- Mathematics (2)
- *Meditation (1)
- Mental Processes/*physiology (1)
- Middle Aged (1)
- Nerve Net/anatomy & histology/physiology (1)
- Neural Pathways/anatomy & histology/*physiology (1)
- Neural Pathways/*physiology (1)
- Neuropsychological Tests (1)
- Occipital Lobe/blood supply/metabolism (1)
- Oxygen/blood (1)
- Personality (1)
- Personality Inventory (1)
- Phobic Disorders/*physiopathology (2)
- Photic Stimulation (4)
- *Photic Stimulation (1)
- Prefrontal Cortex/physiology (1)
- Problem Solving/physiology (1)
- Reaction Time/physiology (1)
- Reward (1)
- Sex Factors (1)
- Sexual Behavior/physiology (1)
- Spiders (1)
- *Spiders (1)
- Thalamus/blood supply/metabolism (1)
- *Theta Rhythm (1)
- Thinking/physiology (1)
- Time Factors (2)
- Tomography Scanners, X-Ray Computed (1)
- Vision, Binocular/physiology (1)
- Visual Fields/physiology (1)
- Visual Perception/*physiology (2)
- Young Adult (3)