Inertia, together with intensity and valence, is an important component of emotion. We tested whether positive and negative events generate lingering changes in subsequent brain responses to unrelated threat stimuli and investigated the impact of individual anxiety. We acquired fMRI data while participants watched positive or negative movie-clips and subsequently performed an unrelated task with fearful and neutral faces. We quantified changes in amygdala reactivity to fearful faces as a function of the valence of preceding movies and cumulative neural activity evoked during them. We demonstrate that amygdala responses to emotional movies spill over to subsequent processing of threat information in a valence-specific manner: negative movies...
Debate continues as to the automaticity of the amygdala's response to threat. Accounts taking a stro...
Debate continues as to the automaticity of the amygdala's response to threat. Accounts taking a stro...
Anxiety disorders can be treated both pharmacologically and psychologically, but many individuals ei...
Inertia, together with intensity and valence, is an important component of emotion. We tested whethe...
Findings from fear-conditioning studies in rats and functional neuroimaging with human volunteers ha...
Reaction times (RTs) are a valuable measure for assessing cognitive processes. However, RTs are susc...
Rodent and human studies have implicated an amygdala-prefrontal circuit during threat processing. On...
Findings from fear-conditioning studies in rats and functional neuroimaging with human volunteers ha...
Emotions play a pivotal role in guiding our behaviour within society and our environment. In particu...
Sustained anxiety about potential future negative events is an important feature of anxiety disorder...
Debate continues as to the automaticity of the amygdala’s response to threat. Accounts taking a stro...
Background: Individuals vary in the degree to which salient threatening stimuli disrupt or distract...
The rapid and efficient selection of emotionally salient or goal-relevant stimuli in the environment...
Debate continues as to the automaticity of the amygdala’s response to threat. Accounts taking a stro...
Background: The affective personality trait 'harm avoidance' (HA) from Cloninger's psychobiological ...
Debate continues as to the automaticity of the amygdala's response to threat. Accounts taking a stro...
Debate continues as to the automaticity of the amygdala's response to threat. Accounts taking a stro...
Anxiety disorders can be treated both pharmacologically and psychologically, but many individuals ei...
Inertia, together with intensity and valence, is an important component of emotion. We tested whethe...
Findings from fear-conditioning studies in rats and functional neuroimaging with human volunteers ha...
Reaction times (RTs) are a valuable measure for assessing cognitive processes. However, RTs are susc...
Rodent and human studies have implicated an amygdala-prefrontal circuit during threat processing. On...
Findings from fear-conditioning studies in rats and functional neuroimaging with human volunteers ha...
Emotions play a pivotal role in guiding our behaviour within society and our environment. In particu...
Sustained anxiety about potential future negative events is an important feature of anxiety disorder...
Debate continues as to the automaticity of the amygdala’s response to threat. Accounts taking a stro...
Background: Individuals vary in the degree to which salient threatening stimuli disrupt or distract...
The rapid and efficient selection of emotionally salient or goal-relevant stimuli in the environment...
Debate continues as to the automaticity of the amygdala’s response to threat. Accounts taking a stro...
Background: The affective personality trait 'harm avoidance' (HA) from Cloninger's psychobiological ...
Debate continues as to the automaticity of the amygdala's response to threat. Accounts taking a stro...
Debate continues as to the automaticity of the amygdala's response to threat. Accounts taking a stro...
Anxiety disorders can be treated both pharmacologically and psychologically, but many individuals ei...