Neural substrates of facial emotion processing using fMRI

Marilyn L. Kesler-West, Anders H. Andersen, Charles D. Smith, Malcolm J. Avison, C. Ervin Davis, Richard J. Kryscio, Lee X. Blonder

Producción científica: Articlerevisión exhaustiva

369 Citas (Scopus)

Resumen

We identified human brain regions involved in the perception of sad, frightened, happy, angry, and neutral facial expressions using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Twenty-one healthy right-handed adult volunteers (11 men, 10 women; aged 18-45; mean age 21.6 years) participated in four separate runs, one for each of the four emotions. Participants viewed blocks of emotionally expressive faces alternating with blocks of neutral faces and scrambled images. In comparison with scrambled images, neutral faces activated the fusiform gyri, the right lateral occipital gyrus, the right superior temporal sulcus, the inferior frontal gyri, and the amygdala/entorhinal cortex. In comparisons of emotional and neutral faces, we found that (1) emotional faces elicit increased activation in a subset of cortical regions involved in neutral face processing and in areas not activated by neutral faces; (2) differences in activation as a function of emotion category were most evident in the frontal lobes; (3) men showed a differential neural response depending upon the emotion expressed but women did not.

Idioma originalEnglish
Páginas (desde-hasta)213-226
Número de páginas14
PublicaciónCognitive Brain Research
Volumen11
N.º2
DOI
EstadoPublished - 2001

Nota bibliográfica

Funding Information:
These studies were supported by NSF Grant IBN-9604231. We thank Robin Avison, Sherry C. Williams, Aileen Wiglesworth, Xia Wang, Derek Mace, and Marta Mendiondo for their technical assistance.

Financiación

These studies were supported by NSF Grant IBN-9604231. We thank Robin Avison, Sherry C. Williams, Aileen Wiglesworth, Xia Wang, Derek Mace, and Marta Mendiondo for their technical assistance.

FinanciadoresNúmero del financiador
National Science Foundation Arctic Social Science ProgramIBN-9604231
National Science Foundation Arctic Social Science Program

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
    • Cognitive Neuroscience
    • Behavioral Neuroscience

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