PMC:4428493 / 23557-24160
Annnotations
0_colil
{"project":"0_colil","denotations":[{"id":"25988110-23913733-908691","span":{"begin":147,"end":149},"obj":"23913733"},{"id":"25988110-23408738-908692","span":{"begin":151,"end":153},"obj":"23408738"},{"id":"25988110-24183133-908693","span":{"begin":172,"end":174},"obj":"24183133"},{"id":"25988110-23261871-908694","span":{"begin":535,"end":537},"obj":"23261871"},{"id":"25988110-23408738-908695","span":{"begin":599,"end":601},"obj":"23408738"}],"text":"Obese participants\nIn obese participants, food compared to non-food images activated areas including the PFC, insula, amygdala, nucleus accumbens (91, 92), and cerebellum (89). These areas are associated with numerous roles which could affect food cue processing including executive functioning, reward processing, and anticipation, reinforcement learning, memory modulation, and motor control. Females showed greater activation in the caudate and OFC when fasted and greater activation in the anterior cingulate cortex when satiated (88). Abdominal adiposity predicted brain activity in one study (92)."}
2_test
{"project":"2_test","denotations":[{"id":"25988110-23913733-38724618","span":{"begin":147,"end":149},"obj":"23913733"},{"id":"25988110-23408738-38724619","span":{"begin":151,"end":153},"obj":"23408738"},{"id":"25988110-24183133-38724620","span":{"begin":172,"end":174},"obj":"24183133"},{"id":"25988110-23261871-38724621","span":{"begin":535,"end":537},"obj":"23261871"},{"id":"25988110-23408738-38724622","span":{"begin":599,"end":601},"obj":"23408738"}],"text":"Obese participants\nIn obese participants, food compared to non-food images activated areas including the PFC, insula, amygdala, nucleus accumbens (91, 92), and cerebellum (89). These areas are associated with numerous roles which could affect food cue processing including executive functioning, reward processing, and anticipation, reinforcement learning, memory modulation, and motor control. Females showed greater activation in the caudate and OFC when fasted and greater activation in the anterior cingulate cortex when satiated (88). Abdominal adiposity predicted brain activity in one study (92)."}