2007
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2006.12.027
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Ventral medial prefrontal cortex and cardiovagal control in conscious humans

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Cited by 203 publications
(209 citation statements)
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References 71 publications
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“…This assertion is based on three principal considerations, including (a) the existence of inhibitory neural efferent pathways from the medial PFC to the PNS (the peripheral nervous system substrate of RSA), (b) positive associations between resting RSA and performance on executive function tasks, and (c) positive correlations between RSA and medial PFC activity in neuroimaging studies (see Beauchaine & Thayer, in press). Inhibitory neural efferent pathways from the medial PFC to the PNS have been reviewed by several authors (see, e.g., Barbas, Saha, Rempel-Clower, & Ghashghaei, 2003;Ter Horst & Postema, 1997;Wong, Masse, Kimmerly, Menon, & Shoemaker, 2007). As described by , the medial prefrontal, insular, and cingulate cortices form an interconnected network that exhibits feedback and feed-forward connections with the amygdala.…”
Section: Central Nervous System Substrates Of Rsamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This assertion is based on three principal considerations, including (a) the existence of inhibitory neural efferent pathways from the medial PFC to the PNS (the peripheral nervous system substrate of RSA), (b) positive associations between resting RSA and performance on executive function tasks, and (c) positive correlations between RSA and medial PFC activity in neuroimaging studies (see Beauchaine & Thayer, in press). Inhibitory neural efferent pathways from the medial PFC to the PNS have been reviewed by several authors (see, e.g., Barbas, Saha, Rempel-Clower, & Ghashghaei, 2003;Ter Horst & Postema, 1997;Wong, Masse, Kimmerly, Menon, & Shoemaker, 2007). As described by , the medial prefrontal, insular, and cingulate cortices form an interconnected network that exhibits feedback and feed-forward connections with the amygdala.…”
Section: Central Nervous System Substrates Of Rsamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For completeness of reporting, however, we examined two other areas suggested by previous imaging studies to be involved in autonomic-cardiovascular control and reactivity: the insula and posterior cingulate (Critchley, 2005;Dalton et al, 2005;Gianaros et al, 2005;Wong et al, 2007). For these analyses, we created bilateral masks of each area with the WFU Pick Atlas, and we used Monte Carlo-determined thresholds ( p Ͻ 0.005, k values Ͼ 8) to maintain ROI false-positive detection rates at p Ͻ 0.05.…”
Section: Supplementary Analyses Of the Insula And Posterior Cingulatementioning
confidence: 99%
“…An initial important observation of the current study was the difference in HR responses to IHG between the current participants and those of younger individuals reported earlier from our laboratory (Goswami et al 2012;Norton et al 2013;Wong et al 2007). This difference was statistically significant, as determined by an independent group's t-test that contrasted the present data with those published earlier.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 49%
“…Due to the abundance of neural activity, both corrections were performed sequentially, such that the final results represent only clusters Ͼ 10 voxels in size (unless otherwise specified). Based on earlier data in young individuals performing the same IHG protocol (Norton et al 2013;Wong et al 2007), an a priori region-of-interest analysis was performed for relevant cortical autonomic network regions including the bilateral insular cortices (IC), anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), posterior cingulate cortex (PCC), thalamus, medial prefrontal cortex (MPFC), and hippocampus (HC). All fMRI data are represented in radiological convention (i.e., subject's right appears on the left).…”
Section: Participantsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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