| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6027717 | NeuroImage | 2014 | 9 Pages | 
Abstract
												Focussing on MRS values from the left insula and combining them with neural activity during intero- and exteroceptive awareness in the same healthy individuals, we demonstrated that GABA concentration in a region highly involved in interoceptive processing is correlated with neural responses to interoceptive stimuli, as opposed to exteroceptive stimuli. In addition, both GABA and interoceptive signal changes in the insula predicted the degree of depressed affect, as measured by the Beck Hopelessness Scale. On the one hand, the association between GABA concentration and neural activity during interoceptive awareness provides novel insight into the biochemical underpinnings of insula function and interoception. On the other, through the additional association of both GABA and neural activity during interoception with depressed affect, these data also bear potentially important implications for psychiatric disorders like depression and anxiety, where GABAergic deficits, altered insula function and abnormal affect coincide.
											Keywords
												
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											Authors
												Christine Wiebking, Niall W. Duncan, Brice Tiret, Dave J. Hayes, MaÅgorzata Marjaǹska, Julien Doyon, Malek Bajbouj, Georg Northoff, 
											