Increased intrinsic brain activity in the striatum reflects symptom dimensions in schizophrenia. (73/439)

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Functional clustering drives encoding improvement in a developing brain network during awake visual learning. (74/439)

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Adenylate cyclase 7 is implicated in the biology of depression and modulation of affective neural circuitry. (75/439)

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The incidence and nature of cerebellar findings in schizophrenia: a quantitative review of fMRI literature. (76/439)

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Cumulative genetic risk and prefrontal activity in patients with schizophrenia. (77/439)

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Parsing the neural correlates of moral cognition: ALE meta-analysis on morality, theory of mind, and empathy. (78/439)

Morally judicious behavior forms the fabric of human sociality. Here, we sought to investigate neural activity associated with different facets of moral thought. Previous research suggests that the cognitive and emotional sources of moral decisions might be closely related to theory of mind, an abstract-cognitive skill, and empathy, a rapid-emotional skill. That is, moral decisions are thought to crucially refer to other persons' representation of intentions and behavioral outcomes as well as (vicariously experienced) emotional states. We thus hypothesized that moral decisions might be implemented in brain areas engaged in 'theory of mind' and empathy. This assumption was tested by conducting a large-scale activation likelihood estimation (ALE) meta-analysis of neuroimaging studies, which assessed 2,607 peak coordinates from 247 experiments in 1,790 participants. The brain areas that were consistently involved in moral decisions showed more convergence with the ALE analysis targeting theory of mind versus empathy. More specifically, the neurotopographical overlap between morality and empathy disfavors a role of affective sharing during moral decisions. Ultimately, our results provide evidence that the neural network underlying moral decisions is probably domain-global and might be dissociable into cognitive and affective sub-systems.  (+info)

A 7 tesla FMRI study of amygdala responses to fearful faces. (79/439)

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Dissociable patterns of medial prefrontal and amygdala activity to face identity versus emotion in bipolar disorder. (80/439)

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