Emotion Circuits in the Brain
Top Cited Papers
- 1 March 2000
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Annual Reviews in Annual Review of Neuroscience
- Vol. 23 (1) , 155-184
- https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.neuro.23.1.155
Abstract
The field of neuroscience has, after a long period of looking the other way, again embraced emotion as an important research area. Much of the progress has come from studies of fear, and especially fear conditioning. This work has pinpointed the amygdala as an important component of the system involved in the acquisition, storage, and expression of fear memory and has elucidated in detail how stimuli enter, travel through, and exit the amygdala. Some progress has also been made in understanding the cellular and molecular mechanisms that underlie fear conditioning, and recent studies have also shown that the findings from experimental animals apply to the human brain. It is important to remember why this work on emotion succeeded where past efforts failed. It focused on a psychologically well-defined aspect of emotion, avoided vague and poorly defined concepts such as “affect,” “hedonic tone,” or “emotional feelings,” and used a simple and straightforward experimental approach. With so much research being done in this area today, it is important that the mistakes of the past not be made again. It is also time to expand from this foundation into broader aspects of mind and behaviorKeywords
This publication has 122 references indexed in Scilit:
- Physiological Memory in Primary Auditory Cortex: Characteristics and MechanismsNeurobiology of Learning and Memory, 1998
- Genes, synapses, and long-term memoryJournal of Cellular Physiology, 1997
- Is it time to invoke multiple fear learning systems in the amygdala?Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 1997
- Control of Memory Formation Through Regulated Expression of a CaMKII TransgeneScience, 1996
- Facial Emotion Recognition after Bilateral Amygdala Damage: Differentially Severe Impairment of FearCognitive Neuropsychology, 1996
- Convergent but temporally separated inputs to lateral amygdala neurons from the auditory thalamus and auditory cortex use different postsynaptic receptors: in vivo intracellular and extracellular recordings in fear conditioning pathways.Learning & Memory, 1996
- Involvement of LTP in memory: Are we “searching under the street light”?Neuron, 1995
- Information Cascade from Primary Auditory Cortex to the Amygdala: Corticocortical and Corticoamygdaloid Projections of Temporal Cortex in the RatCerebral Cortex, 1993
- Flashbulb memories: Special, but not so specialMemory & Cognition, 1989
- LOSS OF RECENT MEMORY AFTER BILATERAL HIPPOCAMPAL LESIONSJournal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry, 1957