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Aggression prefrontal cortex

Ferreira, A., Dahlof, L. G., and Hansen, S. (1987). Olfactory mechanisms in the control of maternal aggression, appetite, and fearfulness effects of lesions to olfactory receptors, mediodorsal thalamic nucleus, and insular prefrontal cortex. Behavioral Neuroscience 101, 709-717. [Pg.459]

Serotonin has been linked to aggressive behavior as a result of activation of the limbic system (olfactory bulb, amygdala, and hypothalamus), the prefrontal cortex, and a region of the periaqueductal gray (Wood et al., 2006). [Pg.5]

Using FDG-PET, others have found that murderers had poor functioning of the prefrontal cortex part of the brain - the area believed to control and regulate aggressive behavior (Brain abnormalities in murderers indicated by positron emission tomography. Raine A, Buchsbaum M, LaCasse L. Biol Psychiatry. September 1997,15 42(6) 495-508)... [Pg.119]

Soloff and others found that serotonin in the prefrontal cortex may be involved in impulsive aggression. Studies with PET of aggressive behavior in subjects without... [Pg.122]


See other pages where Aggression prefrontal cortex is mentioned: [Pg.890]    [Pg.75]    [Pg.212]    [Pg.214]    [Pg.214]    [Pg.215]    [Pg.126]    [Pg.384]    [Pg.393]    [Pg.126]    [Pg.114]    [Pg.119]    [Pg.159]    [Pg.186]    [Pg.488]    [Pg.7]    [Pg.141]    [Pg.75]    [Pg.384]    [Pg.129]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.393 ]




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