Nature. 2001 May 17;411(6835):305-9.
Related Articles, Links
Lesions of the human amygdala impair enhanced perception of emotionally salient
events.
Anderson AK, Phelps EA.
Department of Psychology, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 06520, USA.
adam.k.anderson@stanford.edu
Commensurate with the importance of rapidly and efficiently evaluating motivationally
significant stimuli, humans are probably endowed with distinct faculties and
maintain specialized neural structures to enhance their detection. Here we consider
that a critical function of the human amygdala is to enhance the perception
of stimuli that have emotional significance. Under conditions of limited attention
for normal perceptual awareness-that is, the attentional blink-we show that
healthy observers demonstrate robust benefits for the perception of verbal stimuli
of aversive content compared with stimuli of neutral content. In contrast, a
patient with bilateral amygdala damage has no enhanced perception for such aversive
stimulus events. Examination of patients with either left or right amygdala
resections shows that the enhanced perception of aversive words depends specifically
on the left amygdala. All patients comprehend normally the affective meaning
of the stimulus events, despite the lack of evidence for enhanced perceptual
encoding of these events in patients with left amygdala lesions. Our results
reveal a neural substrate for affective influences on perception, indicating
that similar neural mechanisms may underlie the affective modulation of both
recollective and perceptual experience.
PMID: 11357132 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]