2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.neubiorev.2014.06.018
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A comparison of neural responses to appetitive and aversive stimuli in humans and other mammals

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Cited by 91 publications
(69 citation statements)
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References 186 publications
(242 reference statements)
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“…This suppression of goal-irrelevant information would explain why individuals did not preferentially encode surprising events into long-term memory in punishing contexts. Other literature has implicated right lateral OFC in the valuation of aversive incentives 59-62 ; this literature would suggest that enhanced coupling between posterior parahippocampal cortex and lateral OFC may actually reflect the valuation and/or disambiguation of surprising stimuli as threats when they occur in punishing contexts.…”
Section: 0 Discussionmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…This suppression of goal-irrelevant information would explain why individuals did not preferentially encode surprising events into long-term memory in punishing contexts. Other literature has implicated right lateral OFC in the valuation of aversive incentives 59-62 ; this literature would suggest that enhanced coupling between posterior parahippocampal cortex and lateral OFC may actually reflect the valuation and/or disambiguation of surprising stimuli as threats when they occur in punishing contexts.…”
Section: 0 Discussionmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…The insula and anterior cingulate (i.e., cingulo-opercular or “salience network”; Seeley et al, 2007) feature prominently in intact (Hayes et al, 2014) as well as disordered emotional responding (Etkin & Wager, 2007; Satterthwaite et al, 2015). Increasingly, however, anterior cingulate and insular cortices are recognized as more broadly deployed—assigning salience for the coordination of dynamic interaction of large-scale neural networks in response to contextual demands (Jiang et al, 2015; Medford & Critchley, 2010; Menon & Uddin, 2010; (Jiang et al, 2015; Medford & Critchley, 2010; Menon & Uddin, 2010; Power et al, 2013; Sridharan et al, 2008).…”
Section: Clues To Core Cognitive Control Dysfunction Common Across Psmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, how the current results are tied to findings of reduced serotonin 2A receptor binding in the left subgenual and parietal, and right occipital, cortices [19], or asymmetrical functional differences in the temporal cortex, amygdala and insula during the resting state [82], is unknown. It will, for instance, be interesting to see if some of these anorexia-associated asymmetries in structure and function are directly related to those seen in response to affective stimuli [55].…”
Section: Limitations and Future Directionsmentioning
confidence: 99%