2004
DOI: 10.1162/089892904322984481
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Processing Words with Emotional Connotation: An fMRI Study of Time Course and Laterality in Rostral Frontal and Retrosplenial Cortices

Abstract: Responses of rostral frontal and retrosplenial cortices to the emotional significance of words were measured using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Twenty-six strongly right-handed participants engaged in a language task that alternated between silent word generation to categories with positive, negative, or neutral emotional connotation and a baseline task of silent repetition of emotionally neutral words. Activation uniquely associated with word generation to categories with positive or negative… Show more

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Cited by 128 publications
(83 citation statements)
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“…The two regions in which tryptophan depletion increased BOLD response to negative relative to positive words, the STG, and posterior cingulate cortex, have also consistently been implicated in unipolar depression Nugent et al, 2006). Both areas share extensive, monosynaptic anatomical connections with the orbitomedial PFC regions associated with the visceromotor network (Ongur et al, 2003), and have been implicated in verbal processing, particularly the processing of emotionally valenced verbal stimuli (Cato et al, 2004;Kuchinke et al, 2005;Maddock et al, 2003).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The two regions in which tryptophan depletion increased BOLD response to negative relative to positive words, the STG, and posterior cingulate cortex, have also consistently been implicated in unipolar depression Nugent et al, 2006). Both areas share extensive, monosynaptic anatomical connections with the orbitomedial PFC regions associated with the visceromotor network (Ongur et al, 2003), and have been implicated in verbal processing, particularly the processing of emotionally valenced verbal stimuli (Cato et al, 2004;Kuchinke et al, 2005;Maddock et al, 2003).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When multiple quantities are involved, as is the case with an FIR series of timepoints, a useful approach is to enter the estimated time-courses into a repeated-measures Analysis of Variance (ANOVA). This approach has been used extensively on time-courses estimated from specific regions of interest [Cato et al, 2004;Davachi and Wagner, 2002], but has not commonly been used to construct whole-brain statistical maps. Thus, the IRF of each voxel, condition, and subject were entered into a voxel-wise repeated measures ANOVA, with subject as a random factor and condition (configural or elemental) and time (12 timepoints) as fixed within-subject factors.…”
Section: Finite Impulse Response Model Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Empirical evidence implicates PCC involvement in a wide variety of functions, including attention (Mesulam, Nobre, Kim, Parrish, & Gitelman, 2001), processing of emotional stimuli (Cato et al, 2004;Maddock, Garrett, & Buonocore, 2003), and self-monitoring during a default resting state (Greicius, Srivastava, Reiss, & Menon, 2004;Gusnard, Akbudak, Shulman, & Raichle, 2001;Raichle et al, 2001). …”
Section: Cognitively-healthy Elderly Adultsmentioning
confidence: 99%