All Relations between multisensory interaction and island of reil

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
K Pennington, P Dicker, L Hudson, D R Cotte. Evidence for reduced neuronal somal size within the insular cortex in schizophrenia, but not in affective disorders. Schizophrenia research. vol 106. issue 2-3. 2009-06-10. PMID:18805671. the insular cortex is a paralimbic area of the brain thought to have important roles in sensory integration, auditory hallucinations and language. 2009-06-10 2023-08-12 Not clear
Angela Deutschländer, Thomas Stephan, Katharina Hüfner, Judith Wagner, Martin Wiesmann, Michael Strupp, Thomas Brandt, Klaus Jah. Imagined locomotion in the blind: an fMRI study. NeuroImage. vol 45. issue 1. 2009-04-28. PMID:19100840. as opposed to their sighted controls, congenitally totally blind individuals activated multisensory vestibular areas in the posterior insula and superior temporal gyrus during imagined locomotion. 2009-04-28 2023-08-12 human
Angela Deutschländer, Thomas Stephan, Katharina Hüfner, Judith Wagner, Martin Wiesmann, Michael Strupp, Thomas Brandt, Klaus Jah. Imagined locomotion in the blind: an fMRI study. NeuroImage. vol 45. issue 1. 2009-04-28. PMID:19100840. in the intergroup comparisons, congenitally blind subjects exhibited higher bold activity levels than sighted subjects in multisensory vestibular (posterior insula and adjacent temporal sites), somatosensory (postcentral gyrus), and primary motor cortical areas, while sighted subjects showed higher activity levels in the parahippocampal and fusiform gyri. 2009-04-28 2023-08-12 human
Susan Francis, Xia Lin, Samia Aboushoushah, Thomas P White, Margaret Phillips, Richard Bowtell, Cris S Constantinesc. fMRI analysis of active, passive and electrically stimulated ankle dorsiflexion. NeuroImage. vol 44. issue 2. 2009-02-19. PMID:18950717. es-induced activation was greater in bilateral sii and insula than for active adf, hypothesised to result from increased sensory integration, but also possibly due to a nociceptive component to es. 2009-02-19 2023-08-12 human
Krista M Rodgers, Alexander M Benison, Andrea Klein, Daniel S Bart. Auditory, somatosensory, and multisensory insular cortex in the rat. Cerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991). vol 18. issue 12. 2009-02-13. PMID:18424777. auditory, somatosensory, and multisensory insular cortex in the rat. 2009-02-13 2023-08-12 rat
Krista M Rodgers, Alexander M Benison, Andrea Klein, Daniel S Bart. Auditory, somatosensory, and multisensory insular cortex in the rat. Cerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991). vol 18. issue 12. 2009-02-13. PMID:18424777. this study examined the unisensory and multisensory function of the rat insula using high-resolution, whole-hemisphere, epipial evoked potential mapping. 2009-02-13 2023-08-12 rat
John S Allen, Karen Emmorey, Joel Bruss, Hanna Damasi. Morphology of the insula in relation to hearing status and sign language experience. The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience. vol 28. issue 46. 2009-01-26. PMID:19005055. we hypothesize that the distinct morphology of the right insula for asl signers may arise from enhanced connectivity resulting from an increased reliance on cross-modal sensory integration in sign language compared with spoken language. 2009-01-26 2023-08-12 human
Martin L Lenhardt, Abraham Shulman, Barbara A Goldstei. The role of the insula cortex in the final common pathway for tinnitus: experience using ultra-high-frequency therapy. The international tinnitus journal. vol 14. issue 1. 2008-08-18. PMID:18616081. the insula cortex (brodmann's 13-16) has distinct auditory and multisensory areas that have been identified through imaging to be active or hypoactive in cases of severe tinnitus. 2008-08-18 2023-08-12 Not clear
P Schlindwein, M Mueller, T Bauermann, T Brandt, P Stoeter, M Dieteric. Cortical representation of saccular vestibular stimulation: VEMPs in fMRI. NeuroImage. vol 39. issue 1. 2008-02-19. PMID:17919936. after exclusion of the auditory effects, the major findings were as follows: (i) significant activations were located in the multisensory cortical vestibular network within both hemispheres, including the posterior insular cortex, the middle and superior temporal gyri, and the inferior parietal cortex. 2008-02-19 2023-08-12 Not clear
Isabelle Hesling, Bixente Dilharreguy, Sylvain Clément, Martine Bordessoules, Michèle Allar. Cerebral mechanisms of prosodic sensory integration using low-frequency bands of connected speech. Human brain mapping. vol 26. issue 3. 2006-02-24. PMID:15929092. in the expressive condition, the specific sensory integration fn results in an increase of the articulatory loop and new recruitments such as right ba6-44, left ba39-40, the left posterior insula and the bilateral ba30. 2006-02-24 2023-08-12 Not clear
Hans-Otto Karnath, Marianne Dieteric. Spatial neglect--a vestibular disorder? Brain : a journal of neurology. vol 129. issue Pt 2. 2006-02-24. PMID:16371409. lesion studies in human and monkey, electrical and transcranial magnetic stimulation, as well as functional imaging results have revealed the superior temporal cortex, insula and the temporo-parietal junction to be substantial parts of the multisensory (vestibular) system as well as to be affected in spatial neglect. 2006-02-24 2023-08-12 human
Donna Lloyd, India Morrison, Neil Robert. Role for human posterior parietal cortex in visual processing of aversive objects in peripersonal space. Journal of neurophysiology. vol 95. issue 1. 2006-01-20. PMID:16162829. in addition, areas involved in motivational-affective coding such as mid-cingulate (ba24) and anterior insula also showed such relevance-dependent modulation, whereas premotor areas known to receive multisensory information about limb position did not. 2006-01-20 2023-08-12 human
Harpreet S Duggal, Srirangam Muddasani, Matcheri S Keshava. Insular volumes in first-episode schizophrenia: gender effect. Schizophrenia research. vol 73. issue 1. 2005-05-10. PMID:15567083. insula is a multimodal sensory integration region that acts as a gateway between somatosensory areas and limbic structures such as amygdala. 2005-05-10 2023-08-12 human
Sandra Bense, Peter Bartenstein, Matthias Lochmann, Peter Schlindwein, Thomas Brandt, Marianne Dieteric. Metabolic changes in vestibular and visual cortices in acute vestibular neuritis. Annals of neurology. vol 56. issue 5. 2005-01-10. PMID:15449325. regional cerebral glucose metabolism (rcgm) was significantly increased (p <0.001 uncorrected) during the acute stage in multisensory vestibular cortical and subcortical areas (parietoinsular vestibular cortex in the posterior insula, posterolateral thalamus, anterior cingulate gyrus [brodmann area 32/24], pontomesencephalic brainstem, hippocampus). 2005-01-10 2023-08-12 human
Massimo Filippi, Maria A Rocca, Domenico M Mezzapesa, Angelo Ghezzi, Andrea Falini, Vittorio Martinelli, Giuseppe Scotti, Giancarlo Com. Simple and complex movement-associated functional MRI changes in patients at presentation with clinically isolated syndromes suggestive of multiple sclerosis. Human brain mapping. vol 21. issue 2. 2004-03-31. PMID:14755598. during the performance of a complex motor task with the dominant upper and lower limbs, cis patients had an increased recruitment of a widespread network (including the frontal lobe, the insula, the thalamus), usually considered to function in motor, sensory, and multimodal integration processing. 2004-03-31 2023-08-12 human