A fast, subcortical pathway to the amygdala is thought to have evolved to enable rapid detection of threat. This pathway's existence is fundamental for understanding nonconscious emotional responses, but has been challenged as a result of a lack of evidence for short-latency fear-related responses in primate amygdala, including humans. We recorded human intracranial electrophysiological data and found fast amygdala responses, beginning 74-ms post-stimulus onset, to fearful, but not neutral or happy, facial expressions. These responses had considerably shorter latency than fear responses that we observed in visual cortex. Notably, fast amygdala responses were limited to low spatial frequency components of fearful faces, as predicted by magnocellular inputs to amygdala. Furthermore, fast amygdala responses were not evoked by photographs of arousing scenes, which is indicative of selective early reactivity to socially relevant visual information conveyed by fearful faces. These data therefore support the existence of a phylogenetically old subcortical pathway providing fast, but coarse, threat-related signals to human amygdala.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nn.4324 | DOI Listing |
Immun Ageing
January 2025
Institute for Behavioral Medicine Research, Ohio State University, 460 Medical Center Drive, Columbus, OH, 43210, USA.
Background: Obesity and metabolic syndrome are major public health concerns linked to cognitive decline with aging. Prior work from our lab has demonstrated that short-term high fat diet (HFD) rapidly impairs memory function via a neuroinflammatory mechanism. However, the degree to which these rapid inflammatory changes are unique to the brain is unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurobiol Learn Mem
November 2024
Instituto de Investigación Médica Mercedes y Martín Ferreyra, INIMEC-CONICET-Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, Friuli 2434, 5016, Córdoba, Argentina. Electronic address:
The retrosplenial cortex (RSC) plays a critical role in complex cognitive functions such as contextual fear memory formation and consolidation. Perineuronal nets (PNNs) are specialized structures of the extracellular matrix that modulate synaptic plasticity by enwrapping the soma, proximal neurites and synapsis mainly on fast spiking inhibitory GABAergic interneurons that express parvalbumin (PV). PNNs change after contextual fear conditioning (CFC) in amygdala or hippocampus, yet it is unknown if similar remodeling takes place at RSC.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEpilepsy Behav
November 2024
Epilepsy Center, Neurological Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH, USA.
medRxiv
September 2024
Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, WA.
Background: Hypothalamic gliosis is mechanistically linked to obesity and insulin resistance in rodent models. We tested cross-sectional associations between radiologic measures of hypothalamic gliosis in humans and clinically relevant cardiovascular disease risk factors, as well as prevalent coronary heart disease.
Methods: Using brain MRI images from Framingham Heart Study participants (N=867; mean age, 55 years; 55% females), T2 signal intensities were extracted bilaterally from the region of interest in the mediobasal hypothalamus (MBH) and reference regions in the amygdala (AMY) and putamen (PUT).
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