Although understanding brain mechanisms of appetitive-aversive interactions is relevant to our daily lives and has potential clinical relevance, our knowledge about these brain mechanisms is rudimentary. To address this gap in the literature, we conducted two functional MRI studies that investigated appetitive-aversive interactions during perception and attention in healthy adult human brain. In the first study, we probed how potential reward signaled by advance cues altered aversive distractor processing during a subsequent visual task. Behaviorally, the deleterious influence of aversive stimuli on task performance was reduced during the reward compared to no-reward condition. In the brain, at the task phase, paralleling the observed b...
Existing evidence suggests that reward and attentional networks function in concert and that activat...
Appetitive conditioning refers to the process of learning cue-reward associations and is mediated by...
In the burdened scenes of everyday life, our brains must select from among many competing inputs for...
Although neural signals of reward anticipation have been studied extensively, the functional relatio...
Studies of subjective well-being have conventionally relied upon self-report, which directs subjects...
Studies of subjective well-being have conventionally relied upon self-report, which directs subjects...
Adaptive human behavior crucially relies on the ability of the brain to allocate resources automatic...
Studies of subjective well-being have conventionally relied upon self-report, which directs subjects...
The Reinforcement Sensitivity Theory proposes that a neurobiological system, the Behavioral Activati...
Neuroscientists, psychologists, clinicians, and economists have long been interested in how individu...
Ability to anticipate aversive events is important for avoiding dangerous or unpleasant situations. ...
Visual processing is not determined solely by retinal inputs. Attentional modulation can arise when ...
Deficits of self-control are associated with a number of mental state disorders. The ability to dire...
Abstract: Because the processing capacity of the visual system is limited, selective attention to on...
Deficits of self-control are associated with a number of mental state disorders. The ability to dire...
Existing evidence suggests that reward and attentional networks function in concert and that activat...
Appetitive conditioning refers to the process of learning cue-reward associations and is mediated by...
In the burdened scenes of everyday life, our brains must select from among many competing inputs for...
Although neural signals of reward anticipation have been studied extensively, the functional relatio...
Studies of subjective well-being have conventionally relied upon self-report, which directs subjects...
Studies of subjective well-being have conventionally relied upon self-report, which directs subjects...
Adaptive human behavior crucially relies on the ability of the brain to allocate resources automatic...
Studies of subjective well-being have conventionally relied upon self-report, which directs subjects...
The Reinforcement Sensitivity Theory proposes that a neurobiological system, the Behavioral Activati...
Neuroscientists, psychologists, clinicians, and economists have long been interested in how individu...
Ability to anticipate aversive events is important for avoiding dangerous or unpleasant situations. ...
Visual processing is not determined solely by retinal inputs. Attentional modulation can arise when ...
Deficits of self-control are associated with a number of mental state disorders. The ability to dire...
Abstract: Because the processing capacity of the visual system is limited, selective attention to on...
Deficits of self-control are associated with a number of mental state disorders. The ability to dire...
Existing evidence suggests that reward and attentional networks function in concert and that activat...
Appetitive conditioning refers to the process of learning cue-reward associations and is mediated by...
In the burdened scenes of everyday life, our brains must select from among many competing inputs for...