All Relations between frontal cortex and middle temporal gyrus

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Iole Indovina, Alberto Cacciola, Sergio Delle Monache, Demetrio Milardi, Francesco Lacquaniti, Nicola Toschi, Jerome Cochereau, Gianfranco Bosc. A case report of agoraphobia following right parietal lobe surgery: changes in functional and structural connectivities of the multimodal vestibular network. Frontiers in neurology. vol 14. 2023-05-30. PMID:37251237. structural connectomes after surgery showed a decrease of strength in the preserved ventral portion of the supramarginal gyrus (pfcm) and in a high order visual motion area in the right middle temporal gyrus (37dl), and decrease of the clustering coefficient and of the local efficiency in several areas of the limbic, insular cortex, parietal and frontal cortex, indicating general disconnection of the vestibular network. 2023-05-30 2023-08-14 Not clear
Jennifer N Vega, Lilia Zurkovsky, Kimberly Albert, Alyssa Melo, Brian Boyd, Julie Dumas, Neil Woodward, Brenna C McDonald, Andrew J Saykin, Joon H Park, Magdalena Naylor, Paul A Newhous. Altered Brain Connectivity in Early Postmenopausal Women with Subjective Cognitive Impairment. Frontiers in neuroscience. vol 10. 2020-10-01. PMID:27721740. results indicated a positive correlation between the executive control network and cognitive complaint score, weaker negative functional connectivity within the frontal cortex, and stronger positive connectivity within the right middle temporal gyrus in postmenopausal women who report more cognitive complaints. 2020-10-01 2023-08-13 Not clear
Sibylle C Herholz, Andrea R Halpern, Robert J Zatorr. Neuronal correlates of perception, imagery, and memory for familiar tunes. Journal of cognitive neuroscience. vol 24. issue 6. 2013-02-11. PMID:22360595. similar to the encoding phase, the recognition task recruited overlapping areas, including inferior frontal cortex associated with memory retrieval, as well as left middle temporal gyrus. 2013-02-11 2023-08-12 human
Carin Whitney, Elizabeth Jefferies, Tilo Kirche. Heterogeneity of the left temporal lobe in semantic representation and control: priming multiple versus single meanings of ambiguous words. Cerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991). vol 21. issue 4. 2011-07-13. PMID:20732899. anterior inferior temporal gyrus (itg) was sensitive to the number of meanings that were retrieved, suggesting a role for this region in semantic representation, while posterior middle temporal gyrus (pmtg) and inferior frontal cortex showed greater activation in conditions that maximized executive demands. 2011-07-13 2023-08-12 Not clear
Veena M Narayan, Katherine L Narr, Owen R Phillips, Paul M Thompson, Arthur W Toga, Philip R Szeszk. Greater regional cortical gray matter thickness in obsessive-compulsive disorder. Neuroreport. vol 19. issue 15. 2008-11-03. PMID:18797315. our findings indicate that the right inferior frontal cortex and posterior middle temporal gyrus are thicker in patients with ocd compared with healthy controls, which may contribute to response inhibition deficits and other aspects of phenomenology related to the disorder. 2008-11-03 2023-08-12 human
Thomas Ethofer, Silke Anders, Michael Erb, Cornelia Herbert, Sarah Wiethoff, Johanna Kissler, Wolfgang Grodd, Dirk Wildgrube. Cerebral pathways in processing of affective prosody: a dynamic causal modeling study. NeuroImage. vol 30. issue 2. 2006-05-23. PMID:16275138. conventional analysis of fmri data revealed activation within the right posterior middle temporal gyrus and bilateral inferior frontal cortex during evaluation of affective prosody and left temporal pole, orbitofrontal, and medial superior frontal cortex during judgment of affective semantics. 2006-05-23 2023-08-12 human
Scott C Matthews, Alan N Simmons, Scott D Lane, Martin P Paulu. Selective activation of the nucleus accumbens during risk-taking decision making. Neuroreport. vol 15. issue 13. 2005-01-13. PMID:15486494. partially supporting the initial hypotheses, deliberation prior to selection of safe relative to risky responses generated greater activation in the inferior frontal cortex, superior temporal gyrus, and middle temporal gyrus; and deliberation prior to selection of risky relative to safe responses generated greater activation in medial frontal cortex, occipital cortex, nucleus accumbens and caudate. 2005-01-13 2023-08-12 human
Kim S Graham, Andy C H Lee, Matthew Brett, Karalyn Patterso. The neural basis of autobiographical and semantic memory: new evidence from three PET studies. Cognitive, affective & behavioral neuroscience. vol 3. issue 3. 2004-03-08. PMID:14672158. contrasting retrieval of autobiographical memories with retrieval of semantic facts (abm-sem) in 24 subjects across three pet studies revealed bilateral involvement of the middle temporal gyrus (ba 21) and medial frontal cortex (ba 9/10). 2004-03-08 2023-08-12 human