Differences in neural responses to reward and punishment processing between anorexia nervosa subtypes: An fMRI study
Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences2017Vol. 71(9), pp. 647–658
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2017 papers
Ema Murao, Genichi Sugihara, Masanori Isobe, Tomomi Noda, Michiko Kawabata, Noriko Matsukawa, Hidehiko Takahashi, Toshiya Murai, Shun’ichi Noma
Abstract
AN-bp patients showed altered neural responses to punishment in brain regions implicated in emotional arousal. Our findings suggest that individuals with AN-bp are more sensitive to potential punishment than individuals with AN-r and healthy individuals at the neural level. The present study provides preliminary evidence that there are neurobiological differences between AN subtypes with regard to the reward system, especially punishment processing.
Related Papers
- → Interoceptive awareness moderates neural activity during decision-making(2013)78 cited
- → Individual differences in the anterior insula are associated with the likelihood of financially helping versus harming others(2013)25 cited
- → Functional connectivity of the anterior insula during withdrawal from cigarette smoking(2021)21 cited
- → Decision letter for "Posterior cingulate cortex targeted real‐time fMRI neurofeedback recalibrates functional connectivity with the amygdala, posterior insula, and default‐mode network in PTSD"(2022)
- → Review for "Posterior cingulate cortex targeted real‐time fMRI neurofeedback recalibrates functional connectivity with the amygdala, posterior insula, and default‐mode network in PTSD"(2022)