R Fallows, K McCoy, J Hertza… - Archives of Clinical …, 2011 - acn.oxfordjournals.org Objective: The seminal paper on cerebellar cognitive affective syndrome by Schmahmann and Sherman (1998), and sub- sequent studies, has expanded our understanding of the role of the cerebellum beyond motor functioning to psychological and cognitive functioning. ...
JS Kim, JH Park, RL Foster… - Journal of Transcultural …, 2011 - tcn.sagepub.com ...EmotionalReaction to Hospitalization ... Researchers have placed heavy emphasis on children's nega- tive emotional responses and disregarded any positive psy- chological ... Little is known regarding whether this nega- tive consequence is caused by illness itself, pain, or the ... Related articles - All 2 versions
A Ibáñez, E Hurtado, A Lobos, J Escobar, N Trujillo… - Brain Research, 2011 - Elsevier ... In support of this theory, results from an fMRI study demonstrated that the expression of pain activates brain areas associated with the implicit processing of pain expression and triggers an emotionalreaction characterized by a threat-related response (eg, Simon et al., 2006). ... All 2 versions
[HTML] from hindawi.comA Carole - Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative …, 2011 - hindawi.com ... The way acupuncture affects the emotional component of CIBP has emerged as a result of brain imaging studies, which show that sensory input may be modulated by the emotional reaction and cognitive aspects of pain and vice versa [55–57]. ... Related articles - Cached - All 2 versions
[HTML] from apta.orgSJ Linton… - Physical Therapy, 2011 - ptjournal.apta.org ... One of the most disruptive features of pain is the emotional distress. The typical emotionalreaction to pain includes anxiety, fear, anger, guilt, frustration, and depression. How these emotions are regulated by the patient has implications for their impact on pain. ... Cited by 2 - Related articles - All 9 versions