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. 2017 Oct 23;13(4):381–390. doi: 10.1093/scan/nsx083

Fig. 1.

Fig. 1.

Functional connectivity analyses. Upper panel (I): voxels in ACC (B) and in left DLPFC (C) that show lower connectivity with the right amygdala (A) in schizophrenia patients compared with healthy controls. (D) Schematic representation of between-group differences in amygdala functional connectivity as a function of valence; the blue arrows represent decreased connectivity in patients compared with controls. Middle panel (II): voxels in the ventral ACC (F) that show stronger connectivity with the dorsal ACC (E) in patients compared with controls during emotional conflict. (G) Schematic representation of between-group differences in dorsal ACC functional connectivity as a function of conflict; the red arrows represent increased connectivity in patients compared with controls. Bottom panel (III): voxels in the ventral ACC (I) that show stronger connectivity with the right DLPFC (H) in patients compared with controls during high attentional load conditions. (J) Schematic representation of between-group differences in DLPFC functional connectivity as a function of attention. Results are displayed on a single subject’s anatomical slices, at P < 0.005 (uncorrected).