International audienceThere is significant controversy over the existence and function of a direct subcortical visual pathway to the amygdala. It is thought that this pathway rapidly transmits low spatial frequency information to the amygdala independently of the cortex, and yet the directionality of this function has never been determined. We used magnetoencephalography to measure neural activity while human participants discriminated the gender of neutral and fearful faces filtered for low or high spatial frequencies. We applied dynamic causal modeling to demonstrate that the most likely underlying neural network consisted of a pulvinar-amygdala connection that was uninfluenced by spatial frequency or emotion, and a cortical-amygdala conn...
Evolutionary survival and procreation are augmented if an individual organism quickly detects enviro...
Over the past few decades, evidence has come to light that there is a rapid subcortical shortcut tha...
Vuilleumier, Armony, Driver & Dolan (2003) have shown that amygdala cells to fearful expressions...
International audienceThere is significant controversy over the existence and function of a direct s...
There is significant controversy over the existence and function of a direct subcortical visual path...
AbstractHuman faces may signal relevant information and are therefore analysed rapidly and effective...
Human faces may signal relevant information and are therefore analysed rapidly and effectively by th...
A fast, subcortical pathway to the amygdala is thought to have evolved to enable rapid detection of ...
This poster was presented at the Organization for Human Brain Mapping (OHBM) 2016 conference in Gene...
Over the past few decades, evidence has come to light that there is a rapid subcortical shortcut tha...
A recent brain imaging study (Vuilleumier, Armony, Driver and Dolan 2003, Nature Neuroscience, 6, 62...
Our ability to rapidly detect threats is thought to be subserved by a subcortical pathway that quick...
Signals of threat—such as fearful faces—are processed with priority and have privileged access to aw...
Evolutionary survival and procreation are augmented if an individual organism quickly detects enviro...
Signals of threat—such as fearful faces—are processed with priority and have privileged access to aw...
Evolutionary survival and procreation are augmented if an individual organism quickly detects enviro...
Over the past few decades, evidence has come to light that there is a rapid subcortical shortcut tha...
Vuilleumier, Armony, Driver & Dolan (2003) have shown that amygdala cells to fearful expressions...
International audienceThere is significant controversy over the existence and function of a direct s...
There is significant controversy over the existence and function of a direct subcortical visual path...
AbstractHuman faces may signal relevant information and are therefore analysed rapidly and effective...
Human faces may signal relevant information and are therefore analysed rapidly and effectively by th...
A fast, subcortical pathway to the amygdala is thought to have evolved to enable rapid detection of ...
This poster was presented at the Organization for Human Brain Mapping (OHBM) 2016 conference in Gene...
Over the past few decades, evidence has come to light that there is a rapid subcortical shortcut tha...
A recent brain imaging study (Vuilleumier, Armony, Driver and Dolan 2003, Nature Neuroscience, 6, 62...
Our ability to rapidly detect threats is thought to be subserved by a subcortical pathway that quick...
Signals of threat—such as fearful faces—are processed with priority and have privileged access to aw...
Evolutionary survival and procreation are augmented if an individual organism quickly detects enviro...
Signals of threat—such as fearful faces—are processed with priority and have privileged access to aw...
Evolutionary survival and procreation are augmented if an individual organism quickly detects enviro...
Over the past few decades, evidence has come to light that there is a rapid subcortical shortcut tha...
Vuilleumier, Armony, Driver & Dolan (2003) have shown that amygdala cells to fearful expressions...