Prefrontal involvement in the regulation of emotion: convergence of rat and human studies.

Imagen de Gregory Quirk
PDF versionPDF version
TítuloPrefrontal involvement in the regulation of emotion: convergence of rat and human studies.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2006
AutoresQuirk, GJ, Beer, JS
JournalCurr Opin Neurobiol
Volume16
Issue6
Pagination723-7
Date Published2006 Dec
ISSN0959-4388
Palabras claveAmygdala, Animals, Cognition, Emotions, Extinction, Psychological, Fear, Humans, Models, Animal, Neural Inhibition, Neural Pathways, Prefrontal Cortex, Rats
Abstract

Emotion regulation is a process by which we control when and where emotions are expressed. Paradigms used to study the regulation of emotion in humans examine controlled responses to emotional stimuli and/or the inhibition of emotional influences on subsequent behavior. These processes of regulation of emotion trigger activation of the ventromedial prefrontal cortex and inhibition of the amygdala. A similar pattern of activation is seen in rodents during recall of fear extinction, an example of emotional regulation. The overlap in circuitry is consistent with a common mechanism, and points toward future experiments designed to bridge human and rodent models of emotion regulation.

DOI10.1016/j.conb.2006.07.004
Alternate JournalCurr. Opin. Neurobiol.
PubMed ID17084617