Emotion - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 35
About This Presentation
Title:

Emotion

Description:

... circuits within the brain. We experience emotion consciously ... Physiological inputs to the hypothalamus act on the brain stem & autonomic nervous system. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:1770
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 36
Provided by: linda68
Category:
Tags: brain | emotion

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Emotion


1
Emotion
  • Expression Experience

2
What is emotion?
  • No scientific definition
  • Controlled by distinct neuronal circuits within
    the brain
  • We experience emotion consciously
  • therefore there is a cognitive element, most
    likely involving the cerebral cortex
  • Emotion can be viewed as an outcome of the
    interaction of peripheral central factors

3
Responses to Emotion
  • Emotion is accompanied by autonomic, endocrine
    skeletomotor responses
  • Thus it also depends on sub-cortical parts,
    including
  • amygdala
  • hypothalamus
  • brain stem

4
Peripheral Responses
  • Peripheral responses prepare the body for action
  • Communicate emotions to other people
  • Example fear
  • increased heart rate respiration
  • dry mouth
  • tense muscles
  • sweaty palms

5
The Autonomic Nervous System Emotion
  • Most changes that accompany emotional states are
    mediated by autonomic nervous system
  • The autonomic system is primarily an effector
    system
  • controls smooth muscles, heart, exocrine glands
  • autonomic is involuntary

6
Three Divisions of the ANS
  • Sympathetic
  • governs fight or flight response
  • response to stress
  • Parasympathetic
  • rest and digest
  • Normal conditions
  • Enteric

7
(No Transcript)
8
Role of the Hypothalamus
  • Contains many of the neuronal circuits that
    regulate functions that vary with emotion
  • Temperature
  • heart rate
  • blood pressure
  • water and food intake
  • also controls pituitary gland thereby the
    endocrine system
  • controls output of autonomic nervous system
  •  

9
Hypothalamic Control of the ANS
  • The hypothalamus acts on ANS in 2 ways
  • Projects to 3 important regions in the brain stem
    spinal cord
  • to the nucleus of the solitary tract
  • receives sensory input from viscera
  • to the brain stem in the rostral ventral medulla
  • leads to general sympathetic activation
  • directly to the autonomic outflow of the spinal
    cord
  • The hypothalamus acts on endocrine system to
    release hormones that influence autonomic
    function

10
(No Transcript)
11
Experimental Evidence
  • Emotional states are elicited by stimulating the
    hypothalamus
  • Stephen Ranson - 1932
  • stimulated different regions of the hypothalamus
    in anesthetized animals
  • Evoked autonomic reactions including changes of
    heart rate, blood pressure, etc.
  • Walter Hess - 1940s
  • used awake animals
  • produced behaviors and physiologic changes
    characteristic of particular emotions e.g. fear

12
Cortical Centers of Emotion
  • Physiological inputs to the hypothalamus act on
    the brain stem autonomic nervous system.
  • This information reaches the cerebral cortex from
    the peripheral organs.
  • This gives rise to the conscious perception of
    emotion
  • So where is the cortical representation of
    emotion?

13
The Limbic System Concept
  • Is there a system ( a group of structures that
    function together) responsible for emotion?
  • Scientists identified the limbic system as the
    key pathway in emotion 1930s
  • Paul Broca
  • James Papez

14
Brocas Limbic Lobe
  • Paul Broca 1878
  • Identified a portion of cortex present in all
    mammals which is different from surrounding
    cortical tissue
  • These areas form a ring or border around the
    brainstem
  • Limbus border , thus limbic lobe
  • Includes
  • cortex around the corpus callosum, especially in
    the cingulate gyrus
  • Cortex on the medial surface of the temporal
    lobe, including the hippocampus
  • Broca did not relate these structures to emotion

15
(No Transcript)
16
The Papez Circuit
  • James Papez- 1930s
  • Proposed that there is an emotion system that
    links the cortex to the hypothalamus
  • Emotion is determined by the activity of the
    cingualte cortex
  • Emotional expression is governed by the
    hypothalamus
  • The Papez Circuit
  • A group of structures, each connected to the next
    by a major fiber tract
  • The cingulate cortex projects to the hippocampus,
    which projects to the hypothalamus through the
    fornix the hypothalamus projects to the anterior
    nuclei of the thalamus, which reach back to the
    cortex

17
Papez Circuit
18
Studying Emotion
  • Emotional expression
  • behavioral manifestations of internal emotion
  • Emotional experience
  • subjective feelings of emotion
  • Limitations of animal models
  • can study emotional expression but cannot
    investigate emotional experience
  • Limitations of human experiments
  • very often the medical situation which provides
    information involves damage to or compromise of
    other neural structures and functions in an
    uncontrolled way

19
Theories of Emotion- James Lange
  • William James Karl Lange - 1884
  • Proposed that the experience we call emotion
    occurs after the cortex receives signals about
    physiologic changes
  • Emotional expression precedes emotional
    experience
  • Physiological changes occur in response to
    stimuli, then we feel emotions
  • Emotion is the consequence of information from
    the periphery
  • We feel sorry because we cry
  • The physiological changes are the emotion

20
Critique of James Lange
  • Emotions are experienced even if physiological
    changes arent sensed
  • Patients animals with transected spinal cords
    do not have lessened emotions
  • The same physiological changes accompany
    different emotions and can have other causes
  • e.g. fear, anger disease can all increase heart
    rate cause sweating

21
Theories of Emotion Cannon Bard
  • Walter Cannon and Phillip Bard - 1927
  • Stimuli cause emotional experience
  • Emotional experience can occur independently of
    emotional expression
  • The thalamus plays a pivotal role in emotional
    sensations
  • Emotions are produced when signals reach the
    thalamus directly from sensory receptors or by
    descending cortical input
  • The emotion is determined by the pattern of
    activation of the thalamus

22
The Somatic Marker Hypothesis
  • Stanley Schacter
  • The cortex constructs emotion out of signals
    received from the periphery
  • This is called the somatic marker hypothesis
  • Emotion is a story the brain concocts to explain
    bodily reactions
  • Depends expectations, experience, social context
  • Thus the same responses can accompany different
    emotions

23
Current Theories
  • Antonio Damasio -
  • Expanded somatic marker hypothesis
  • Draws a close connection between emotion and
    cognition.
  • Emotions are biologically indispensable to
    decisions.
  • Studied patients with damage to the amygdala or
    prefrontal cortex
  • Research on patients with frontal lobe damage
    indicates that feelings normally accompany
    response options
  • Operate as a biasing device to dictate choice.
  • Descartes error separating mind body

24
The Current View
  • No single neural system produces emotions
  • Different emotions may depend on different neural
    circuits, but many of these circuits converge in
    the same parts of the brain
  • The limbic system may be involved in some
    emotional experiences, but it is not the sole
    neural system underlying emotion
  • Feelings (emotion) result from the interplay
    between
  • The amygdala, hypothalamus, brain stem
    autonomic nervous system and . . .
  • between amygdala and frontal limbic cortex

25
Fear Anxiety
  • The amygdala is the critical structure
  • Also involves the hypothalamus ANS
  • Demonstrated by
  • Kluver-Bucy Syndrome
  • Electrical stimulation experiments
  • Patients with damage to the amygdala

26
Klüver-Bucy Syndrome
  • Heinrich Kluver Paul Bucy - 1939
  • bilateral removal of the temporal lobes in
    monkeys (which contains the amygdala
    hippocampal formation) ?
  • Radical changes in emotional behavior
  • increased and bizarre sexual behavior
  • highly oral
  • failed to recognize familiar objects (psychic
    blindness)
  • temporal lobe destruction of visual cortices
  • emotionally flat
  • absence of fear - amygdala missing

27
Kluver-Bucy Syndrome
28
The Amygdala
  • Structure critical to emotional part of
    Kluver-Bucy syndrome is the amygdala
  • The amygdala is part of the limbic system
  • Human patients with damaged amygdalas have
    reduced ability to recognize fear in others
  • Electrical stimulation leads to fear and anxiety
  • A learned fear response, where pain is associated
    with a sensory input, may involve a circuit
    through the basolateral nuclei central nucleus
    of the amygdala
  • These effects are mediated through the
    hypothalamus autonomic nervous system.

29
The Amygdala
30
Anger and Aggression
  • Definitions
  • Predatory aggression
  • leads to an attack for food
  • motive is to kill other animal
  • Affective aggression
  • behavior for show to scare other animal
  • lots of sympathetic ANS activity
  • Mediated by the hypothalamus, midbrain amygdala
  • May also involve serotonin

31
The Role of the Hypothalamus
  • When the entire cerebral hemispheres are removed,
    sham rage results
  • Small stimuli provoke violent responses
  • Difficult to interpret because the entire
    neocortex is missing
  • Removal of anterior hypothalamus, sham rage still
    occurs
  • Removal of the posterior hypothalamus, sham rage
    vanishes
  • Conclusion posterior hypothalamus is important
    for aggression and is normally inhibited by
    neocortex
  • Electrical stimulation of the hypothalamus
  • Stimulation of medial hypothalamus leads to
    affective aggression - hiss and spit at mouse
  • Stimulation of lateral hypothalamus leads to
    predatory aggression

32
Possible Role of the Midbrain
  • Major outputs of hypothalamus to brain stem are
  • Medial forebrain bundle (mfb)
  • project to ventral tegmental area
  • Electrical stimulation of ventral tegmental area
    can cause predatory aggression
  • Lesions in ventral tegmental area can abolish
    affective aggression
  • Dorsal longitudinal fasciculus (dlf)
  • project to periaqueductal gray matter
  • Electrical stimulation of PAG can elicit
    affective aggression and lesions can abolish
    affective aggression

33
Possible Role of the Amygdala
  • Ablation experiments indicate that the amygdala
    is also involved in aggression
  • amygdalectomy reduces aggression
  • Two pathways for aggression
  • Predatory aggression - cortex amygdala
    lateral hypothalamus mfb ventral tegmental
    area
  • Affective aggression - cortex amygdala medial
    hypothalamus dlf periaqueductal gray matter
  • Led to psychosurgical procedures to destroy
    amygdala in humans
  • Frontal lobotomy is another example of
    psychosurgery

34
Possible Role of Serotonin
  • Experimental evidence suggests that blocking or
    reducing the synthesis or release of serotonin
    may increase aggressive behavior
  • When the gene for serotonin receptors are removed
    in mice, they become more aggressive
  • The type of receptor that is most effective when
    deleted is normally found in the amygdala,
    periaqueductal gray matter, and basal ganglia, as
    well as the raphe nuclei

35
Summary
  • No single neural system produces emotions
  • Brain structures involved in emotion are multi
    functional
  • there are interesting relationships among
    emotion, memory, and olfaction
  • Emotion results from the interplay between
  • The amygdala, hypothalamus, brain stem
    autonomic nervous system and . . .
  • between amygdala and frontal limbic cortex
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com