Feeling or Features Different Sensitivity to Emotion in High-Order Visual Cortex and Amygdala

[1]  N. Logothetis,et al.  Neurophysiological investigation of the basis of the fMRI signal , 2001, Nature.

[2]  A. Anderson,et al.  Lesions of the human amygdala impair enhanced perception of emotionally salient events , 2001, Nature.

[3]  Talma Hendler,et al.  Center–periphery organization of human object areas , 2001, Nature Neuroscience.

[4]  R. Dolan,et al.  Effects of Attention and Emotion on Face Processing in the Human Brain An Event-Related fMRI Study , 2001, Neuron.

[5]  K. Grill-Spector,et al.  fMR-adaptation: a tool for studying the functional properties of human cortical neurons. , 2001, Acta psychologica.

[6]  T. Hendler,et al.  A hierarchical axis of object processing stages in the human visual cortex. , 2001, Cerebral cortex.

[7]  M. Bar,et al.  Cortical Mechanisms Specific to Explicit Visual Object Recognition , 2001, Neuron.

[8]  J. Vroomen,et al.  Covert Processing of Faces in Prosopagnosia Is Restricted to Facial Expressions: Evidence from Cross-Modal Bias , 2000, Brain and Cognition.

[9]  N. Costes,et al.  Emotional Responses to Pleasant and Unpleasant Olfactory, Visual, and Auditory Stimuli: a Positron Emission Tomography Study , 2000, The Journal of Neuroscience.

[10]  S. Taylor,et al.  The effect of graded aversive stimuli on limbic and visual activation , 2000, Neuropsychologia.

[11]  K. Grill-Spector,et al.  The dynamics of object-selective activation correlate with recognition performance in humans , 2000, Nature Neuroscience.

[12]  N. Kanwisher Domain specificity in face perception , 2000, Nature Neuroscience.

[13]  E. Rolls Functions of the Primate Temporal Lobe Cortical Visual Areas in Invariant Visual Object and Face Recognition , 2000, Neuron.

[14]  Karl J. Friston,et al.  Attentional modulation of effective connectivity from V2 to V5/MT in humans. , 2000, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[15]  J. Haxby,et al.  The distributed human neural system for face perception , 2000, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.

[16]  H. Critchley,et al.  Neural Activity Relating to Generation and Representation of Galvanic Skin Conductance Responses: A Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study , 2000, The Journal of Neuroscience.

[17]  E. Rolls The Brain and Emotion , 2000 .

[18]  H. Critchley,et al.  Explicit and implicit neural mechanisms for processing of social information from facial expressions: A functional magnetic resonance imaging study , 2000, Human brain mapping.

[19]  M Moscovitch,et al.  SUPER FACE-INVERSION EFFECTS FOR ISOLATED INTERNAL OR EXTERNAL FEATURES, AND FOR FRACTURED FACES , 2000, Cognitive neuropsychology.

[20]  Leslie G. Ungerleider,et al.  Complementary neural mechanisms for tracking items in human working memory. , 2000, Science.

[21]  H Fischer,et al.  Brain representation of habituation to repeated complex visual stimulation studied with PET , 2000, Neuroreport.

[22]  L. Weiskrantz,et al.  Non-conscious recognition of affect in the absence of striate cortex. , 1999, Neuroreport.

[23]  S. Edelman,et al.  Differential Processing of Objects under Various Viewing Conditions in the Human Lateral Occipital Complex , 1999, Neuron.

[24]  Kenji Kawano,et al.  Global and fine information coded by single neurons in the temporal visual cortex , 1999, Nature.

[25]  R. Dolan,et al.  Common effects of emotional valence, arousal and attention on neural activation during visual processing of pictures , 1999, Neuropsychologia.

[26]  Gregory P. Lee,et al.  Different Contributions of the Human Amygdala and Ventromedial Prefrontal Cortex to Decision-Making , 1999, The Journal of Neuroscience.

[27]  M. Corbetta,et al.  A Common Network of Functional Areas for Attention and Eye Movements , 1998, Neuron.

[28]  S. Taylor,et al.  The Effect of Emotional Content on Visual Recognition Memory: A PET Activation Study , 1998, NeuroImage.

[29]  S. Edelman,et al.  Cue-Invariant Activation in Object-Related Areas of the Human Occipital Lobe , 1998, Neuron.

[30]  W. Singer,et al.  The constructive nature of vision: direct evidence from functional magnetic resonance imaging studies of apparent motion and motion imagery , 1998, The European journal of neuroscience.

[31]  Karl J. Friston,et al.  Brain Systems Mediating Aversive Conditioning: an Event-Related fMRI Study , 1998, Neuron.

[32]  Dietrich Lehmann,et al.  Faces and emotions: brain electric field sources during covert emotional processing , 1998, Neuropsychologia.

[33]  Alex Martin,et al.  Properties and mechanisms of perceptual priming , 1998, Current Opinion in Neurobiology.

[34]  W. Singer,et al.  Functional imaging of mirror and inverse reading reveals separate coactivated networks for oculomotion and spatial transformations , 1998, Neuroreport.

[35]  M. Bradley,et al.  Emotional arousal and activation of the visual cortex: an fMRI analysis. , 1998, Psychophysiology.

[36]  A. Dale,et al.  Functional-Anatomic Correlates of Object Priming in Humans Revealed by Rapid Presentation Event-Related fMRI , 1998, Neuron.

[37]  R. Dolan,et al.  Modulation of extrastriate visual cortex by emotion, arousal and attention , 1997 .

[38]  Leslie G. Ungerleider,et al.  FMRI reveals differential activation in the ventral vision pathway during the perception of objects , 1997, Neuroscience Letters.

[39]  M. Bradley,et al.  Neuroanatomical correlates of pleasant and unpleasant emotion , 1997, Neuropsychologia.

[40]  D. Perrett,et al.  A specific neural substrate for perceiving facial expressions of disgust , 1997, Nature.

[41]  A. Young,et al.  Face processing impairments after amygdalotomy. , 1997, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[42]  Karl J. Friston,et al.  Neuroanatomical correlates of externally and internally generated human emotion. , 1997, The American journal of psychiatry.

[43]  N. Kanwisher,et al.  The Fusiform Face Area: A Module in Human Extrastriate Cortex Specialized for Face Perception , 1997, The Journal of Neuroscience.

[44]  D. Perrett,et al.  Perceptual asymmetries in judgements of facial attractiveness, age, gender, speech and expression , 1997, Neuropsychologia.

[45]  Joseph E LeDoux The Emotional Brain: The Mysterious Underpinnings of Emotional Life , 1996 .

[46]  S. Rauch,et al.  Response and Habituation of the Human Amygdala during Visual Processing of Facial Expression , 1996, Neuron.

[47]  A. Dale,et al.  New images from human visual cortex , 1996, Trends in Neurosciences.

[48]  D. Perrett,et al.  A differential neural response in the human amygdala to fearful and happy facial expressions , 1996, Nature.

[49]  S. Kosslyn,et al.  Neural effects of visualizing and perceiving aversive stimuli: a PET investigation. , 1996, Neuroreport.

[50]  A. Calder Facial emotion recognition after bilateral amygdala damage: Differentially severe impairment of fear , 1996 .

[51]  Peter J. Lang,et al.  Processing emotional pictures: Differential activation in primary visual cortex , 1996, NeuroImage.

[52]  Streichenwein Sm,et al.  Am J Psychiatry , 1996 .

[53]  E. DeYoe,et al.  Mapping striate and extrastriate visual areas in human cerebral cortex. , 1996, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[54]  Deborah J. Hellawell,et al.  Facial expression processing after amygdalotomy , 1996, Neuropsychologia.

[55]  Robert L. Morris,et al.  The relationships among performance on a prototype indicator of perceptual defence/vigilance, personality, and extrasensory perception , 1995 .

[56]  Joseph E LeDoux,et al.  Impaired fear conditioning following unilateral temporal lobectomy in humans , 1995, The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience.

[57]  R. Adolphs,et al.  Fear and the human amygdala , 1995, The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience.

[58]  R. Malach,et al.  Object-related activity revealed by functional magnetic resonance imaging in human occipital cortex. , 1995, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[59]  R. Adolphs,et al.  Double dissociation of conditioning and declarative knowledge relative to the amygdala and hippocampus in humans , 1995, Science.

[60]  P. Lang The emotion probe. Studies of motivation and attention. , 1995, The American psychologist.

[61]  B. Horwitz,et al.  Brain activity during transient sadness and happiness in healthy women. , 1995, The American journal of psychiatry.

[62]  R. Adolphs,et al.  Impaired recognition of emotion in facial expressions following bilateral damage to the human amygdala , 1994, Nature.

[63]  J. Sergent,et al.  Segregated processing of facial identity and emotion in the human brain: A pet study , 1994 .

[64]  A. Young,et al.  Face perception after brain injury. Selective impairments affecting identity and expression. , 1993, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[65]  J. Bartlett,et al.  Inversion and Configuration of Faces , 1993, Cognitive Psychology.

[66]  R. Desimone,et al.  Activity of neurons in anterior inferior temporal cortex during a short- term memory task , 1993, The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience.

[67]  Joseph E LeDoux,et al.  Sensory tuning beyond the sensory system: an initial analysis of auditory response properties of neurons in the lateral amygdaloid nucleus and overlying areas of the striatum , 1992, The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience.

[68]  M. Torrens Co-Planar Stereotaxic Atlas of the Human Brain—3-Dimensional Proportional System: An Approach to Cerebral Imaging, J. Talairach, P. Tournoux. Georg Thieme Verlag, New York (1988), 122 pp., 130 figs. DM 268 , 1990 .

[69]  J. Sergent,et al.  Prosopagnosia in a right hemispherectomized patient. , 1989, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[70]  A. Damasio,et al.  Non-conscious face recognition in patients with face agnosia , 1988, Behavioural Brain Research.

[71]  E. Silberman,et al.  Hemispheric lateralization of functions related to emotion , 1986, Brain and Cognition.

[72]  R. Bauer Autonomic recognition of names and faces in prosopagnosia: A neuropsychological application of the guilty knowledge test , 1984, Neuropsychologia.

[73]  P. Thompson,et al.  Margaret Thatcher: A New Illusion , 1980, Perception.

[74]  E. T. Rolls,et al.  Activity of neurones in the inferotemporal cortex of the alert monkey , 1977, Brain Research.

[75]  D. Jacobowitz,et al.  Serotonergic innervation of the forebrain: Effect of lesions on serotonin and tryptophan hydroxylase levels , 1977, Brain Research.

[76]  D. Broadbent,et al.  Perception of Emotionally Toned Words , 1967, Nature.

[77]  Andrew W. Young,et al.  The enigma of the amygdala: on its contribution to human emotion , 2000 .

[78]  Karl J. Friston,et al.  A neuromodulatory role for the human amygdala in processing emotional facial expressions. , 1998, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[79]  S. Edelman,et al.  A sequence of object‐processing stages revealed by fMRI in the human occipital lobe , 1998, Human brain mapping.

[80]  J. H. Prost,et al.  Visual processing of pictures , 1994 .

[81]  Karl J. Friston,et al.  Statistical parametric maps in functional imaging: A general linear approach , 1994 .

[82]  Michael Davis,et al.  The role of the amygdala in fear and anxiety. , 1992, Annual review of neuroscience.

[83]  John P. Aggleton,et al.  The amygdala: Neurobiological aspects of emotion, memory, and mental dysfunction. , 1992 .

[84]  M. Kinsbourne Asymmetrical function of the brain , 1978 .

[85]  A. Ohman,et al.  Habituation of the electrodermal orienting reaction to potentially phobic and supposedly neutral stimuli in normal human subjects. , 1974, Biological psychology.