Fear conditioning is associated with dynamic directed functional interactions between and within the human amygdala, hippocampus, and frontal lobe
- 3 June 2011
- journal article
- Published by Elsevier in Neuroscience
- Vol. 189, 359-369
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroscience.2011.05.067
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
This publication has 67 references indexed in Scilit:
- Painful laser stimuli induce directed functional interactions within and between the human amygdala and hippocampusNeuroscience, 2011
- Attention to painful cutaneous laser stimuli evokes directed functional connectivity between activity recorded directly from human pain-related cortical structuresPain, 2011
- Painful stimuli evoke potentials recorded from the medial temporal lobe in humansNeuroscience, 2010
- Exploring the brain in pain: Activations, deactivations and their relationPain, 2010
- Motor threshold in transcranial magnetic stimulation: The impact of white matter fiber orientation and skull‐to‐cortex distanceHuman Brain Mapping, 2008
- Prefrontal-Subcortical Pathways Mediating Successful Emotion RegulationNeuron, 2008
- Neural Circuitry Underlying the Regulation of Conditioned Fear and Its Relation to ExtinctionNeuron, 2008
- Baseline brain activity fluctuations predict somatosensory perception in humansProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007
- The amygdala: Different pains, different mechanismsPain, 2007
- Memory and the hippocampus: A synthesis from findings with rats, monkeys, and humans.Psychological Review, 1992