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Articles 1 - 2 of 2
Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences
Aberrant Functional Connectivity Of The Amygdala Complexes In Ptsd During Conscious And Subconscious Processing Of Trauma-Related Stimuli, Daniela Rabellino, Maria Densmore, Paul A Frewen, Jean Theberge, Margaret C Mckinnon, Ruth A Lanius
Aberrant Functional Connectivity Of The Amygdala Complexes In Ptsd During Conscious And Subconscious Processing Of Trauma-Related Stimuli, Daniela Rabellino, Maria Densmore, Paul A Frewen, Jean Theberge, Margaret C Mckinnon, Ruth A Lanius
Department of Medicine Publications
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is characterized by altered functional connectivity of the amygdala complexes at rest. However, amygdala complex connectivity during conscious and subconscious threat processing remains to be elucidated. Here, we investigate specific connectivity of the centromedial amygdala (CMA) and basolateral amygdala (BLA) during conscious and subconscious processing of trauma-related words among individuals with PTSD (n = 26) as compared to non-trauma-exposed controls (n = 20). Psycho-physiological interaction analyses were performed using the right and left amygdala complexes as regions of interest during conscious and subconscious trauma word processing. These analyses revealed a differential, context-dependent responses by each amygdala …
Acc Neuro-Over-Connectivity Is Associated With Mathematically Modeled Additional Encoding Operations Of Schizophrenia Stroop-Task Performance, Reggie Taylor, Jean Theberge, Peter C Williamson, Maria Densmore, Richard W J Neufeld
Acc Neuro-Over-Connectivity Is Associated With Mathematically Modeled Additional Encoding Operations Of Schizophrenia Stroop-Task Performance, Reggie Taylor, Jean Theberge, Peter C Williamson, Maria Densmore, Richard W J Neufeld
Department of Medicine Publications
Functional magnetic resonance imaging at 7.0 Tesla was undertaken among Schizophrenia participants (Sz), and clinical (major mood disorder; MDD) and healthy controls (HC), during performance of the Stoop task. Stroop conditions included congruent and incongruent word color items, color-only items, and word-only items. Previous modeling results extended to this most widely used selective-attention task. All groups executed item-encoding operations (subprocesses of the item encoding process) at the same rate (performance accuracy being similarly high throughout), thus displaying like processing capacity; Sz participants, however, employed more subprocesses for item completions than did the MDD participants, who in turn used more subprocesses …