Researchers report it might not be slowed prefrontal cortex development that drives teens to embark in risky behavior, as some common theories state. Instead, they argue, teens may make risky decisions as a means of experience building so they are better equipped at making important decisions later in life.
A large scale SPECT imaging study reveals women's brains are significantly more active in more regions than males, including the prefronal cortex and limbic areas. Visual and areas associated with coordination were more active in males, researchers noted.
The same area of the brain can motivate and suppress a learned behavior at the same time, a new study reports.
Researchers note distinct patterns of neural activity as a response to auditory stimuli in patients with concussion.
Findings about how early life social stress affect brain connections in mice may have implications for treating human psychiatric illnesses.
Researchers discover depression can be categorized into four different subtypes, each defined by different patterns of abnormal brain connectivity.
Researchers look to neuroimaging and EEG technology to improve market research.
According to researchers, anxiety response is not only seen in areas associated with emotion, but also in brain areas associated with movement.
Researchers report downregulating amygdala activity may improve behavioral emotion regulation.
Researchers have singled and taken control of a circuit in mouse brains in order to dial the animal's mood up or down.
A new imaging technique could help to provide a way to break the cycle of alcoholism.
A new study reports prolonged exposure to stress can result in structural changes to the amygdala in mice.