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Cynthia H.Y. Fu

Researcher at University of East London

Publications -  141
Citations -  11007

Cynthia H.Y. Fu is an academic researcher from University of East London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Major depressive disorder & Functional magnetic resonance imaging. The author has an hindex of 49, co-authored 128 publications receiving 9511 citations. Previous affiliations of Cynthia H.Y. Fu include Sapienza University of Rome & Bethlem Royal Hospital.

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Predictors of amygdala activation during the processing of emotional stimuli: A meta-analysis of 385 PET and fMRI studies.

TL;DR: A meta-analysis of 385 functional neuroimaging studies of emotional processing found that all emotional stimuli were associated with higher probability of amygdala activity than neutral stimuli, and methodological variables, such as type of analysis and magnet strength, were independent predictors of amygdala activation.
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A systematic review and quantitative appraisal of fMRI studies of verbal fluency: Role of the left inferior frontal gyrus

TL;DR: A systematic review of functional magnetic resonance imaging studies employing phonologic and semantic verbal fluency tasks and the results support distinct dorsal–ventral locations for phonological and semantic processes within the left inferior frontal gyrus.
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Common and distinct patterns of grey-matter volume alteration in major depression and bipolar disorder: evidence from voxel-based meta-analysis

Toby Wise, +45 more
- 01 Oct 2017 - 
TL;DR: The results suggest that MDD and BD are characterised by both common and distinct patterns of grey-matter volume changes, which has the potential to inform the development of diagnostic biomarkers for these conditions.
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A functional MRI study of happy and sad affective states induced by classical music

TL;DR: The findings suggest that an emotion processing network in response to music integrates the ventral and dorsal striatum, areas involved in reward experience and movement; the anterior cingulate, which is important for targeting attention; and medial temporal areas, traditionally found in the appraisal and processing of emotions.