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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Using Neuroscience to Help Understand Fear and Anxiety: A Two-System Framework.

TLDR
It is argued that failure to recognize and consistently emphasize a distinction between circuits underlying two classes of responses elicited by threats has impeded progress in understanding fear and anxiety disorders and hindered attempts to develop more effective pharmaceutical and psychological treatments.
Abstract
Tremendous progress has been made in basic neuroscience in recent decades. One area that has been especially successful is research on how the brain detects and responds to threats. Such studies have demonstrated comparable patterns of brain-behavior relationships underlying threat processing across a range of mammalian species, including humans. This would seem to be an ideal body of information for advancing our understanding of disorders in which altered threat processing is a key factor, namely, fear and anxiety disorders. But research on threat processing has not led to significant improvements in clinical practice. The authors propose that in order to take advantage of this progress for clinical gain, a conceptual reframing is needed. Key to this conceptual change is recognition of a distinction between circuits underlying two classes of responses elicited by threats: 1) behavioral responses and accompanying physiological changes in the brain and body and 2) conscious feeling states reflected in sel...

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Three Approaches to Understanding and Classifying Mental Disorder: ICD-11, DSM-5, and the National Institute of Mental Health’s Research Domain Criteria (RDoC):

TL;DR: This work identifies four key issues that present challenges to understanding and classifying mental disorder and discusses how the three systems’ approaches to these key issues correspond or diverge as a result of their different histories, purposes, and constituencies.
Journal ArticleDOI

A higher-order theory of emotional consciousness

TL;DR: It is argued that conscious experiences, regardless of their content, arise from one system in the brain, and a modified version of what is known as the higher-order theory of consciousness is offered to allow higher- order theory to account for self-awareness.
Journal ArticleDOI

The birth, death and resurrection of avoidance: a reconceptualization of a troubled paradigm

TL;DR: In this article, defensive reactions (freezing), actions (avoidance) and habits (habitual avoidance) are viewed as being controlled by unique circuits that operate nonconsciously in the control of behavior, and that are distinct from the circuits that give rise to conscious feelings of fear and anxiety.
Journal ArticleDOI

Surviving threats: neural circuit and computational implications of a new taxonomy of defensive behaviour

TL;DR: This work proposes a hierarchical taxonomy of defensive behaviour on the basis of known psychological processes and uses this taxonomy to guide a summary of findings regarding the underlying neural circuits.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

An integrative theory of prefrontal cortex function

TL;DR: It is proposed that cognitive control stems from the active maintenance of patterns of activity in the prefrontal cortex that represent goals and the means to achieve them, which provide bias signals to other brain structures whose net effect is to guide the flow of activity along neural pathways that establish the proper mappings between inputs, internal states, and outputs needed to perform a given task.
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.
Journal ArticleDOI

How do you feel--now? The anterior insula and human awareness.

TL;DR: New findings suggest a fundamental role for the AIC (and the von Economo neurons it contains) in awareness, and thus it needs to be considered as a potential neural correlate of consciousness.
Journal ArticleDOI

The cognitive control of emotion.

TL;DR: The results suggest a functional architecture for the cognitive control of emotion that dovetails with findings from other human and nonhuman research on emotion.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neural systems supporting interoceptive awareness.

TL;DR: In right anterior insular/opercular cortex, neural activity predicted subjects' accuracy in the heartbeat detection task and local gray matter volume correlated with both interoceptive accuracy and subjective ratings of visceral awareness.
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