We often have to make risky decisions between alternatives with outcomes that can be better or worse than the outcomes of safer alternatives. Although previous studies have implicated various brain regions in risky decision making, it remains unknown which regions are crucial for balancing whether to take a risk or play it safe. Here, we focused on the anterior insular cortex (AIC), the causal involvement of which in risky decision making is still unclear, although human imaging studies have reported AIC activation in various gambling tasks. We investigated the effects of temporarily inactivating the AIC on rats' risk preference in two types of gambling tasks, one in which risk arose in reward amount and one in which it arose in reward dela...
Decisions require careful weighing of the risks and benefits associated with a choice. Some people n...
Deficits in cost/benefit decision making are a critical risk factor for substance use disorder and b...
Pathological gambling is thought to result from a shift of balance between two competing neurobiolog...
We often have to make risky decisions between alternatives with outcomes that can be better or worse...
Deficits in cost-benefit decision making, as assessed in the Iowa Gambling Task (IGT), are commonly ...
RATIONALE: Studies employing the Iowa Gambling Task (IGT) demonstrated that areas of the frontal cor...
Systemic manipulations have shown that dopamine and serotonin systems are involved in risky decision...
The ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) and insular cortex are implicated in distributed neural c...
When making decisions, people show different attitudes in risk-taking. Classically, individual diffe...
Gambling disorder (GD) and other forms of behavioural and substance addictions are characterized by ...
Human decision making is rarely conducted in temporal isolation. It is often biased and affected by ...
Damage to various regions of the prefrontal cortex (PFC) impairs decision making involving evaluatio...
Prefrontal cortex plays an important role in decision making (DM), supporting choices in the ordinar...
Anterior insular and orbitofrontal cortex (AIC and OFC, respectively) are known to play important ro...
Patients sustaining lesions of the orbital prefrontal cortex (PFC) exhibit marked impairments in the...
Decisions require careful weighing of the risks and benefits associated with a choice. Some people n...
Deficits in cost/benefit decision making are a critical risk factor for substance use disorder and b...
Pathological gambling is thought to result from a shift of balance between two competing neurobiolog...
We often have to make risky decisions between alternatives with outcomes that can be better or worse...
Deficits in cost-benefit decision making, as assessed in the Iowa Gambling Task (IGT), are commonly ...
RATIONALE: Studies employing the Iowa Gambling Task (IGT) demonstrated that areas of the frontal cor...
Systemic manipulations have shown that dopamine and serotonin systems are involved in risky decision...
The ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) and insular cortex are implicated in distributed neural c...
When making decisions, people show different attitudes in risk-taking. Classically, individual diffe...
Gambling disorder (GD) and other forms of behavioural and substance addictions are characterized by ...
Human decision making is rarely conducted in temporal isolation. It is often biased and affected by ...
Damage to various regions of the prefrontal cortex (PFC) impairs decision making involving evaluatio...
Prefrontal cortex plays an important role in decision making (DM), supporting choices in the ordinar...
Anterior insular and orbitofrontal cortex (AIC and OFC, respectively) are known to play important ro...
Patients sustaining lesions of the orbital prefrontal cortex (PFC) exhibit marked impairments in the...
Decisions require careful weighing of the risks and benefits associated with a choice. Some people n...
Deficits in cost/benefit decision making are a critical risk factor for substance use disorder and b...
Pathological gambling is thought to result from a shift of balance between two competing neurobiolog...