A new study published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B has uncovered how the human brain’s perception of pain is influenced by instructions—such as whether to perceive pain as separate sensations or as integrated multimodal pain. The study also reveals how this process works and identifies the neural mechanisms involved.
A recent study published in Schizophrenia Bulletin on June 13 shows that cerebellum-basal ganglia functional connectivity plays an important role to the development of anhedonia and amotivation in patients with schizophrenia.
The study finds that salient PM cues can
improve event- and time-based PM in school-age children whereas EFT may not improve PM
performance compared to standard encoding. Future research should investigate children’s
ability to voluntarily set salient cues for completing daily PM tasks.