戻る
「早戻しボタン」を押すと検索画面に戻ります。 [閉じる]

コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)

通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
1 reward processing (right amygdala and fronto-insular cortex).
2  and right inferior parietal lobes and right insular cortex.
3 rs the signature of autonomic arousal in the insular cortex.
4 taste memory and AMPA receptor expression in insular cortex.
5 he parabrachial nucleus, and projects to the insular cortex.
6 , subgenual anterior cingulate, and anterior insular cortex.
7 NMDAR-dependent CaMKII- AMPAR pathway in the insular cortex.
8 ed the cerebellum, hippocampus, amygdala and insular cortex.
9 gating of cardiac-related information in the insular cortex.
10 mapping of vestibular responses in the human insular cortex.
11 ecially within adjacent posterior regions of insular cortex.
12 th low-fat meals on the hypothalamus and the insular cortex.
13 y portion of the thalamus, and the gustatory insular cortex.
14 me reduction in orbitofrontal, cingulate and insular cortex.
15 and conditioned taste aversion memory in the insular cortex.
16  by brain mechanisms that do not require the insular cortex.
17 ilar finding involving NMDA receptors in the insular cortex.
18 but also in auditory, visual, entorhinal and insular cortex.
19 cleus of the stria terminalis but not in the insular cortex.
20  lateral hypothalamus, central amygdala, and insular cortex.
21 e thalamus, second somatosensory cortex, and insular cortex.
22 reactivity (FLI) in the central amygdala and insular cortex.
23 ut decreased NGF and BDNF mRNA levels in the insular cortex.
24 stributions of neurons in the prefrontal and insular cortex.
25 ion and lysine acetyltransferase activity in insular cortex.
26 ctivities along with the ERK/MAPK cascade in insular cortex.
27 rgets of the gustatory system, including the insular cortex.
28 he anterior extreme capsule white matter and insular cortex.
29  calbindin neurons, at least within Anterior Insular Cortex.
30  to restore hunger-like response patterns in insular cortex.
31 ns, like the putamen with connections to the insular cortex.
32 he lateral pallium at the site of the future insular cortex.
33 he pial surface to form layers (2-6a) of the insular cortex.
34 lose to the external capsule and deep in the insular cortex.
35 tatory responses to stimulation of the human insular cortex.
36 y covered by the Nr4a2-negative cells of the insular cortex.
37 ecting that of long-term potentiation in the insular cortex.
38 ng signal (prediction error) in the anterior insular cortex.
39                  What is the function of the insular cortex?
40  not AM251, infusions into the interoceptive insular cortex (a region known to be activated in acute
41           We hypothesized that the right mid-insular cortex, a central recipient of viscerosensory in
42 tivated protein kinase (MAPK)/RSK cascade in insular cortex, a CNS region known to be crucial for the
43 ral and functional abnormalities in the left insular cortex, a region also implicated in individuals
44 ocessing (left lateral prefrontal and fronto-insular cortex), action execution and pain processing (r
45 d 10% to 15% of the variance in amygdala and insular cortex activation to emotional faces.
46 ls related to subclinical anxiety levels and insular cortex activation.
47 ctivation in both regions; however, only the insular cortex activations are significantly associated
48                                 The anterior insular cortex (AI) was the only brain region examined w
49  cortex (PrL) interactions with the anterior insular cortex (aIC) and dorsal hippocampus (dHPC) in re
50 ror-associated regions, such as the anterior insular cortex (aIC) and rostral anterior cingulate cort
51 l regions in rats, the agranular/dysgranular insular cortex (AIC) and the ventromedial prefrontal cor
52  foundation for a role of the human anterior insular cortex (AIC) in emotional awareness, defined as
53                  Consistent with an anterior insular cortex (AIC) involvement in storing taste memori
54 w that activation of neurons in the anterior insular cortex (aIC) that project into the basolateral a
55                           The right anterior insular cortex (AIC) was identified as the principal are
56 l-dependent (BOLD) responses in the anterior insular cortex (AIC), a core hub of the "salience networ
57                         Activity in anterior insular cortex (AIC), premotor cortex (PMd), and inferio
58 atosensory cortex, retrosplenial cortex, and insular cortex also contained tdTomato-labelled neurons.
59 d to be expressed across the olfactory bulb, insular cortex, amygdala, and dorsal hippocampus.
60 ronal ensembles in the orbitofrontal cortex, insular cortex, amygdala, and nucleus accumbens while ra
61 ial temporal lobe, with values of 1.6 in the insular cortex and 0.7-1.0 in other cortical regions.
62 order) and with increased limbic activation (insular cortex and amygdala) during emotion processing (
63 D2 receptor binding in the salience network (insular cortex and anterior cingulate cortex [ACC] and t
64 on group exhibited regional CBF increases in insular cortex and anterior cingulate gyrus; increases i
65 erior temporal area extending to include the insular cortex and basal ganglia, lateralizing to the si
66 ness of Ce output neurons to inputs from the insular cortex and BLA.
67 body and to the modulation of pain (anterior insular cortex and brainstem, respectively) determines w
68 ral striatum), but also aversive processing (insular cortex and cerebellum).
69 owth of the frontotemporal opercula over the insular cortex and compared the transcriptome of the dev
70 ears exhibited an enhanced response in right insular cortex and decreased response in right prefronta
71  assessed high-signal-intensity areas in the insular cortex and extreme capsule on coronal MR images
72 rCBF in the vicinity of the hypothalamus and insular cortex and in additional paralimbic and limbic a
73 ontrol was associated with reduced volume in insular cortex and increased volume of caudate nucleus.
74 ructural brain abnormalities implicating the insular cortex and limbic system.
75 iation between increased gyrification of the insular cortex and memory function, specifically observe
76 insula is an interface between the posterior insular cortex and motor cortex and is connected with mo
77 ack of layer IV, was defined as the temporal insular cortex and named as area TI after Beck.
78 ing of the multiple sensory functions of the insular cortex and of the cortical processing of vestibu
79 , caudate nucleus, anterior cingulate gyrus, insular cortex and orbitofrontal cortex).
80 lation of neurons in this structure, and the insular cortex and the basolateral amygdala (BLA) intera
81 ersus neutral stimuli were found in the left insular cortex and the left anterior cingulate.
82 re distributed most densely in the agranular insular cortex and the paraventricular nuclei of the tha
83  thalamus, as well as metabolic decreases in insular cortex and the periaqueductal gray, were noted.
84 e posterior insula, that is, in the granular insular cortex and the postcentral insular gyrus.
85 ral sheet of gray matter located between the insular cortex and the striatum.
86 ocentric paralimbic regions of interest, the insular cortex and the temporal pole, were evaluated.
87 s, such as the primary somatosensory cortex, insular cortex, and ACC.
88  lateral hypothalamus, orbitofrontal cortex, insular cortex, and amygdala of hungry rats that volunta
89 ivated sites within the medial frontal lobe, insular cortex, and cerebellum distinct from, but close
90 cFos immunohistochemistry and found that the insular cortex, and other regions, are activated followi
91 er volume in medial prefrontal cortex (PFC), insular cortex, and subgenual anterior cingulate regions
92 ial prefrontal cortices, anterior cingulate, insular cortex, and superior temporal gyrus.
93 ate, the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, the insular cortex, and the nucleus accumbens.
94 btained in patients with MDD in the anterior insular cortex, anterior and posterior thalamus, ventral
95    Amygdaloid projections from the posterior insular cortex appear to be organized in a feedforward p
96 hes, including viral vector transfections of insular cortex, arc fluorescence in situ hybridization (
97 e ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) and insular cortex are implicated in distributed neural circ
98 s to determine whether NMDA receptors in the insular cortex are involved in this experience-dependent
99 d found that the visual-vestibular posterior insular cortex area was less activated during attentive
100 eural activity in the visual, cerebellar and insular cortex areas compared with a resting condition.
101 oint at macroscopic representations in human insular cortex as a complex function of taste category a
102 veral brain regions, including the bilateral insular cortex, bilateral precuneus/posterior cingulate
103 served decreased binding specifically in the insular cortex bilaterally.
104  the posterolateral orbitofrontal cortex and insular cortex bilaterally.
105                      Electrolytic lesions of insular cortex blocked behavioral expression of a condit
106 evate FLI expression in central amygdala and insular cortex, but also failed to induce stronger taste
107 his pattern was seen in central amygdala and insular cortex, but not in basolateral amygdala, parabra
108 ain areas, the anterior cingulate cortex and insular cortex, but not in the spinal cord.
109 covery of von Economo neurons within macaque insular cortex by Evrard et al. described in this issue
110                                Damage to the insular cortex can profoundly disrupt tobacco addiction
111                                          The insular cortex cells, which are born later and which are
112 atosensory representation in caudal granular insular cortex (CGIC) in the rat, either before or after
113 satiety-related visceral signals converge in insular cortex, chemogenetic activation of hypothalamic
114 ding dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC), insular cortex, cingular cortex, and the basal ganglia d
115 signated histogenetic unit gives rise to the insular cortex/claustrum and should therefore be conside
116 ing seven clusters across frontoparietal and insular cortex comparable to human MD regions and one un
117 esponses to disgusted faces in the bilateral insular cortex compared with healthy controls.
118 ed by anterograde tracer injections into the insular cortex, corticothalamic projections in the VPMpc
119 unctionally dissociable effects of vmPFC and insular cortex damage.
120 um, consistent with classical definitions of insular cortex dating back to Rose.
121 s that this is dissociable from the adjacent insular cortex-dependent taste aversion memory.
122 essing, they make evident that the region of insular cortex destroyed is not necessary for the normal
123 ene blue increased response in the bilateral insular cortex during a psychomotor vigilance task (Z =
124  regions within the human frontal cortex and insular cortex during food desirability choices, combine
125 atric and neurological disorders impacted by insular cortex dysfunction, including autism, schizophre
126 alamic activity and the interaction with the insular cortex elicited by fat may contribute to an effi
127 odel of awareness proposes that the anterior insular cortex engenders feelings that provide an amodal
128  propose that inflammation restricted to the insular cortex enhances associative taste memory through
129 cortex in auditory processing, with the left insular cortex especially responsive to linguistic stimu
130 terior dorsal insula, such that a portion of insular cortex forms an isolated pocket medial to the Sy
131  CTA depends on the gustatory portion of the insular cortex (GC) and the basolateral nucleus of the a
132 he past decade has established the gustatory insular cortex (GC) as a model for studying how primary
133 nization of taste responses in the gustatory insular cortex (GC) is currently debated, with conflicti
134 g approaches to delineate the likely area of insular cortex given to gustatory function and to charac
135              A bilateral volume reduction in insular cortex gray matter was specific to first-episode
136                                 The anterior insular cortex (IC) and the nucleus accumbens (NAc) core
137               Previous findings indicate the insular cortex (IC) and the nucleus accumbens (NAc) play
138                               Lesions of the insular cortex (IC) attenuate acquisition of conditioned
139                                              Insular cortex (IC) contributes to a variety of complex
140 l amygdala (BLA) and the gustatory region of insular cortex (IC) have been implicated in these proces
141 e present study investigated the role of the insular cortex (IC) in morphine-induced conditioned tast
142                                              Insular cortex (IC) is recognized as a potential site fo
143                 We examined the influence of insular cortex (IC) lesions on morphine-induced suppress
144 present experiment examined the influence of insular cortex (IC) lesions on the intake of a taste sti
145  the influence of excitotoxic lesions of the insular cortex (IC) on taste-potentiated odor aversion (
146                                          The insular cortex (IC) plays key roles in emotional and reg
147 strate that partial depletion of 5-HT in the insular cortex (IC) prevents LiCl-induced conditioned di
148 tudies suggest that the anterior part of the insular cortex (IC) serves as primary taste cortex, wher
149  the posterior half of GC in addition to the insular cortex (IC) that is just dorsal and caudal to th
150 a significant increase in ACh release in the insular cortex (IC), a highly relevant structure for tas
151  stronger Fos-like immunoreactivity (FLI) in insular cortex (IC), amygdala, and brainstem than famili
152                                          The insular cortex (IC), an area largely studied in rodents
153               Prior studies suggest that the insular cortex (IC), and particularly its posterior regi
154 apped a discrete cortico-limbic loop between insular cortex (IC), central amygdala (CE), and nucleus
155                This pattern depends upon the insular cortex (IC), which is anatomically connected to
156                                 To that aim, insular cortex (IC)-dependent positive and negative form
157  nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNST), and insular cortex (IC).
158  extracellular acetylcholine (ACh) levels in insular cortex (IC).
159 s designed to examine whether lesions of the insular cortex (IC; Experiment 1), the basolateral amygd
160                                       In the insular cortex, IL1beta enhanced IL6 mRNA and TNFalpha i
161 r-bound protons, within a discrete region of insular cortex implicated in representing internal physi
162                         The specific role of insular cortex in acquisition and expression of a condit
163 tion of those stimuli and implicate anterior insular cortex in auditory processing, with the left ins
164 nvestigated the functional properties of the insular cortex in behaving monkeys using intracortical m
165 es have challenged the necessary role of the insular cortex in both awareness and feeling by showing
166 tion, supporting a critical role of anterior insular cortex in empathetic pain processing.
167 olinergic neurotransmission in the posterior insular cortex in neuropathic pain condition and the inv
168 onnectivity, and fALFF converged in the left insular cortex in patients with FXS.
169 we demonstrate a causal role of the anterior insular cortex in relapse to alcohol seeking after exten
170 ds of winning, consistent with a role of the insular cortex in signalling the probability of aversive
171                     However, the role of the insular cortex in such modulatory processes remains poor
172 ior cingulate cortex (ACC) and the posterior insular cortex in the anxiodepressive, sensory, and affe
173 nversely, we report a signal in the anterior insular cortex in the highest earners that precedes the
174                               Involvement of insular cortex in the induction of c-Fos-immunoreactivit
175 suggests a prominent role of dorsal anterior insular cortex in the parasympathetic control of cardiac
176 pite numerous studies suggesting the role of insular cortex in the processing of gustatory and olfact
177 uroimaging studies in humans have implicated insular cortex in these phenomena.
178 tion on visual awareness and the role of the insular cortex in this process remain unclear.
179 h the thinness of the anterior region of the insular cortex, in which highly impulsive (HI) rats expr
180                We demonstrated that anterior insular cortex inputs are the sole inputs that express a
181 f the intralaminar complex (PINT) and caudal insular cortex (INS) block acquisition but not expressio
182                                          The insular cortex (INS) is extensively connected to the cen
183                                  While human insular cortex (InsCtx) is implicated in interoception,
184                            We identified the insular cortex (insula), a region involved in regulating
185  functional areas of the brain including the insular cortex (involved in enteroceptive monitoring) an
186                                    The human insular cortex is a heterogeneous brain structure which
187                                       As the insular cortex is a well-established region in pain proc
188  We suggest that fusion between temporal and insular cortex is an example of a relatively rare neuroa
189                                          The insular cortex is anatomically positioned to serve as on
190           The rostral perirhinal border with insular cortex is at the extreme caudal limit of the cla
191                                          The insular cortex is fundamentally involved in the processi
192                   QR2 mRNA expression in the insular cortex is inversely correlated with mAChR activa
193 al conditioning, the gustatory region of the insular cortex is involved in encoding the taste of food
194                                          The insular cortex is involved in the perception of interoce
195        Additional activation observed in the insular cortex is proposed to be involved in conveying a
196                                          The insular cortex is required for CTA memory formation and
197 e processing of interoceptive signals in the insular cortex is thought to underlie self-awareness.
198 thalamus, putamen, and pallidum), as well as insular cortex, is associated with greater change in bel
199 the left IFG and left pallidum, putamen, and insular cortex, is associated with reduced change in bel
200 the gustatory cortex, including parts of the insular cortex, is crucial for the processing of food it
201 an assemblage of taste-responsive neurons in insular cortex, is widely regarded as integral to condit
202                                Expression in insular cortex, lateral septal nucleus, medial preoptic
203 ces of pain remained present after posterior insular cortex lesion, even though the mechanical allody
204                   In the present experiment, insular cortex-lesioned (ICX) rats showed normal respons
205                 Patients with focal anterior insular cortex lesions displayed decreased discriminatio
206                   In contrast, patients with insular cortex lesions failed to adjust their bets by th
207  findings reveal that only discrete anterior insular cortex lesions, but not anterior cingulate corte
208                          Volume reduction in insular cortex may constitute an important neuropatholog
209 stable lesions to the vmPFC (n = 20) and the insular cortex (n = 13) were compared against healthy su
210 We observed patterns of fMRI activity within insular cortex narrowly tuned to specific tastants consi
211                                              Insular cortex neurons demonstrate food-cue-biased respo
212 d to activate limbic/paralimbic regions (eg, insular cortex, nucleus accumbens, and parahippocampal g
213                              Conversely, the insular cortex of AD patients was hypogyrificated.
214 roach to monitor visual cue responses in the insular cortex of behaving mice across hunger states.
215             In the hypothalamus and granular insular cortex of mice with type 1 diabetes, bone marrow
216  analyses of the neuronal connections of the insular cortex of the macaque monkey using modern high-r
217 gulation within the right and left posterior insular cortex of the rat, suggest the possibility of tr
218  parahippocampal gyrus and frontal operculum/insular cortex of the right hemisphere and, to a lesser
219                                 The anterior insular cortex of the right hemisphere, in particular it
220 eral areas, including the prefrontal cortex, insular cortex, olfactory bulb, amygdala, and hippocampu
221 rease of activity was observed in the fronto-insular cortex on both hemispheres.
222 inergic projections to the rostral agranular insular cortex on GABAergic and oxytocin receptor-expres
223 lesions aimed at the gustatory region of the insular cortex on instrumental conditioning in rats.
224 lateral or bilateral electrolytic lesions of insular cortex or 'sham' operations.
225 ns whose locations matched with the anterior insular cortex or anterior cingulate cortex clusters ide
226 on of others' pain in patients with anterior insular cortex or anterior cingulate cortex lesions whos
227 ding the piriform cortex, entorhinal cortex, insular cortex, orbital cortex, and all cortical amygdal
228 n including the nucleus accumbens, striatum, insular cortex, orbitofrontal cortex, and medial forebra
229                                The vmPFC and insular cortex patients showed selective and distinctive
230 nular insular (AId) and regions of posterior insular cortex (PI-comprising the agranular, dysgranular
231  choline has been evidenced in the posterior insular cortex (pIC) of neuropathic animal, which was si
232 r vestibular cortex (PIVC) and the posterior insular cortex (PIC).
233                                          The insular cortex plays a central role in the perception an
234    Animal and human studies suggest that the insular cortex plays an important role in subjective awa
235  in the medial and lateral frontal cortices, insular cortex, posterior cingulate cortex, precuneus, a
236 al functional connectivity with parietal and insular cortex, predicted individual variability in stra
237 ation of the secondary somatosensory cortex, insular cortex, prefrontal cortex, inferior parietal lob
238 ded the olfactory system, nucleus accumbens, insular cortex, prefrontal cortex, ventral tegmental are
239 nsory and stress areas such as somatosensory/insular cortex, preoptic area, paraventricular nucleus,
240  that acute microinfusion of MK-801 into the insular cortex prevented the attenuation of gustatory ne
241 ices received extensive projections from the insular cortex, primarily from its agranular areas.
242                         Dysgranular anterior insular cortex projected to lateral agranular frontal co
243 nd they suggest that discrete modules within insular cortex provide the basis for its polymodal integ
244                        The rostral agranular insular cortex (RAIC) has recently been identified as a
245                        The rostral agranular insular cortex (RAIC) is a relevant structure in nocicep
246                        The rostral agranular insular cortex (RAIC) of rats has opioid receptors and h
247  by painful stimuli is the rostral agranular insular cortex (RAIC) where, as in other parts of the co
248 inhibitor GBR-12935 in the rostral agranular insular cortex (RAIC), a cortical area that receives a d
249  touch, but evidence suggests involvement of insular cortex rather than parietal somatosensory cortic
250                       In contrast, bilateral insular cortex responded to pain stimulation regardless
251     Finally, in Experiment 3, lesions of the insular cortex retarded CTA acquisition but had no influ
252 approximately 20% less c-fos ir-cells in the insular cortex, retrosplenial cortex, and dentate gyrus.
253  a third network comprising the right fronto-insular cortex (rFIC) and anterior cingulate cortex (ACC
254                             The right fronto-insular cortex (rFIC) is a critical component of a salie
255               The major targets are granular insular cortex, secondary somatosensory cortex and sever
256  an unanticipated long-lasting activation of insular cortex signal transduction cascades in novel tas
257                                          The insular cortex subserves visceral-emotional functions, i
258 al component of the functional topography of insular cortex; such an approach could have general appl
259 alimbic areas such as anterior cingulate and insular cortex, supplementary motor area (SMA) and parie
260 , bilateral lesions to a region of posterior insular cortex, termed the "sensory insula," prevented t
261 fic VMpo projection area in dorsal posterior insular cortex that provides the basis for a somatotopic
262  neuronal populations in the dorsal anterior insular cortex that showed task-evoked activations corre
263 poro-occipital, inferior parietal, and right insular cortex that were distinctively predictive of def
264 ons, within the same neuronal populations of insular cortex, that emerged intermittently during a wak
265 he endopiriform nucleus and claustrum of the insular cortex, the globus pallidus, the ventromedial hy
266 reward and emotion encompassing the anterior insular cortex, the nucleus accumbens, and the amygdala.
267 lum together with the anterior and posterior insular cortex, the putamen, as well as subcortical whit
268 fferences in the extent of the damage to the insular cortex, three findings were common to both indiv
269 ptic glutamatergic projections from anterior insular cortex to central amygdala is critical to relaps
270                          The contribution of insular cortex to speech production remains unclear and
271 ardiac nervous system, from the level of the insular cortex to the intrinsic cardiac nervous system,
272 , we implicate projections from the anterior insular cortex to the nucleus accumbens as modulating hi
273 ected pathway extending bilaterally from the insular cortex to the prefrontal cortex.
274 pendent on glutamatergic transmission in the insular cortex, to investigate the behavioral and cellul
275                   We identified the anterior insular cortex-to-central amygdala projection as a new a
276 n the ventromedial prefrontal cortex and the insular cortex, two regions that have been shown to be r
277      Finally, we show that inhibition of the insular cortex using GABA agonists impairs performance o
278 e studied the auditory thalamic input to the insular cortex using mice as a model system.
279  in the amygdala, frontal operculum-anterior insular cortex, ventromedial prefrontal cortex, and the
280 tions uncover a pathway from AgRP neurons to insular cortex via the paraventricular thalamus and baso
281        A decrease in the gyrification of the insular cortex was also found in older HC participants a
282                           The prefrontal and insular cortex was evaluated microscopically for overlap
283                    mu-OR binding in the left insular cortex was less in bulimic subjects than in cont
284 pression in both nucleus accumbens shell and insular cortex was positively associated with risk-takin
285 r performance for both the angular gyrus and insular cortex was reliably enhanced by the addition of
286 using high-resolution fMRI revealed that the insular cortex was sensitive to both visible and invisib
287               Furthermore, fALFF in the left insular cortex was significantly positively correlated w
288 wever, an increased degree of folding of the insular cortex was specifically associated with better m
289                              The ipsilateral insular cortex was stimulated both electrically (0.5 mA,
290 in Mandarin lexical tones, the left anterior insular cortex was the most active.
291 e bilateral superior parietal lobes and left insular cortex were less activated.
292 taste-related informational content in human insular cortex, which contains primary gustatory cortex.
293 greater connectivity between the DMN and the insular cortex, which is a brain region known to process
294                                          The insular cortex, which receives sensory inputs from both
295 aze duration (nucleus accumbens and anterior insular cortex), while two components were positively co
296 rkers of myeloarchitectural integrity of the insular cortex, while affective empathy was predicted by
297 albindin neurons in layer II of the Anterior Insular Cortex, while deep hypothermia reversed this eff
298 nd other areas of the frontal cortex and the insular cortex with hypothalamic, ventral, and dorsal st
299 sentation of sensorimotor information in the insular cortex, with possible involvement of limbic area
300 ucture enclosed between the striatum and the insular cortex, with widespread reciprocal connections w

 
Page Top