neurophysiology of emotion Flashcards

1
Q

the limbic system is recognized to control (or be involved in controlling) what?

A

the emotional behavior and motivational drives

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2
Q

I may not recognize an emotion until my heart starts pounding. what part of the limbic system is responsible for this?

A

the hypothalamus and its connection to the ANS

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3
Q

what nucleus in the basal ganglia is responsible for the sensation of pleasure?

A

nucleus accumbens

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4
Q

what nucleus in the basal ganglia is responsible for disgust?

A

putamen

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5
Q

what regions of the limbic system are linked to surprise?

A

parahippicampal regions

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6
Q

what part of the limbic system is associated with fear and anger?

A

the amygdala

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7
Q

what is the important feature of the cingulate cortex?

A

many of these neurons show after-discharge meaning that once the event has ended the neurons will keep firing so emotions like anger and sadness will last longer

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8
Q

the cingulate cortex is mostly what (in terms of layers)?

A

paleocortex (3 layers)

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9
Q

what is used to create the physiologic response to emotion?

A

the hypothalamus

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10
Q

what relays sensory information into the system?

A

thalamus

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11
Q

what are the basal ganglia tied to?

A

disgust and pleasure

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12
Q

what is significant about the anterior cingulate cortex?

A

it is associated with higher level of control and sadness

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13
Q

what is the mirror neuron system?

A

the system of neurons that is responsible for a person being able to recognize an emotion in someone else when they can experience that emotion

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14
Q

when do mirror neurons fire?

A

when you do something (smile) and when you see someone else do that same action

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15
Q

what are the two kinds of fear?

A

innate and conditioned

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16
Q

what are the two most frequently cited innate fears in humans?

A

falling and loud noises

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17
Q

what structure is related to the processing and recognition of social cues related to fear?

A

the amygdala

18
Q

the sensory inputs used to create fear arrive at the amygdala by two pathways. What are they?

A
  1. direct thalami-amygdaloid pathway to the lateral nucleus of the amygdala 2. an indirect thalami-cortico-amygdaloid pathway to the lateral nucleus of the amygdala
19
Q

what is the direct thalamo-amygdaloid pathway to the lateral nucleus of the amygdala responsible for?

A

rapid responses

20
Q

what is the indirect thalamo-cortico-amygdaloid pathway to the lateral nucleus of the amygdala responsible for?

A

later responses

21
Q

inputs of fear arrive where?

A

the lateral nucleus of the amygdala

22
Q

where is the paired information that the amygdala integrates then sent to?

A

to the basal and intercalated nuclei for additional processing

23
Q

where is information from the lateral, basal, and intercalated nuclei then sent to?

A

to the central nucleus of the amygdala

24
Q

where is information from the central nucleus of the amygdala then sent?

A

to the hypothalamus

25
Q

what part of the amygdala determines what the response to a potentially fearful stimulus should be?

A

the central nucleus of the amygdala

26
Q

anger is mediated through what part of the brain?

A

the amygdala

27
Q

experiencing and recognizing anger requires what?

A

dopamine acting at D2 receptors

28
Q

how do inhibit anger?

A

through the neocortex, dorsomedial and hypothalamic nucleus

29
Q

avoidance is designed to prevent the occurrence of a behavior that has what?

A

short term rewards but long term negative consequences

30
Q

what anatomical substrate is involved in avoidance?

A

the lateral posterior hypothalamus, dorsal midbrain, entorhinal cortex

31
Q

what anatomical substrates are involved in sadness?

A

the lower sector of the anterior cingulate cortex

32
Q

what anatomical substrate is involved in experiencing disgust?

A

the insular cortex and putamen

33
Q

what neurodegenerative disease causes damage to the putamen and therefore those patients cannot experience and notice disgust?

A

Huntington’s disease

34
Q

what is the parahippocampal gyrus important in detecting?

A

novelty or unexpected events “something new just happened’

35
Q

the anterior cingulate cortex is functionally divided into what two regions?

A

the ventral and the dorsal regions

36
Q

what is the ventral region of the anterior cingulate cortex responsible for?

A

affective functions

37
Q

what is the dorsal region of the anterior cingulate cortex responsible for?

A

cognitive functions

38
Q

what is the role of the ventral anterior cingulate cortex?

A

integration of all sensory and emotional processing; controlling emotional display (poker face vs. crying)

39
Q

the ventral anterior cingulate cortex sends information where?

A

to the pre-frontal cortex

40
Q

the ventromedial devision of the prefrontal cortex receives information from what four areas?

A

the amygdala, hippocampus, the temporal visual association area, and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex

41
Q

what are the three roles of the ventromedial prefrontal cortex?

A

reward processing, integration of bodily signals (gut feeling), and top down regulation (delayed gratification)

42
Q

what is the participation of the olfactory cortex in emotion?

A

odors are a strong stimulus for emotion