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Avoiding monetary loss: a human habenula functional MRI ultra-high field study
2021
Cortex
A number of convergent human neuroimaging and animal studies suggest that habenula neurons fire in anticipation of non-rewarding outcomes, and suppress their firing in anticipation of rewarding outcomes. This normative function of the habenula appears disrupted in depression, and may be critical to the anti-depressant effects of ketamine. However, studying habenula functionality in humans using standard 3 T MRI is inherently limited by its small size. We employed ultra-high field (7 T) fMRI to
doi:10.1016/j.cortex.2021.05.013
pmid:34186462
pmcid:PMC8422162
fatcat:3xreohu74zdfnky27ftgnxu5ju