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Modulation of retrieval processing reflects accuracy of emotional source memory.

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TLDR
The authors found that retrieval of emotional contexts elicited enhanced activity in right amygdala and a right-lateralized network that included extrastriate visual areas, while contextual retrieval was unsuccessful.
Abstract
There is considerable evidence that encoding and consolidation of memory are modulated by emotion, but the retrieval of emotional memories is not well characterized. Here we manipulated the emotional context with which affectively neutral stimuli were associated during encoding, allowing us to examine neural activity associated with retrieval of emotional memories without confounding the emotional attributes of cue items and the retrieved context. Using a source memory procedure we were also able to compare how retrieval processing was modulated when the emotional encoding context was recollected or not. An interaction between emotional encoding context and accuracy of source memory revealed that successful retrieval of emotional context was associated with activity in left amygdala, and a left frontotemporal network including anterior insula, prefrontal cortex and cingulate. In contrast, when contextual retrieval was unsuccessful, items encoded in emotional contexts elicited enhanced activity in right amygdala and a right-lateralized network that included extrastriate visual areas. These findings indicate distinct effects of emotion on successful and unsuccessful retrieval of source information, including lateralization of amygdala responses.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Stress, memory and the amygdala

TL;DR: The unique features of stress-induced plasticity in the amygdala, in association with changes in other brain regions, could have long-term consequences for cognitive performance and pathological anxiety exhibited in people with affective disorders.
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The role of the amygdala in emotional processing: a quantitative meta-analysis of functional neuroimaging studies.

TL;DR: The results confirm that the amygdala responds to both positive and negative stimuli, with a preference for faces depicting emotional expressions, and provide strong support for a functional dissociation between left and right amygdala in terms of temporal dynamics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Source monitoring 15 years later: What have we learned from fMRI about the neural mechanisms of source memory?

TL;DR: Focusing primarily on functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), evidence regarding the roles of subregions of the medial temporal lobes, prefrontal cortex, posterior representational areas, and parietal cortex in source memory is reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Retrieval of emotional memories.

TL;DR: The review of the literature addressing the effects of emotion on retrieval suggests that the amygdala, in combination with the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex, plays an important role in the retrieval of memories for emotional events.
Journal ArticleDOI

Emotion and autobiographical memory

TL;DR: The interactions between emotion and autobiographical memory are reviewed, focusing on two broad ways in which these interactions occur, and the behavioral manifestations of each of these types of interactions are discussed.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Functional neuroanatomy of emotion: a meta-analysis of emotion activation studies in PET and fMRI.

TL;DR: A critical comparison of findings across individual studies is provided and suggests that separate brain regions are involved in different aspects of emotion.
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The functional neuroanatomy of the human orbitofrontal cortex: evidence from neuroimaging and neuropsychology

TL;DR: This work reviews the neuroanatomical and neuropsychological literature on the human orbitofrontal cortex, and proposes two distinct trends of neural activity based on a meta-analysis of neuroimaging studies, including a mediolateral and posterior-anterior distinction.
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Conscious and unconscious emotional learning in the human amygdala

TL;DR: The results indicate that the human amygdala can discriminate between stimuli solely on the basis of their acquired behavioural significance, and second, this response is lateralized according to the subjects' level of awareness of the stimuli.
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Human amygdala activation during conditioned fear acquisition and extinction : a mixed-trial fmri study

TL;DR: FMRI results provide further evidence for the conservation of amygdala function across species and implicate an amygdalar contribution to both acquisition and extinction processes during associative emotional learning tasks.
Journal ArticleDOI

The anatomy of language: contributions from functional neuroimaging

Cathy J. Price
- 01 Oct 2000 - 
TL;DR: From functional imaging results, a new anatomically constrained model of word processing is proposed which reconciles the anatomical ambitions of the 19th Century neurologists and the cognitive finesse of the 20th Century cognitive models.
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