Publications by authors named "M M Silveri"

Parkinson's disease (PD) patients are impaired in word production when the word has to be selected among competing alternatives requiring higher attentional resources. In PD, word selection processes are correlated with the structural integrity of the inferior frontal gyrus, which is critical for response selection, and the uncinate fasciculus, which is necessary for processing lexical information. In early PD, we investigated the role of the main cognitive large-scale networks, namely the salience network (SN), the central executive networks (CENs), and the default mode network (DMN), in word selection.

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Patients affected by Parkinson's disease (PD) display a tendency toward making risky choices in value-based conditions. Possible causes may encompass the pathophysiologic characteristics of PD that affect neural structures pivotal for decision making (DM) and the dopaminergic medications that may bias choices. Nevertheless, excluding patients with concurrent impulse control disorders, results are few and mixed.

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Article Synopsis
  • Anxiety during early alcohol abstinence is linked to neural changes that increase relapse rates, specifically involving the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNST) and its connections to anxiety-related brain regions.
  • A study compared brain function between individuals in early abstinence (EA group) and healthy controls (HC group) using a threat task, revealing significant differences in brain activation and connectivity related to anxiety levels and sex.
  • Findings suggest that early abstinence is associated with heightened BNST activation and altered brain connectivity patterns, highlighting the importance of the BNST in anxiety and providing insights into the effects of chronic alcohol use on the brain.
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