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Researchers map how the brain regulates emotions

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  1. C-Cab
    Link
    Some key points:

    Some key points:

    Using computational methods, the researchers examined two independent datasets of fMRI studies obtained earlier by co-author Peter Gianaros at the University of Pittsburgh. Participants' brain activity was recorded in an fMRI scanner as they viewed images that were likely to draw a negative reaction such as a bloody scene or scary- looking animals.

    The participants were then asked to recontextualize the stimulus by generating new kinds of thoughts about an image to make it less aversive, before a neutral image was presented followed by another dislikable image.
    ...
    The new study reveals that emotion regulation, also known in neuroscience as "reappraisal," involves particular areas of the anterior prefrontal cortex and other higher-level cortical hierarchies whose role in emotion regulation had not previously been isolated with this level of precision. These regions are involved in other high-level cognitive functions and are important for abstract thought and long-term representations of the future.
    ...
    "Our results showed that receptors for cannabinoids, opioids, and serotonin, including 5H2A, were especially rich in areas that are involved in emotion regulation," says senior author Tor Wager, the Diana L. Taylor Distinguished Professor in Neuroscience and director of the Dartmouth Brain Imaging Center at Dartmouth. "When drugs that bind to these receptors are taken, they are preferentially affecting the emotion regulation system, which raises questions about their potential for long-term effects on our capacity to self-regulate."

  2. C-Cab
    Link
    Food for thought: It might be intuitive for some that regulating emotion is a distinct system from the generation of emotion. Regardless, it's valuable that we know which parts of the brain do...

    Food for thought:

    It might be intuitive for some that regulating emotion is a distinct system from the generation of emotion. Regardless, it's valuable that we know which parts of the brain do these distinct processes. Allowing us to target distinct networks could aid us in how we treat mood disorders.