Department of Pharmacy, University of Pisa Via Bonanno 6 56126 Pisa Italy giulia.bononi@farm.unipi.it valentina.citi@unipi.it alma.martelli@unipi.it giulio.poli@unipi.it tiziano.tuccinardi@unipi.it carlotta.granchi@unipi.it lara.testai@unipi.it vincenzo.calderone@unipi.it filippo.minutolo@unipi.it.
Department of Pharmacy, University of Pisa Via Bonanno 6 56126 Pisa Italy giulia.bononi@farm.unipi.it valentina.citi@unipi.it alma.martelli@unipi.it giulio.poli@unipi.it tiziano.tuccinardi@unipi.it carlotta.granchi@unipi.it lara.testai@unipi.it vincenzo.calderone@unipi.it filippo.minutolo@unipi.it.
Department of Pharmacy, University of Pisa Via Bonanno 6 56126 Pisa Italy giulia.bononi@farm.unipi.it valentina.citi@unipi.it alma.martelli@unipi.it giulio.poli@unipi.it tiziano.tuccinardi@unipi.it carlotta.granchi@unipi.it lara.testai@unipi.it vincenzo.calderone@unipi.it filippo.minutolo@unipi.it.
Center for Instrument Sharing of the University of Pisa (CISUP) Lungarno Pacinotti 43 56126 Pisa Italy.
Department of Pharmacy, University of Pisa Via Bonanno 6 56126 Pisa Italy giulia.bononi@farm.unipi.it valentina.citi@unipi.it alma.martelli@unipi.it giulio.poli@unipi.it tiziano.tuccinardi@unipi.it carlotta.granchi@unipi.it lara.testai@unipi.it vincenzo.calderone@unipi.it filippo.minutolo@unipi.it.
Department of Pharmacy, University of Pisa Via Bonanno 6 56126 Pisa Italy giulia.bononi@farm.unipi.it valentina.citi@unipi.it alma.martelli@unipi.it giulio.poli@unipi.it tiziano.tuccinardi@unipi.it carlotta.granchi@unipi.it lara.testai@unipi.it vincenzo.calderone@unipi.it filippo.minutolo@unipi.it.
Center for Instrument Sharing of the University of Pisa (CISUP) Lungarno Pacinotti 43 56126 Pisa Italy.
Department of Pharmacy, University of Pisa Via Bonanno 6 56126 Pisa Italy giulia.bononi@farm.unipi.it valentina.citi@unipi.it alma.martelli@unipi.it giulio.poli@unipi.it tiziano.tuccinardi@unipi.it carlotta.granchi@unipi.it lara.testai@unipi.it vincenzo.calderone@unipi.it filippo.minutolo@unipi.it.
Center for Instrument Sharing of the University of Pisa (CISUP) Lungarno Pacinotti 43 56126 Pisa Italy.
Department of Pharmacy, University of Pisa Via Bonanno 6 56126 Pisa Italy giulia.bononi@farm.unipi.it valentina.citi@unipi.it alma.martelli@unipi.it giulio.poli@unipi.it tiziano.tuccinardi@unipi.it carlotta.granchi@unipi.it lara.testai@unipi.it vincenzo.calderone@unipi.it filippo.minutolo@unipi.it.
Center for Instrument Sharing of the University of Pisa (CISUP) Lungarno Pacinotti 43 56126 Pisa Italy.
Department of Pharmacy, University of Pisa Via Bonanno 6 56126 Pisa Italy giulia.bononi@farm.unipi.it valentina.citi@unipi.it alma.martelli@unipi.it giulio.poli@unipi.it tiziano.tuccinardi@unipi.it carlotta.granchi@unipi.it lara.testai@unipi.it vincenzo.calderone@unipi.it filippo.minutolo@unipi.it.
Center for Instrument Sharing of the University of Pisa (CISUP) Lungarno Pacinotti 43 56126 Pisa Italy.
Department of Pharmacy, University of Pisa Via Bonanno 6 56126 Pisa Italy giulia.bononi@farm.unipi.it valentina.citi@unipi.it alma.martelli@unipi.it giulio.poli@unipi.it tiziano.tuccinardi@unipi.it carlotta.granchi@unipi.it lara.testai@unipi.it vincenzo.calderone@unipi.it filippo.minutolo@unipi.it.
Center for Instrument Sharing of the University of Pisa (CISUP) Lungarno Pacinotti 43 56126 Pisa Italy.
Department of Animal Sciences, The Robert H. Smith Faculty of Agriculture, Food and Environment, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Rehovot 761001, Israel.
School of Pharmaceutical Science and Technology, Hangzhou Institute for Advanced Study, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Hangzhou 310024, China.
State Key Laboratory of Chemical Biology, Shanghai Institute of Materia Medica, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai 201203, China.
Bulimia nervosa (BN) is characterized by recurrent binge-eating episodes and inappropriate compensatory behaviors. This study investigated alterations in resting-state surface-based neural activity in...
A total of 26 BN patients and 28 healthy controls were enrolled. Indirect measurement of cerebral cortical activity and functional connectivity (FC) analyses were performed in Surfstat. A principal co...
Compared with the healthy control group, the BN group showed decreased surface-based two-dimensional regional homogeneity in the right superior parietal lobule (SPL). Additionally, the BN group showed...
We revealed that the right SPL undergoes reorganization with respect to specific brain regions at the whole-brain level in BN. In addition, our results suggest a correlation between brain reorganizati...
V, descriptive study....
The objective of this study is to investigate a possible role of the Medial Olivocochlear (MOC) efferent neural pathway and neural connections responsible for tinnitus generation in silence/sensory de...
By placing normal hearing participants in a sound booth for 10 minutes, silence/sensory deprivation was created. This offered assessment of MOC neural pathway in normal hearing participants in silence...
Approximately, forty-one percent of the participants perceived some type of tinnitus during/after 10 minutes of silence. No statistically significant difference was found in the total TEOAE amplitude ...
These results suggest that the medial olivocochlear efferent pathway or lower brain stem area does not appear to play a role in the emergence of temporary tinnitus in silence however indicate the invo...
In a recent eye-tracking study we found a differential dwell time pattern for negatively-valenced and neutral faces among patients with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), trauma-exposed healthy con...
Ten minutes magnetic resonance imaging rsFC scans were recorded in 17 PTSD patients, 21 TEHCs, and 16 HCs. Participants then completed a free-viewing eye-tracking task assessing attention allocation o...
As previously reported, group differences occurred in attention allocation to negative-valence stimuli, with longer dwell time on negatively valence stimuli in the PTSD and TEHC groups than the HC gro...
While exploratory in nature, present findings may suggest that reward-related brain areas are involved in disengaging attention from negative-valenced stimuli, and possibly in regulating ensuing negat...
We can all agree that a good story engages us, however, agreeing which story is good is far more debatable. In this study, we explored whether engagement with a narrative synchronizes listeners' brain...
Neurons are highly interwoven to form intricate neural circuits that underlie the diverse functions of the brain. Dissecting the anatomical organization of neural circuits is key to deciphering how th...
Despite homogenous clinical presentations between bipolar and unipolar disorders, there are distinct neurobiological differences. Chronicity of illness may be a factor impacting and sustaining certain...
One hundred and seventy-two participants (40 BD, 39 TSD, 40 TRD, and 53 age-gender-matched healthy controls) underwent resting-state fMRI scans. Seed-based and independent component analyses were perf...
All three clinical groups had significantly lower connectivity within the frontoparietal network (FPN) relative to controls. TRD and BD were significantly different from TSD (TRD, BD > TSD) but were n...
BD demonstrated shared and differential connectivity features relative to symptomatic TRD and euthymic TSD groups. The increased sgACC-RDLPFC connectivity in BD and its correlation with a number of de...
Sustained attention is one of the basic abilities of humans to maintain concentration on relevant information while ignoring irrelevant information over extended periods. The purpose of the review is ...
Physical activity is known to positively impact brain structure and function, but its effects on resting-state functional connectivity (rsFC) and its relationship with complex tasks as a function of a...