Individuals with anorexia nervosa showed greater left orbitofrontal, right insular, and
bilateral temporal cortex gray matter compared to the control group.
Not exact matches
They showed significantly higher measurements of specific electrophysiological parameters, known as beta and theta oscillations, in brain regions called the right
temporal lobe and
bilateral occipital
cortex.
Increase in donations was linked to
bilateral lesions in the dorsomedial parietal
cortex, while decrease in donations was observed in the veterans who had suffered damage in posterior parts of the right hemisphere, including superior
temporal sulcus and middle
temporal gyrus.
Specifically, males on average had larger volumes and higher tissue densities in the left amygdala, hippocampus, insular
cortex, putamen; higher densities in the right VI lobe of the cerebellum and in the left claustrum; and larger volumes in the
bilateral anterior parahippocampal gyri, posterior cingulate gyri, precuneus,
temporal poles, and cerebellum, areas in the left posterior and anterior cingulate gyri, and in the right amygdala, hippocampus, and putamen.
Conversely, movie - related BOLD activity was enhanced in autism relative to controls in
bilateral non-primary visual
cortex and the right posterior superior
temporal sulcus (Figure 1B).
For the reverse contrast (ONE - LoE > TWO - LoE), we identified clusters in the
bilateral middle superior
temporal gyri, and left premotor
cortex.
The contrast UNGRAMMATICAL > GRAMAMTICAL yielded significant clusters (red) in the right inferior frontal gyrus, right middle frontal gyrus,
bilateral anterior insular
cortices, the pre-supplementary motor area, and the right posterior middle
temporal gyrus.
Cluster a (a) shows the default mode network, consisting of frontal regions, including superior frontal gyrus (BA 8/9) and medial frontal gyrus (BA 10/11) and precuneus / posterior cingulate
cortex (BA 23/31) and
bilateral regions overlapping middle / superior
temporal tyrus (BA 21/39) and inferior / superior parietal
cortex (BA 39/40).