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      Emotion, motivation, and anxiety: brain mechanisms and psychophysiology

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      Biological Psychiatry
      Elsevier BV

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          Abstract

          The organization of response systems in emotion is founded on two basic motive systems, appetitive and defensive. The subcortical and deep cortical structures that determine primary motivated behavior are similar across mammalian species. Animal research has illuminated these neural systems and defined their reflex outputs. Although motivated behavior is more complex and varied in humans, the simpler underlying response patterns persist in affective expression. These basic phenomena are elucidated here in the context of affective perception. Thus, the research examines human beings watching uniquely human stimuli--primarily picture media (but also words and sounds) that prompt emotional arousal--showing how the underlying motivational structure is apparent in the organization of visceral and behavioral responses, in the priming of simple reflexes, and in the reentrant processing of these symbolic representations in the sensory cortex. Implications of the work for understanding pathological emotional states are discussed, emphasizing research on psychopathy and the anxiety disorders.

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          Most cited references37

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          Relationship between attitudes and evaluative space: A critical review, with emphasis on the separability of positive and negative substrates.

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            Modality-specific retrograde amnesia of fear.

            Emotional responses such as fear are rapidly acquired through classical conditioning. This report examines the neural substrate underlying memory of acquired fear. Rats were classically conditioned to fear both tone and context through the use of aversive foot shocks. Lesions were made in the hippocampus either 1, 7, 14, or 28 days after training. Contextual fear was abolished in the rats that received lesions 1 day after fear conditioning. However, rats for which the interval between learning and hippocampal lesions was longer retained significant contextual fear memory. In the same animals, lesions did not affect fear response to the tone at any time. These results indicate that fear memory is not a single process and that the hippocampus may have a time-limited role in associative fear memories evoked by polymodal (contextual) but not unimodal (tone) sensory stimuli.
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              Emotion, attention, and the startle reflex.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Biological Psychiatry
                Biological Psychiatry
                Elsevier BV
                00063223
                December 1998
                December 1998
                : 44
                : 12
                : 1248-1263
                Article
                10.1016/S0006-3223(98)00275-3
                9861468
                45e5c286-0291-4434-b867-c41b509e00b8
                © 1998

                https://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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