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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

A differential neural response in the human amygdala to fearful and happy facial expressions

TLDR
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.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Attention to emotion modulates fMRI activity in human right superior temporal sulcus.

TL;DR: The results suggest that the right STS region plays a special role in facial emotion recognition within distributed face-processing systems, and may support the notion that the STS is involved in social perception.
Journal ArticleDOI

Memory Systems in the Brain

TL;DR: The operation of different brain systems involved in different types of memory, including a system in the primate orbitofrontal cortex and amygdala involved in representing rewards and punishers, and in learning stimulus-reinforcer associations, is described.
Book ChapterDOI

Emotion, motivation, and the brain: Reflex foundations in animal and human research

TL;DR: A motivational circuit in the brain, centered on the amygdala, that underlies human emotion is focused on, showing similar activation patterns in brain and body in response to emotion cues, co-varying with participants' reports of affective valence and increasing emotional arousal.
Journal ArticleDOI

Magnetic resonance imaging of brain in people at high risk of developing schizophrenia.

TL;DR: People at high risk of developing schizophrenia for genetic reasons have several structural brain abnormalities that are similar to those in patients with the disorder, and at-risk individuals with particularly small AHC or thalami are most likely to develop schizophrenia.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inverse amygdala and medial prefrontal cortex responses to surprised faces.

TL;DR: Individual differences in the judgment of surprised faces are related to a systematic inverse relationship between amygdala and mPFC activity, a circuitry that the animal literature suggests is critical to the assessment of stimuli that predict potential positive vs negative outcomes.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Statistical parametric maps in functional imaging: A general linear approach

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a general approach that accommodates most forms of experimental layout and ensuing analysis (designed experiments with fixed effects for factors, covariates and interaction of factors).
Book

The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals

TL;DR: The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals Introduction to the First Edition and Discussion Index, by Phillip Prodger and Paul Ekman.

Pictures of Facial Affect

Paul Ekman
Journal ArticleDOI

Spatial registration and normalization of images

TL;DR: A general technique that facilitates nonlinear spatial (stereotactic) normalization and image realignment is presented that minimizes the sum of squares between two images following non linear spatial deformations and transformations of the voxel (intensity) values.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impaired recognition of emotion in facial expressions following bilateral damage to the human amygdala.

TL;DR: Findings suggest the human amygdala may be indispensable to recognize fear in facial expressions, but is not required to recognize personal identity from faces, and constrains the broad notion that the amygdala is involved in emotion.
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