Behavioral responses to threat are critical to survival. Several cortical and subcortical brain regions respond selectively to threat. However, the relation of these neural responses and their underlying representations to behavior is unclear. We examined the contribution of lower-order subcortical representations to behavioral responses to threat in adult humans. In Experiments 1 and 2, participants viewed pairs of images presented to the same eye or to different eyes. We observed a monocular advantage, which indicates subcortical facilitation, for ancestral threats (snakes, spiders), but not for modern threats, positive images, or neutral images. In Experiment 3, we presented pairs of snakes or neutral images into the temporal or nasal he...
In human cognition, most relevant stimuli, such as faces, are processed in central vision. However, ...
From an evolutionary perspective, environmental threats relevant for survival constantly challenged ...
Research has consistently shown that threat stimuli automatically attract attention in order to acti...
Behavioral responses to threat are critical to survival. Several cortical and subcortical brain regi...
Common or folk knowledge about animals is dominated by three dimensions: (1) level of cognitive comp...
Recent behavioral observations suggest an influence of prior expectancies on attention to neutral ta...
Probabilistic diffusion tractography was used to provide the first direct evidence for a subcortical...
The human brain has evolved a multifaceted fear system, allowing threat detection to enable rapid ad...
Visual processing of ecologically relevant stimuli involves a central bias for stimuli demanding det...
Evolution has shaped systems in the human brain to respond to danger. Some of these systems are inna...
Rapid and efficient judgments about the significance of social threat are important for species surv...
When organisms confront unpleasant objects in their natural environments, they engage in behaviors t...
Humans, like other animals, alter their behavior depending on whether a threat is close or distant. ...
In the monkey brain, the precentral gyrus and ventral intraparietal area are two interconnected brai...
In human cognition, most relevant stimuli, such as faces, are processed in central vision. However, ...
From an evolutionary perspective, environmental threats relevant for survival constantly challenged ...
Research has consistently shown that threat stimuli automatically attract attention in order to acti...
Behavioral responses to threat are critical to survival. Several cortical and subcortical brain regi...
Common or folk knowledge about animals is dominated by three dimensions: (1) level of cognitive comp...
Recent behavioral observations suggest an influence of prior expectancies on attention to neutral ta...
Probabilistic diffusion tractography was used to provide the first direct evidence for a subcortical...
The human brain has evolved a multifaceted fear system, allowing threat detection to enable rapid ad...
Visual processing of ecologically relevant stimuli involves a central bias for stimuli demanding det...
Evolution has shaped systems in the human brain to respond to danger. Some of these systems are inna...
Rapid and efficient judgments about the significance of social threat are important for species surv...
When organisms confront unpleasant objects in their natural environments, they engage in behaviors t...
Humans, like other animals, alter their behavior depending on whether a threat is close or distant. ...
In the monkey brain, the precentral gyrus and ventral intraparietal area are two interconnected brai...
In human cognition, most relevant stimuli, such as faces, are processed in central vision. However, ...
From an evolutionary perspective, environmental threats relevant for survival constantly challenged ...
Research has consistently shown that threat stimuli automatically attract attention in order to acti...