All Relations between decision making and island of reil

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Emily R Stern, Richard Gonzalez, Robert C Welsh, Stephan F Taylo. Medial frontal cortex and anterior insula are less sensitive to outcome predictability when monetary stakes are higher. Social cognitive and affective neuroscience. vol 9. issue 10. 2015-06-03. PMID:24078021. prior research links greater activation of posterior medial frontal cortex (pmfc) and anterior insula (ai) with decreasing outcome predictability during decision making, as measured by decreasing probability for the more likely outcome out of two or increasing outcome variance. 2015-06-03 2023-08-12 Not clear
João Castelhano, Isabel Catarina Duarte, Michael Wibral, Eugénio Rodriguez, Miguel Castelo-Branc. The dual facet of gamma oscillations: separate visual and decision making circuits as revealed by simultaneous EEG/fMRI. Human brain mapping. vol 35. issue 10. 2015-05-20. PMID:24839083. a low gamma sub-band (near 40 hz) activity was tightly related to the decision making network, and in particular the anterior insula. 2015-05-20 2023-08-13 Not clear
Hideki Ohir. [Interoception and decision-making]. Nihon shinkei seishin yakurigaku zasshi = Japanese journal of psychopharmacology. vol 35. issue 1. 2015-04-30. PMID:25816635. the somatic marker hypothesis proposed by damasio argued that interoception, which means bodily responses such as sympathetic activity, can be represented in the insula and anterior cingulate cortex and can play critical roles in decision-making. 2015-04-30 2023-08-13 Not clear
Hideki Ohir. [Interoception and decision-making]. Nihon shinkei seishin yakurigaku zasshi = Japanese journal of psychopharmacology. vol 35. issue 1. 2015-04-30. PMID:25816635. in addition, cumulative findings suggest that the anterior insula where the inner model of interoception is represented can act as an interface between the brain and body in decision-making. 2015-04-30 2023-08-13 Not clear
Jennifer L Stewart, April C May, Tasha Poppa, Paul W Davenport, Susan F Tapert, Martin P Paulu. You are the danger: attenuated insula response in methamphetamine users during aversive interoceptive decision-making. Drug and alcohol dependence. vol 142. 2015-04-23. PMID:24993186. you are the danger: attenuated insula response in methamphetamine users during aversive interoceptive decision-making. 2015-04-23 2023-08-13 Not clear
Michael Amlung, Lawrence H Sweet, John Acker, Courtney L Brown, James MacKillo. Dissociable brain signatures of choice conflict and immediate reward preferences in alcohol use disorders. Addiction biology. vol 19. issue 4. 2015-04-20. PMID:23231650. significant activation during drd was found in several decision-making regions, including dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlpfc), insula, posterior parietal cortex (ppc), and posterior cingulate. 2015-04-20 2023-08-12 human
Ashley R Smith, Laurence Steinberg, Jason Chei. The role of the anterior insula in adolescent decision making. Developmental neuroscience. vol 36. issue 3-4. 2015-04-17. PMID:24853135. the role of the anterior insula in adolescent decision making. 2015-04-17 2023-08-13 Not clear
Ashley R Smith, Laurence Steinberg, Jason Chei. The role of the anterior insula in adolescent decision making. Developmental neuroscience. vol 36. issue 3-4. 2015-04-17. PMID:24853135. while this work has largely focused on the development of prefrontal (self-regulation) and striatal (reward processing) circuitry, the present article explores the significance of a different region, the anterior insular cortex (aic), in adolescent decision making. 2015-04-17 2023-08-13 Not clear
Rena Fukunaga, Tim Bogg, Peter R Finn, Joshua W Brow. Decisions during negatively-framed messages yield smaller risk-aversion-related brain activation in substance-dependent individuals. Psychology of addictive behaviors : journal of the Society of Psychologists in Addictive Behaviors. vol 27. issue 4. 2015-04-10. PMID:23148798. in the positively-framed condition, the sd and non-sd groups showed improved decision-making performance that corresponded to higher risk-aversion-related brain activity in the anterior cingulate cortex (acc) and anterior insula (ai). 2015-04-10 2023-08-12 Not clear
Qinghua He, Lin Xiao, Gui Xue, Savio Wong, Susan L Ames, Susan M Schembre, Antoine Bechar. Poor ability to resist tempting calorie rich food is linked to altered balance between neural systems involved in urge and self-control. Nutrition journal. vol 13. 2015-03-30. PMID:25228353. the loss of self-control or inability to resist tempting/rewarding foods, and the development of less healthful eating habits may be explained by three key neural systems: (1) a hyper-functioning striatum system driven by external rewarding cues; (2) a hypo-functioning decision-making and impulse control system; and (3) an altered insula system involved in the translation of homeostatic and interoceptive signals into self-awareness and what may be subjectively experienced as a feeling. 2015-03-30 2023-08-13 Not clear
James MacKillop, Michael T Amlung, John Acker, Joshua C Gray, Courtney L Brown, James G Murphy, Lara A Ray, Lawrence H Swee. The neuroeconomics of alcohol demand: an initial investigation of the neural correlates of alcohol cost-benefit decision making in heavy drinking men. Neuropsychopharmacology : official publication of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology. vol 39. issue 8. 2015-02-12. PMID:24584331. across choice types, the anterior insula was notably recruited in diverse roles, further implicating the importance of interoceptive processing in decision-making behavior. 2015-02-12 2023-08-12 human
Jennifer L Stewart, Colm G Connolly, April C May, Susan F Tapert, Marc Wittmann, Martin P Paulu. Cocaine dependent individuals with attenuated striatal activation during reinforcement learning are more susceptible to relapse. Psychiatry research. vol 223. issue 2. 2015-02-02. PMID:24862388. the fmri results indicated that compared with abstinent individuals, relapsed users exhibited lower activation in (1) bilateral inferior frontal gyrus and striatum during decision making more generally; and (2) bilateral middle frontal gyrus and anterior insula during reward contingency learning in particular. 2015-02-02 2023-08-13 human
Steven Greening, Loretta Norton, Karim Virani, Ambrose Ty, Derek Mitchell, Elizabeth Finge. Individual differences in the anterior insula are associated with the likelihood of financially helping versus harming others. Cognitive, affective & behavioral neuroscience. vol 14. issue 1. 2014-12-16. PMID:24097059. recent work has focused on the potential role of the anterior insula in guiding social and nonsocial decision making, but the specific nature of its activation during such decision making remains unclear. 2014-12-16 2023-08-12 Not clear
John C Churchwell, Deborah A Yurgelun-Tod. Age-related changes in insula cortical thickness and impulsivity: significance for emotional development and decision-making. Developmental cognitive neuroscience. vol 6. 2014-12-01. PMID:23921157. age-related changes in insula cortical thickness and impulsivity: significance for emotional development and decision-making. 2014-12-01 2023-08-12 human
Hideki Ohira, Naho Ichikawa, Kenta Kimura, Seisuke Fukuyama, Jun Shinoda, Jitsuhiro Yamad. Neural and sympathetic activity associated with exploration in decision-making: further evidence for involvement of insula. Frontiers in behavioral neuroscience. vol 8. 2014-11-26. PMID:25426038. neural and sympathetic activity associated with exploration in decision-making: further evidence for involvement of insula. 2014-11-26 2023-08-13 human
Hideki Ohira, Naho Ichikawa, Kenta Kimura, Seisuke Fukuyama, Jun Shinoda, Jitsuhiro Yamad. Neural and sympathetic activity associated with exploration in decision-making: further evidence for involvement of insula. Frontiers in behavioral neuroscience. vol 8. 2014-11-26. PMID:25426038. we previously reported that sympathetic activity was associated with exploration in decision-making indexed by entropy, which is a concept in information theory and indexes randomness of choices or the degree of deviation from sticking to recent experiences of gains and losses, and that activation of the anterior insula mediated this association. 2014-11-26 2023-08-13 human
Elisabeth Steinmann, Antonia Schmalor, Alexander Prehn-Kristensen, Stephan Wolff, Andreas Galka, Jan Möhring, Wolf-Dieter Gerber, Franz Petermann, Ulrich Stephani, Michael Siniatchki. Developmental changes of neuronal networks associated with strategic social decision-making. Neuropsychologia. vol 56. 2014-11-12. PMID:24412687. using the ultimatum game, several studies have demonstrated that the process of decision-making to cooperate or to defeat in interaction with a partner is associated with activation of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlpfc), anterior cingulate cortex (acc), anterior insula (ai), and inferior frontal cortex (ifc). 2014-11-12 2023-08-12 Not clear
Jianping Hu, Rongjun Y. The neural correlates of the decoy effect in decisions. Frontiers in behavioral neuroscience. vol 8. 2014-08-22. PMID:25147516. at the decision phase, choosing the targets vs. the competitors elicited stronger anterior insula activation, suggesting that perceptual salience drives heuristic decision making in the decoy effect. 2014-08-22 2023-08-13 human
Natalie S Werner, Nicola Schweitzer, Thomas Meindl, Stefan Duschek, Joseph Kambeitz, Rainer Schandr. Interoceptive awareness moderates neural activity during decision-making. Biological psychology. vol 94. issue 3. 2014-07-31. PMID:24076035. neural activity within the right anterior insula was associated with decision-making performance only in individuals with accurate but not in those with non-accurate interoceptive awareness. 2014-07-31 2023-08-12 human
Xavier Noël, Damien Brevers, Antoine Bechar. A triadic neurocognitive approach to addiction for clinical interventions. Frontiers in psychiatry. vol 4. 2014-06-24. PMID:24409155. according to the triadic neurocognitive model of addiction to drugs (e.g., cocaine) and non-drugs (e.g., gambling), weakened "willpower" associated with these behaviors is the product of an abnormal functioning in one or more of three key neural and cognitive systems: (1) an amygdala-striatum dependent system mediating automatic, habitual, and salient behaviors; (2) a prefrontal cortex dependent system important for self-regulation and forecasting the future consequences of a behavior; and (3) an insula dependent system for the reception of interoceptive signals and their translation into feeling states (such as urge and craving), which in turn plays a strong influential role in decision-making and impulse control processes related to uncertainty, risk, and reward. 2014-06-24 2023-08-12 Not clear