-
Functional MRI of human amygdala activity during Pavlovian fear conditioning: stimulus processing versus response expression.
Department of Psychology, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, 53201, USA.
Although laboratory animal studies have shown that the amygdala plays multiple roles in conditional fear, less is known about the human amygdala. Human subjects were trained in a Pavlovian fear conditioning paradigm during functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Brain activity maps correlated with reference waveforms representing the temporal pattern of visual conditional stimuli (CSs) and subject-derived autonomic responses were compared. Subjects receiving paired CS-shock presentations showed greater amygdala activity than subjects receiving unpaired CS-shock presentations when their brain activity was correlated with a waveform generated from their behavioral responses. Stimulus-based waveforms revealed learning differences in the visual cortex, but not in the amygdala. These data support the view that the amygdala is important for the expression of learned behavioral responses during Pavlovian fear conditioning.
PMID: 12619902 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
-
Cited by 7 PubMed Central articles
-
Human fear conditioning and extinction in neuroimaging: a systematic review.
Sehlmeyer C, Schöning S, Zwitserlood P, Pfleiderer B, Kircher T, Arolt V, Konrad C.
PLoS One. 2009 Jun 10; 4(6):e5865. Epub 2009 Jun 10.
[PLoS One. 2009]
-
Functional magnetic resonance imaging of delay and trace eyeblink conditioning in the primary visual cortex of the rabbit.
Miller MJ, Weiss C, Song X, Iordanescu G, Disterhoft JF, Wyrwicz AM.
J Neurosci. 2008 May 7; 28(19):4974-81.
[J Neurosci. 2008]
-
Enhanced metabolic capacity of the frontal cerebral cortex after Pavlovian conditioning.
Bruchey AK, Gonzalez-Lima F.
Neuroscience. 2008 Mar 18; 152(2):299-307. Epub 2007 Dec 4.
[Neuroscience. 2008]
- » See all...