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. 2014 Jun;53(6):677–687.e5. doi: 10.1016/j.jaac.2014.02.009

Figure S3.

Figure S3

Main effects of facial emotion in the group × facial emotion analysis of variance. Note: Panel A shows the significant main effect of emotion in right posterior superior temporal gyrus/sulcus extending into fusiform gyrus (circled in blue), whereas Panel C depicts the main effect of emotion in right ventrolateral prefrontal cortex/inferior frontal gyrus (circled in blue). The color bar, which ranges from red to white, represents F statistics. Images are thresholded at p < .005, uncorrected, for display purposes only. Panels B and D display the plots of the data extracted from the peak voxels in superior temporal gyrus and ventrolateral prefrontal cortex, respectively. These plots show that both regions were most strongly activated by angry faces and least activated by neutral faces, with sad faces also tending to activate these regions to a greater degree than neutral faces. CD = conduct disorder; HC = healthy control.