Ventromedial prefrontal cortex

The ventral medial prefrontal is located in the frontal lobe at the bottom of the cerebral hemispheres and is implicated in the processing of risk and fear, as it is critical in the regulation of amygdala activity in humans.The ventromedial prefrontal cortex is connected to and receives input from the ventral tegmental area, amygdala, the temporal lobe, the olfactory system, and the dorsomedial thalamus.[5] This huge network of connections affords the vmPFC the ability to receive and monitor large amounts of sensory data and to affect and influence a plethora of other brain regions, particularly the amygdala.Research in developmental neuroscience also suggested that neural networks in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex are rapidly developing during adolescence and young adulthood supporting emotion regulation through the amygdala,[6] being associated with a decrease in cortisol levels.There are only a few reports of people with early-onset vmPFC damage during childhood, but these individuals tend to have severe antisocial behavior and impaired moral judgment.[2] Patients with bilateral lesions of the vmPFC develop severe impairments in personal and social decision-making[5][8] even though most of their intellectual ability is preserved.People with damage to the ventromedial prefrontal cortex still retain the ability to consciously make moral judgments without error, but only in hypothetical situations presented to them.[5] People with early damage to the ventromedial prefrontal cortex are more likely to endorse self-serving actions that break moral rules or cause harm to others.In functional imaging studies, increased activity in the vmPFC is associated with thinking of these personal moral situations, while making harmless decisions does not.The first and most famous case of someone with defects to this region was Phineas Gage, a railroad construction foreman who had his vmPFC bilaterally destroyed in an accident in 1848.In patients with vmPFC damage, evidence shows that there is a correlation between emotional disregulation and dysfunction in real world competencies.In experiments with participants allowing snakes to come near or away from them, acts of courage correlated with activation in the vmPFC, specifically the subgenual anterior cingulate cortex.[22] The right half of the ventromedial prefrontal cortex was associated with regulating the interaction of cognition and affect in the production of empathic responses.[26] Treatments geared to the activation of the ventromedial prefrontal cortex were therefore suggested for individuals and parent-child relationships affected by PTSD.Specific deficits in reversal learning and decision-making have led to the hypothesis that the ventromedial prefrontal cortex is a major locus of dysfunction in the mild stages of the behavioral variant of frontotemporal dementia.
Anatomical terms of neuroanatomyprefrontal cortexmammalian brainfrontal lobecerebral hemispheresamygdaladecision-makingself-controlmoralityBrodmann area 10Brodmann area 14Brodmann area 25Brodmann area 32Brodmann area 11Brodmann area 12Brodmann area 13orbitofrontal cortexAntónio Damásioventral tegmental areatemporal lobeolfactory systemdorsomedial thalamuslateral hypothalamushippocampal formationcingulate cortexdevelopmental neurosciencecortisolrewardssarcasmdeceptionadvertisingskepticismbeliefsmoral judgmentsEmotionssocial normsfunctional imagingmoral emotionPhineas GageserotoninMorten Kringelbachpost-traumatic stress disorderfrontotemporal dementiatheory of mindmentalizingdefense mechanismssomatic marker hypothesisextinctioncocainegray matterpyramidal cellsdrug seeking behaviorsBibcodecerebral cortexhuman brainPrefrontalSuperior frontal gyrusMiddle frontal gyrusInferior frontal gyrusPars orbitalisBroca's areaPars opercularisPars triangularisSuperior frontal sulcusInferior frontal sulcusPrecentralPrecentral gyrusPrecentral sulcusMedial frontal gyrusParaterminal gyrusParaolfactory areaStraight gyrusOrbital gyriSubcallosal areaOlfactory sulcusOrbital sulcusParacentral lobuleParacentral sulcusPrimary motor cortexPremotor cortexSupplementary motor areaSupplementary eye fieldFrontal eye fieldsParietal lobeSuperior parietal lobuleInferior parietal lobuleSupramarginal gyrusAngular gyrusParietal operculumIntraparietal sulcusPrecuneusMarginal sulcusPostcentral gyrusPrimary somatosensory cortex3, 1 and 2Secondary somatosensory cortexPosterior parietal cortexOccipital lobeOccipital gyriLateral occipital gyrusLunate sulcusTransverse occipital sulcusVisual cortexCuneusLingual gyrusCalcarine sulcusTransverse temporal gyrusAuditory cortex41 and 42Superior temporal gyrusWernicke's areaPlanum temporaleSuperior temporal sulcusMiddle temporal gyrusOccipitotemporal sulcusFusiform gyrusMedial temporal lobeInferior temporal sulcusInferior temporal gyrusInterlobarsulci/fissuresCentral (frontal+parietal)Lateral (frontal+parietal+temporal)Parieto-occipitalPreoccipital notchLongitudinal fissureCingulate (frontal+cingulate)Collateral (temporal+occipital)Callosal sulcusLimbic lobeParahippocampal gyrusEntorhinal cortexPerirhinal cortexPostrhinal cortexPosterior parahippocampal gyrusPrepyriform areaSubgenual areaAnterior cingulatePosterior cingulateIsthmus of cingulate gyrusRetrosplenial cortexHippocampal sulcusFimbria of hippocampusDentate gyrusRhinal sulcusIndusium griseumInsular cortexOperculumBrodmann areas