“…For example, a corpus of brain areas, originally described as a “pain neuromatrix,” are involved in the nociceptive (posterior insular, middle cingulate, and medial parietal opercular cortices) or perceptual aspects of pain (middle and anterior insular, prefrontal, posterior parietal, supplementary motor, and anterior cingulate cortices, hippocampus, striatum, and cerebellum) ( 5 , 9 – 16 ); however, it should be noted that most of these areas are not specific to pain processing. Additionally, alterations in grey matter volume, neurochemistry, and connectivity within the default-mode network (DMN), which functions in monitoring and processing internal states ( 17 – 22 ), are correlated with pain sensitivity, severity, duration, catastrophizing, and rumination ( 16 , 23 – 26 ). Finally, several regions which mediate body perception, learning and motivational functions, and pain anticipation, perception, and empathy, are often omitted from even the broadly-defined pain neuromatrix.…”