The Basolateral Amygdalae and Frontotemporal Network Functions for Threat Perception

Publication date

2017-01

Authors

Hortensius, RuudORCID 0000-0002-5279-6202ISNI 0000000419557589
Terburg, DavidISNI 0000000393680801
Morgan, Barak
Stein, Dan J.
van Honk, JackISNI 0000000042813326
de Gelder, Beatrice

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

taverne

Abstract

Although the amygdalae play a central role in threat perception and reactions, the direct contributions of the amygdalae to specific aspects of threat perception, from ambiguity resolution to reflexive or deliberate action, remain ill understood in humans. Animal studies show that a detailed understanding requires a focus on the different subnuclei, which is not yet achieved in human research. Given the limits of human imaging methods, the crucial contribution needs to come from individuals with exclusive and selective amygdalae lesions. The current study investigated the role of the basolateral amygdalae and their connection with associated frontal and temporal networks in the automatic perception of threat. Functional activation and connectivity of five individuals with Urbach–Wiethe disease with focal basolateral amygdalae damage and 12 matched controls were measured with functional MRI while they attended to the facial expression of a threatening face– body compound stimuli. Basolateral amygdalae damage was associated with decreased activation in the temporal pole but increased activity in the ventral and dorsal medial prefrontal and medial orbitofrontal cortex. This dissociation between the prefrontal and temporal networks was also present in the connectivity maps. Our results contribute to a dynamic, multirole, subnuclei-based perspective on the involvement of the amygdalae in fear perception. Damage to the basolateral amygdalae decreases activity in the temporal network while increasing activity in the frontal network, thereby potentially triggering a switch from resolving ambiguity to dysfunctional threat signaling and regulation, resulting in hypersensitivity to threat.

Keywords

amygdalae, basolateral amygdalae, emotion, threat, Urbach–Wiethe disease, Taverne, SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being

Citation

Hortensius, R, Terburg, D, Morgan, B, Stein, D J, van Honk, J & de Gelder, B 2017, 'The Basolateral Amygdalae and Frontotemporal Network Functions for Threat Perception', eNeuro, vol. 4, no. 1, pp. 1-15. https://doi.org/10.1523/ENEURO.0314-16.2016