Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)

CNS Measures of Pain Responses Pre- and Post-Anesthetic Ketamine in a Patient with Complex Regional Pain Syndrome

Background. Previous reports have indicated that ketamine anesthesia may produce significant improvement if not complete recovery of patients with complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS). Aims. Here we report on a patient who had CRPS affecting mainly the right side of her body who underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scans prior to and in the months following apparent successful treatment with anesthetic doses of ketamine. Materials and Methods.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Pain Med

Can Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Improve Success Rates in CNS Drug Discovery?

INTRODUCTION: The bar for developing new treatments for CNS disease is getting progressively higher and fewer novel mechanisms are being discovered, validated and developed. The high costs of drug discovery necessitate early decisions to ensure the best molecules and hypotheses are tested in expensive late stage clinical trials. The discovery of brain imaging biomarkers that can bridge preclinical to clinical CNS drug discovery and provide a 'language of translation' affords the opportunity to improve the objectivity of decision-making.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Expert Opin Drug Discov

Robust, unbiased general linear model estimation of phMRI signal amplitude in the presence of variation in the temporal response profile

PURPOSE: To determine a simple yet robust method to generate parsimonious design matrices that accurately estimate the "pharmacological MRI" (phMRI) response amplitude in the presence of both confounding signals and variability in temporal profile. Variability in the temporal response profile of phMRI time series data is often observed. If not properly accounted for, this variation can result in inaccurate and unevenly biased signal amplitude estimates when modeled within a general linear model (GLM) framework.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
J Magn Reson Imaging

Evaluation of novel drugs using fMRI in early-phase clinical trials: safety monitoring

A advances in functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) permit the possibility of helping with dose ranging, as well as potential drug efficacy and side-effect profiles. However there are no current guidelines or standards for fMRI that meet established standards of care. Guidelines must be adopted to be used when patients are exposed to novel drugs, in particular, when immediate access to the patient is limited.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Drug Discov Today

Neural mechanisms of symptom improvements in generalized anxiety disorder following mindfulness training

Mindfulness training aims to impact emotion regulation. Generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) symptoms can be successfully addressed through mindfulness-based interventions. This preliminary study is the first to investigate neural mechanisms of symptom improvements in GAD following mindfulness training. Furthermore, we compared brain activation between GAD patients and healthy participants at baseline.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Neuroimage Clin

Amygdala task-evoked activity and task-free connectivity independently contribute to feelings of arousal

Individual differences in the intensity of feelings of arousal while viewing emotional pictures have been associated with the magnitude of task-evoked blood-oxygen dependent (BOLD) response in the amygdala. Recently, we reported that individual differences in feelings of arousal are associated with task-free (resting state) connectivity within the salience network. There has not yet been an investigation of whether these two types of functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) measures are redundant or independent in their relationships to behavior.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Hum Brain Mapp

Situating emotional experience

Psychological construction approaches to emotion suggest that emotional experience is situated and dynamic. Fear, for example, is typically studied in a physical danger context (e.g., threatening snake), but in the real world, it often occurs in social contexts, especially those involving social evaluation (e.g., public speaking). Understanding situated emotional experience is critical because adaptive responding is guided by situational context (e.g., inferring the intention of another in a social evaluation situation vs. monitoring the environment in a physical danger situation).

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Front Hum Neurosci

Affective learning enhances activity and functional connectivity in early visual cortex

This study examined the impact of task-irrelevant affective information on early visual processing regions V1-V4. Fearful and neutral faces presented with rings of different colors were used as stimuli. During the conditioning phase, fearful faces presented with a certain ring color (e.g., black) were paired with mild electrical stimulation. Neutral faces shown with rings of that color, as well as fearful or neutral faces shown with another ring color (e.g., white), were never paired with shock.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Neuropsychologia

The amygdala and the experience of affect

The current study examined the hypothesis that amygdala activation serves as a neural precondition for negative affective experience. Participants' affective experience was measured by asking them to report on their momentary experiences several times a day over the course of a month using an electronic experience-sampling procedure. One year later, participants viewed backwardly masked depictions of fear while functional magnetic resonance imaging was used to measure their amygdala and fusiform gyrus activation.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci

Sex differences in the neural correlates of affective experience

People believe that women are more emotionally intense than men, but the scientific evidence is equivocal. In this study, we tested the novel hypothesis that men and women differ in the neural correlates of affective experience, rather than in the intensity of neural activity, with women being more internally (interoceptively) focused and men being more externally (visually) focused. Adult men (n = 17) and women (n = 17) completed a functional magnetic resonance imaging study while viewing affectively potent images and rating their moment-to-moment feelings of subjective arousal.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci

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