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The relationship between abnormalities in amygdala functional connectivity and emotion regulation difficulties in problematic smartphone users. [PDF]

open access: yesBMC Psychol
Wang YL   +12 more
europepmc   +1 more source
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The amygdala and emotion

Current Opinion in Neurobiology, 1996
The amygdala complex has long been known as part of the neural circuitry critical for emotion. Beyond its role in emotional reactivity, studies of animal models and patients with amygdala damage demonstrate its importance in emotional learning, whereby cues acquire significance through association with rewarding or aversive events.
M, Gallagher, A A, Chiba
openaire   +2 more sources

THE AMYGDALAE AND BEHAVIOR

American Journal of Psychiatry, 1958
The individual and social behavior of 15 cats and 18 rhesus monkeys was recorded and analyzed during a control period of from 3 to 15 months, during which the animals were also trained to solve increasingly complicated problems. Adaptational conflicts were used to induce persistent experimental neuroses in 3 kittens, 2 cats, 3 young monkeys and 8 adult
J H, MASSERMAN   +4 more
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The amygdala and reward

Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 2002
The amygdala -- an almond-shaped group of nuclei at the heart of the telencephalon -- has been associated with a range of cognitive functions, including emotion, learning, memory, attention and perception. Most current views of amygdala function emphasize its role in negative emotions, such as fear, and in linking negative emotions with other aspects ...
Mark G, Baxter, Elisabeth A, Murray
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Amygdala

Duodecim; laaketieteellinen aikakauskirja, 2002
Abstract The amygdala (alias the amygdaloidal or amygdalar complex), first described and named by the German anatomist Burdach in the early nineteenth century (Meyer 1971), is so called because in the primate brain its shape resembles an almond (amugdale-in Greek).
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