Monday, April 14, 2008

ARTICLE UPDATE - The amygdala and the experience of affect.

Barrett LF, Bliss-Moreau E, Duncan SL, Rauch SL, Wright CI.

Social Cognitive Affective Neuroscience, 2, 73-83

The current study examined the hypothesis that amygdala activation serves as a neural precondition for negative affective experience. Participants' affective experience was measured by asking them to report on their momentary experiences several times a day over the course of a month using an electronic experience-sampling procedure. One year later, participants viewed backwardly masked depictions of fear while functional magnetic resonance imaging was used to measure their amygdala and fusiform gyrus activation. Negative affect, as measured during the experience-sampling procedure 1-year prior, was positively correlated with amygdala activation in response to these brief presentations of fear depictions. Furthermore, descriptive analyses indicated that fusiform gyrus activation and negative affective experience in the scanner were associated for participants reporting increased nervousness during the imaging procedure. The results are consistent with the interpretation that the amygdala contributes to negative affective experience by increasing perceptual sensitivity for negative stimuli.

4 comments:

FarFromEquilibrium said...
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FarFromEquilibrium said...

I have seen many articles about the amygdala as the primary mediator of fearful responses, which is where the research began. I have seen many fewer mentions of the amygdala as a mediator of pleasurable response, such as sexual arousal. The ones I have seen have been non-specific and not very descriptive. As the primary link to the hypothalamus, the main control center for the autonomic nervous system, the amygdala would be the logical locus of both fearful and desirable perceptions. Does anyone have a good cite for research in this direction (or countering it)?

anthonioo said...

Hi Michael (not sure if you're the Michael I know)...

Anyway, if you type "amygdala" and "positive" on the box located at the top-left of this blog and then click enter, you'll find quite a few studies that found amygdala activation is related to the processing of positive stimuli. But in general less is know about the processing of positive stimuli and its relationship with amygdala. To my knowledge, the link between amygdala and positive stimuli is much weaker than that between amygdala and negative stimuli.

Eric Sun said...

http://brainethics.wordpress.com/2007/11/12/amygdala-is-also-positive/

Maybe this article may help us. :)