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Stuart W. G. Derbyshire

Researcher at National University of Singapore

Publications -  132
Citations -  8348

Stuart W. G. Derbyshire is an academic researcher from National University of Singapore. The author has contributed to research in topics: Noxious stimulus & Chronic pain. The author has an hindex of 43, co-authored 132 publications receiving 7924 citations. Previous affiliations of Stuart W. G. Derbyshire include University of Manchester & University of Salford.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Pain processing during three levels of noxious stimulation produces differential patterns of central activity.

TL;DR: Comparisons and correlation analysis indicated a wide range of active regions including bilateral prefrontal, inferior parietal and premotor cortices and thalamic responses, contralateral hippocampus, insula and primary somatosensory cortex and ipsilateral perigenual cingulate cortex and medial frontal cortex.
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Structural and functional dichotomy of human midcingulate cortex.

TL;DR: Pain activity is coupled to fear in aMCC, while other MCC processing is not related to affect, and this is the first report of a very dense layer Va for areas p24′ and 23 and the features of transitional area 23d.
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Pain Processing in Four Regions of Human Cingulate Cortex Localized with Co‐registered PET and MR Imaging

TL;DR: The localization of relative rCBF changes suggests different roles for the cingulate cortex in pain processing: elevated r CBF in area 24’may be involved in response selection like nocifensive reflex inhibition; activation of the perigenual cortex may participate in affective responses to noxious stimuli like suffering associated with pain.
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Culture of Fear: Risk Taking and the Morality of Low Expectation

Stuart W. G. Derbyshire
- 27 Sep 1997 - 
TL;DR: Late 20th century society has become so obsessed with depravity, danger, and destruction that it is now common sense to assume only the worst will happen, and Culture of Fear documents the origins of this outlook and its corrosive impact on human relations.
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Cerebral activation in patients with irritable bowel syndrome and control subjects during rectosigmoid stimulation.

TL;DR: IBS patients show altered brain responses to rectal stimuli, regardless of whether these stimuli are actually delivered or simply anticipated, and these alterations are consistent with reported alterations in autonomic and perceptual responses and may be related to altered central noradrenergic modulation.