Neural activation during selective attention to subjective emotional responses

WE examined neural activity associated with selectively attending to subjective emotional responses in a study where subjects viewed emotional picture sets. During picture viewing when subjects attended to their subjective emotional responses, highly significant increased neural activity was elicited in rostral anterior cingulate (BA 32) (Z = 6.87, p < 0.001, corrected). By contrast, under the same stimulus conditions when subjects attended to spatial aspects of identical picture sets activation was observed in the parieto-occipital cortex bilaterally (Z = 5.71, p < 0.001, corrected). The findings indicated a specific role for the anterior cingulate cortex in representing subjective emotional responses and are consistent with a suggested role for associated medial prefrontal structures in representing states of mind.

[1]  J. L. Hoffman Clinical observations concerning schizophrenic patients treated by prefrontal leukotomy. , 1949, The New England journal of medicine.

[2]  K M Heilman,et al.  Trimodal inattention following parietal lobe ablations. , 1970, Transactions of the American Neurological Association.

[3]  J. Winn,et al.  Brain , 1878, The Lancet.

[4]  J. Eccles The emotional brain. , 1980, Bulletin et memoires de l'Academie royale de medecine de Belgique.

[5]  Kenneth M. Heilman,et al.  Neuropsychology of human emotion , 1983 .

[6]  Sean A. Spence,et al.  Descartes' Error: Emotion, Reason and the Human Brain , 1995 .

[7]  M. Posner Attention in cognitive neuroscience: An overview. , 1995 .

[8]  J. R. Augustine Circuitry and functional aspects of the insular lobe in primates including humans , 1996, Brain Research Reviews.

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

[10]  R. Cabeza,et al.  Imaging Cognition: An Empirical Review of PET Studies with Normal Subjects , 1997, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.