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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: brains + pain + brain  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

Unrelenting Grief May Be Sign of Distinct Syndrome
Washington Post, United States - Aug 3, 2008
"The question was: Are their brains processing their grief differently?" In all the women, the parts of the brain involved in physical and emotional pain ...
Science and Medicine: Complicated Grief Washington Post
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Who do you trust when your child's surgeons give conflicting advice?
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I do think that it changed my view, perceptions, in that it made me aware of how much of what we see, hear, taste and smell is a function of our brain?s ...
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Voice of America
Ten Percent of Healthy People Injured from Silent Strokes
Voice of America -
This week, we will tell about a brain injury known as silent stroke. We will also tell about melanoma -- the most deadly form of skin cancer. ...
How the brain is wired for pain
guardian.co.uk, UK - Jul 28, 2008
These nerves generate signals that pass like electricity along a wire, up through the spinal cord and brainstem before entering the brain. As a result, pain ...
Lose Weight Whilst You Sleep - Swiss Scientists discover 'Dieter's ...
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Developed by Swiss scientists after 20 years of research, SensaSlim is an all natural formulation that safely 'fools the brain' into believing you are full ...
Source: Google News

Dissociating Pain from Its Anticipation in the Human Brain -
A Ploghaus, I Tracey, JS Gati, S Clare, RS Menon, … - Science, 1999 - sciencemag.org
... We identified brain regions involved in the experience of pain by comparing brain
activation during pain with activation during warm stimulation. ...

Pain Intensity Processing Within the Human Brain: A Bilateral, Distributed Mechanism -
RC Coghill, CN Sang, JM Maisog, MJ Iadarola - Journal of Neurophysiology, 1999 - Am Physiological Soc
... Accordingly, little attention has been given to the global functional
organization of brain mechanisms mediating pain processing. ...

… a quantitative study of the analgesic effects of morphine, meperidine, and brain stem stimulation in … -
D Dubuisson, SG Dennis - Pain, 1977 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
... the analgesic effects of morphine, meperidine, and brain stem stimulation in rats
and cats. Dubuisson D, Dennis SG. A method for assessing pain and analgesia ...

The emotional brain -
J LeDoux - New York, 1996 - books.google.com
... Bolles, RC, and Fanselow, MS (1980). A perceptual-defensive-recuperative model
of fear and pain. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 3, 291-323. ...

[CITATION] Functional imaging of brain responses to pain
R Peyron, B Laurent, L Garcia-Larrea - A review and meta-analysis. Neurophysiol Clin, 2000

Distributed processing of pain and vibration by the human brain -
RC Coghill, JD Talbot, AC Evans, E Meyer, A Gjedde … - Journal of Neuroscience, 1994 - neuroscience.org
-

Haemodynamic brain responses to acute pain in humans: Sensory and attentional networks -
R Peyron, L Garcia-Larrea, MC Gregoire, N Costes, … - Brain, 1999 - Oxford Univ Press
... Thus, in each one of these three pre-determined contrasts, we isolated the rCBF
changes reflecting brain responses to pain (P versus p conditions) plus ...

… pro brain natriuretic peptide on admission for early risk stratification of patients with chest pain -
T Jernberg, M Stridsberg, P Venge, B Lindahl - Journal of the American College of Cardiology, 2002 - Am Coll Cardio Found
... CLINICAL STUDY. N-terminal pro brain natriuretic peptide on admission for early
risk stratification of patients with chest pain and no ST-segment elevation. ...

… encoding of sensory and affective components of pain in the human brain: a positron emission … -
TR Tolle, T Kaufmann, T Siessmeier, S Lautenbacher … - Ann Neurol, 1999 - doi.wiley.com
... psychophysical assessment is the possibility to attribute the processing of specific
pain dimensions to an anatomical substrate in the brain?s pain circuitry ...

Interleukin-1?-mediated induction of Cox-2 in the CNS contributes to inflammatory pain -
TA Samad, KA Moore, A Sapirstein, S Billet, A … - Nature, 2001 - Mass Med Soc
... Nature 2001 Mar 22 410 430-431. Medline abstract (Free). Bartfai T. Telling the
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Source: Google Scholar
 

Study shows response to financial loss parallels brain's processing of pain

Findings offer new insight into gambling

WASHINGTON, DC May 4, 2007 – People process information about financial loss through mechanisms in the brain similar to those used for processing physical pain, according to a new imaging study. The results could provide a new understanding of excessive gambling.

The new study detected activity in the striatum, a region that processes signals in the brain's system of reward and defensiveness. Previous studies had shown activity in the striatum increasing when subjects were awarded money, but falling silent when subjects lost money. The new study's lead author, Ben Seymour, MD, and colleagues at the Wellcome Trust Center for Neuroimaging in London suggest that the negative value people associate with losing money stems from an evolutionarily old system involved in fear and pain. This could provide some biological justification for the popular concept of "financial pain." Their study was published in the May 2 issue of The Journal of Neuroscience.

"This work extends our understanding of how the striatum processes both gains and losses and why other experiments have had difficulty eliciting the striatum's involvement in losses," says Read Montague, PhD, at the Baylor College of Medicine, who did not participate in the research.

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

In the study, 24 subjects—13 male and 11 female—learned to associate abstract image cues with a specific amount of money: 50 pence (equivalent to $1) or ₤1 ($2). The researchers recorded their brain activity over 200 trials as they showed subjects first the original image then an outcome screen indicating whether they had won the associated amount of money, lost it, or received nothing.

The imaging results showed that areas of the striatum toward the front of the brain were more active when subjects did better than they expected, or when they were relieved not to lose as they had expected. Losing money or receiving less than they expected based on the previous association elicited activity in areas of the striatum toward the back of the brain. The findings bolster previous evidence from animal research indicating a gradient of reward- and aversion-based activity across the striatum from front to back.

"Although an impressive amount is known about how the brain learns about financial gains, many previous studies have failed to identify any specific system for dealing with losses," says Seymour. "Understanding how these two systems operate and interact may provide important insights into why some people gamble more than others, and why some become addicted to it."

###

The work was a supported by the Wellcome Trust Programme, Gatsby Charitable Foundation, Royal Society, and Medical Research Council.

The Journal of Neuroscience is published by the Society for Neuroscience, an organization of more than 36,500 basic scientists and clinicians who study the brain and nervous system. Seymour can be reached at bseymour@fil.ion.ucl.ac.uk.

 
 
 
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