about
Functional neuroimaging of reward processing and decision-making: a review of aberrant motivational and affective processing in addiction and mood disorders.Disturbed anterior prefrontal control of the mesolimbic reward system and increased impulsivity in bipolar disorderFear is only as deep as the mind allows: a coordinate-based meta-analysis of neuroimaging studies on the regulation of negative affect.Does competition really bring out the worst? Testosterone, social distance and inter-male competition shape parochial altruism in human malesThe role of the human ventral striatum and the medial orbitofrontal cortex in the representation of reward magnitude - an activation likelihood estimation meta-analysis of neuroimaging studies of passive reward expectancy and outcome processing.How to be patient. The ability to wait for a reward depends on menstrual cycle phase and feedback-related activity.Be quick about it. Endogenous estradiol level, menstrual cycle phase and trait impulsiveness predict impulsive choice in the context of reward acquisition.Testosterone is associated with cooperation during intergroup competition by enhancing parochial altruismEndogenous Testosterone and Exogenous Oxytocin Modulate Attentional Processing of Infant Faces.Effects of city living on the mesolimbic reward system-An fmri study.Dissociating pathomechanisms of depression with fMRI: bottom-up or top-down dysfunctions of the reward system.Investigating the Impact of a Genome-Wide Supported Bipolar Risk Variant of MAD1L1 on the Human Reward System.When desire collides with reason: functional interactions between anteroventral prefrontal cortex and nucleus accumbens underlie the human ability to resist impulsive desires.Functional interactions guiding adaptive processing of behavioral significance.Top-down and bottom-up modulation of brain structures involved in auditory discrimination.Neural substrates of male parochial altruism are modulated by testosterone and behavioral strategy.Impulsive personality and the ability to resist immediate reward: an fMRI study examining interindividual differences in the neural mechanisms underlying self-control.A neural system for evaluating the behavioural relevance of salient events outside the current focus of attention.A functional neuroimaging study assessing gender differences in the neural mechanisms underlying the ability to resist impulsive desires.Gender Differences in Verbal and Visuospatial Working Memory Performance and Networks.Menstrual cycle phase modulates reward sensitivity and performance monitoring in young women: Preliminary fMRI evidence.On the role of the anterior prefrontal cortex in cognitive 'branching': An fMRI study.The power of imagination--how anticipatory mental imagery alters perceptual processing of fearful facial expressions.Brain mechanisms associated with background monitoring of the environment for potentially significant sensory events.The orbitofrontal cortex and its role in the assignment of behavioural significance.DAT1-Genotype and Menstrual Cycle, but Not Hormonal Contraception, Modulate Reinforcement Learning: Preliminary Evidence.Endogenous testosterone and exogenous oxytocin influence the response to baby schema in the female brain.
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description
onderzoeker
@nl
researcher ORCID ID = 0000-0003-3826-8494
@en
name
Esther K Diekhof
@ast
Esther K Diekhof
@en
Esther K Diekhof
@nl
type
label
Esther K Diekhof
@ast
Esther K Diekhof
@en
Esther K Diekhof
@nl
prefLabel
Esther K Diekhof
@ast
Esther K Diekhof
@en
Esther K Diekhof
@nl
P106
P31
P496
0000-0003-3826-8494