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Showing papers by "Raymond J. Dolan published in 1996"


Journal ArticleDOI
31 Oct 1996-Nature
TL;DR: Direct in vivo evidence of a differential neural response in the human amygdala to facial expressions of fear and happiness is reported, providing direct evidence that the humangdala is engaged in processing the emotional salience of faces, with a specificity of response to fearful facial expressions.
Abstract: The amygdala is thought to play a crucial role in emotional and social behaviour. Animal studies implicate the amygdala in both fear conditioning and face perception. In humans, lesions of the amygdala can lead to selective deficits in the recognition of fearful facial expressions and impaired fear conditioning, and direct electrical stimulation evokes fearful emotional responses. Here we report direct in vivo evidence of a differential neural response in the human amygdala to facial expressions of fear and happiness. Positron-emission tomography (PET) measures of neural activity were acquired while subjects viewed photographs of fearful or happy faces, varying systematically in emotional intensity. The neuronal response in the left amygdala was significantly greater to fearful as opposed to happy expressions. Furthermore, this response showed a significant interaction with the intensity of emotion (increasing with increasing fearfulness, decreasing with increasing happiness). The findings provide direct evidence that the human amygdala is engaged in processing the emotional salience of faces, with a specificity of response to fearful facial expressions.

1,954 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The functional anatomy of planning was investigated using the Tower of London task and enhanced neural activity in both this rostral prefrontal area and the visuospatial working memory system was associated with increased task difficulty.

642 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
15 Aug 1996-Nature
TL;DR: The findings provide direct evidence for hemispheric specialization in global and local perception and indicate that temporal–parietal areas exert attentional control over the neural transformations occurring in prestriate cortex.
Abstract: THE perceptual world is organized hierarchically: the forest consists of trees, which in turn have leaves. Visual attention can emphasize the overall picture (global form) or the focal details of a scene (local components)1. Neuropsychological studies have indicated that the left hemisphere is biased towards local and the right towards global processing. The underlying attentional and perceptual mechanisms are maximally impaired by unilateral lesions to the temporal and parietal cortex2,3. We measured brain activity of normal subjects during two experiments using 'hierarchically' organized figures. In a directed attention task, early visual processing (prestriate) areas were activated: attention to the global aspect of the figures activated the right lingual gyrus whereas locally directed attention activated the left inferior occipital cortex. In a subsequent divided attention task, the number of target switches from local to global (and vice versa) covaried with temporal–parietal activation. The findings provide direct evidence for hemispheric specialization in global and local perception; furthermore, they indicate that temporal–parietal areas exert attentional control over the neural transformations occurring in prestriate cortex.

585 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Five patients with Asperger syndrome with mild variant of autism with normal intellectual functioning were studied, and no task-related activity was found in this region of left medial prefrontal cortex, but normal activity was observed in immediately adjacent areas.
Abstract: THE ability to attribute mental states to others ('theory of mind') pervades normal social interaction and is impaired in autistic individuals In a previous positron emission tomography scan study of normal volunteers, performing a 'theory of mind' task was associated with activity in left medial prefrontal cortex We used the same paradigm in five patients with Asperger syndrome, a mild variant of autism with normal intellectual functioning No task-related activity was found in this region, but normal activity was observed in immediately adjacent areas This result suggests that a highly circumscribed region of left medial prefrontal cortex is a crucial component of the brain system that underlies the normal understanding of other minds

581 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is proposed that factorial designs are more powerful than subtraction designs in characterizing cognitive neuroanatomy, precisely because they allow for interactions and eschew notions like pure insertion.

530 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Dec 1996-Brain
TL;DR: It is concluded that the prefrontal cortex, especially in the right hemisphere, is more active when a retrieval attempt succeeds than when it fails, consistent with the idea that the cortex supports processes that operate selectively on the products of memory retrieval.
Abstract: Six subjects underwent PET scans while they performed three versions of a recognition memory test for words and three versions of a control task. In each memory condition, the subjects discriminated between words presented in a prescan study list and words new to the experiment. During the 30 s scanning interval, the ratio of old and new words was 0: 20, 4: 16 or 16: 4, depending on the experimental condition. Outside this interval, the ratio was 50: 50 in all three conditions. The requirement in the control task was to discriminate between two character strings, the ratios of which were also manipulated during the 30 s scanning interval. Employing the control task as a covariate, analysis with statistical parametric mapping revealed that regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) covaried with increasing density of old items in three regions of prefrontal cortex: right dorsolateral [Brodmann area (BA) 9/46], right medial (BA 32/8) and bilateral frontopolar cortex (BA 10). It is concluded that the prefrontal cortex, especially in the right hemisphere, is more active when a retrieval attempt succeeds than when it fails. This finding is consistent with the idea that the prefrontal cortex supports processes that operate selectively on the products of memory retrieval.

355 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Brain imaging studies show that "holding something in mind" is associated with activity in an extended system which involves both prefrontal cortex and more posterior areas whose location is determined by the nature of the information being held in mind.

292 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Oct 1996-Brain
TL;DR: It is indicated that patterns of neural activity during cued recall depend upon the nature of the material and on the degree of association between the cue and the response, and if frontal activity is associated with the difficulty of eliminating inappropriate responses at retrieval.
Abstract: Summary The effects of imagery and semantic relatedness on cued retrieval of word pairs were examined in a functional imaging study of healthy volunteers. Subjects underwent 12 PET scans, preceded by the paced presentation of 12 paired associates. The associates were dichotomized into imageable and non-imageable groups. Within each group, the strength of semantic association between members of pairs was varied in an ordinal fashion. Subsequently, neural activity was measured while subjects were cued with the first item of each pair and required to recall the associated word. Recall of imageable words, when compared with non-imageable ones, was associated with activation of the precuneus, consistent with our hypothesis that this region is important in visual imagery at episodic retrieval. The reverse comparison, non-imageable versus imageable recall, was associated with activation of the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. Within both imageable and non-imageable groups, decreasing semantic association showed a corresponding increase in frontal activity bilaterally. One possible explanation is that of a practice-related effect, weaker-linked pairs having a greater number of pre-scan presentations. However, this explanation is incomplete as the most semantically distant, and most rehearsed, pairs (randomly linked) were associated with a reversal of this effect. This finding can be explained if frontal activity is associated with the difficulty of eliminating inappropriate responses at retrieval. For both randomly linked pairs and closely related pairs it is more likely that erroneous responses will be generated and, therefore, the work done to eliminate them will be greater. Our findings indicate that patterns of neural activity during cued recall depend upon the nature of the material and on the degree of association between the cue and the response.

260 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The representation of emotional faces over a delay period, compared to either the nonemotional or the fixation condition, was associated with significant activation in the left ventral prefrontal cortex, the left anterior cingulate cortex, and the right fusiform gyrus.

213 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Overall, in schizophrenic subjects the effect of apomorphine, which is interpreted in terms of a net dopaminergic antagonism, was to modify the brain activity, making the pattern more akin to that seen in control subjects.
Abstract: We used positron emission tomography (PET) to measure brain activity in healthy control subjects and unmedicated patients with schizophrenia. Subjects were scanned in the context of a combined psychological and pharmacological challenge, and we examined the effects of apomorphine, a drug acting on dopamine receptors, on brain systems engaged by a paced verbal fluency task. This factorial design enabled comparison of control subjects and schizophrenics in terms of the activations engendered by the cognitive task and the pharmacological challenge and the interaction of the two. We report a failure of cognitive task-related activation in anterior cingulate cortex and of task-related deactivation in the left superior temporal gyrus in the schizophrenic subjects. Compared with controls, the impaired cingulate activation was significantly reversed by apomorphine. Additionally, there was a trend for the abnormal fronto-temporal pattern of activation in schizophrenic subjects to be normalized by the drug. Overall, in schizophrenic subjects the effect of apomorphine, which we interpret in terms of a net dopaminergic antagonism, was to modify the brain activity, making the pattern more akin to that seen in control subjects. The results indicate both a regionally specific abnormality of brain function in schizophrenia and an abnormal pattern of fronto-temporal interactions.

168 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Neural activity during the delay period of spatial delayed response (DR) and delayed matching (DM) tasks was investigated by positron emission tomography and activation of a distributed cortical system was activated in each condition.
Abstract: Neural activity during the delay period of spatial delayed response (DR) and delayed matching (DM) tasks was investigated by positron emission tomography A distributed cortical system was activated in each condition. The bilateral dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) was activated in the delay period of both tasks; activation was of higher significance on the right in the DR task and the left in the DM task, and extended to the anterolateral prefrontal cortex in the DM condition. Active representation of spatial location in the DR task was associated with co-activation of the medial and lateral parietal cortex and the extrastriate visual cortex. Active representation of shape in the DM task was associated with co-activation of the medial and lateral parietal cortex and the inferior temporal cortex. Response-related activity was observed in both tasks. Activation of anterior cingulate, inferior frontal, lateral premotor and rostral inferior parietal cortex was observed in the DR condition, a task characterized by preparation of a movement to a predetermined location. In contrast, preparation to move to an undetermined location in the DM task was associated with activation predominantly in rostral SMA.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: PET and11C-raclopride were used to assess the time course of binding to central dopamine D2 receptors by the novel neuroleptic ziprasidone and found that with increasing time between dosing and PET scanning there was a curvilinear increase in BP, so that all studies performed at or after 18 h post-dose gave BPs in the normal range
Abstract: Positron emission tomography (PET) and11C-raclopride were used to assess the time course of binding to central dopamine D2 receptors by the novel neuroleptic ziprasidone. In a third party blind study, six healthy male control subjects received a predose of 40 mg ziprasidone and were scanned at an interval of between 4 and 36 h post-dose. One additional subject was assigned to placebo predose and was scanned at 4 h post-dose. Binding potential (BP) was compared with that seen in the subject predosed with placebo and with that seen in nine unmedicated normal volunteers. Subjects studied up to 12 h post-dose had BPs that were greater than 2 SD less than the mean BP, indicative of extensive D2 receptor binding by ziprasidone. With increasing time between dosing and PET scanning there was a curvilinear increase in BP, so that all studies performed at or after 18 h post-dose gave BPs in the normal range (mean±2 SD). Elevated prolactin levels returned to within the normal range by 18 h post-dose. PET measures of binding potential correlated significantly with serum levels of ziprasidone at the time of scanning and less significantly with absolute prolactin levels at the same time.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This analysis showed that the most significant source of task-related variance was accounted for by a nonlinear relationship not predicted by the prior hypothesis and not revealed by the standard univariate approach, which supports the assertion that multivariate analysis can provide an important adjunct to univariate approaches like statistical parametric mapping (SPM).