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Affective neuroscience

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Affective neuroscience is the study of the neural mechanisms of emotion. This interdisciplinary field combines neuroscience with the psychological study of personality, emotion, and mood.

Contents

[edit] Brain areas related to emotion

Emotions are thought to be related to activity in brain areas that direct our attention, motivate our behavior, and determine the significance of what is going on around us. Pioneering work by Broca (1878)[1], Papez (1937)[2], and MacLean (1952) [3] suggested that emotion is related to a group of structures in the center of the brain called the limbic system, which includes the hypothalamus, cingulate cortex, hippocampi, and other structures. Research has shown that limbic structures are directly related to emotion, but non-limbic structures have been found to be of greater emotional relevance. The following brain structures are currently thought to be involved in emotion[4]:

[edit] Relationship to cognitive neuroscience

In its broadest sense, cognition refers to all mental processes. However, the study of cognition has historically excluded emotion and focused on non-emotional processes (e.g., memory, attention, perception, action, problem solving and mental imagery)[12]. As a result, the study of the neural basis of non-emotional and emotional processes emerged as two separate fields: cognitive neuroscience and affective neuroscience. The distinction between non-emotional and emotional processes is now thought to be largely artificial, as the two types of processes often involve overlapping neural and mental mechanisms[13]. Thus, when cognition is taken at its broadest definition, affective neuroscience could also be called the cognitive neuroscience of emotion.

[edit] Affective Neuroscience and Learning

There are many ways affect plays a role during learning. Recently, affective neuroscience has done much to discover this role. Deep, emotional attachment to a subject area allows a deeper understanding of the material and therefore, learning occurs and lasts [14]. When reading, the emotions one is feeling in comparison to the emotions being portrayed in the content affects ones comprehension. Someone who is feeling sad will understand a sad passage better than someone feeling happy [15]. Therefore, a student’s emotion plays a big role during the learning process. Emotion can also be embodied or perceived from words read on a page or a person’s facial expression. Neuroimaging studies using fMRI have demonstrated that the same area of the brain being activated when one is feeling disgust is also activated when one observes another person feeling disgust [16]. In a traditional learning environment, the teacher’s facial expression can play a critical role in students’ language acquisition. Showing a fearful facial expression when reading passages that contain fearful tones facilitates students learning of the meaning of certain vocabulary words and comprehension of the passage [17].

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Broca, P. (1878). Anatomie comparée des circonvolutions cérébrales: le grand lobe limbique. Rev. Anthropol., 1, 385-498.
  2. ^ Papez J.W. (1937). A proposed mechanism of emotion. 1937. J Neuropsychiatry Clin Neurosci., 7, 103-12.
  3. ^ Maclean, P.D. (1952). Psychiatric implications of physiological studies on frontotemporal portion of limbic system (visceral brain). Electroencephalogr Clin Neurophysiol Suppl., 4, 407-18.
  4. ^ Dalgleish, T. (2004). The emotional brain. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 5, 583-9.
  5. ^ Ledoux, J.E, (1995). Emotion: clues from the brain. Annual Review of Psychology, 46, 209-35.
  6. ^ Davidson, R.J., & Sutton, S.K. (1995). Affective neuroscience: The emergence of a discipline. Current Opinion in Neurobiology, 5, 217-224.
  7. ^ Parvizi, Anderson, Damasio & Damasio, (2001). Pathological laughing and crying: a link to the cerebellum. Brain, Sep;124(Pt 9):1708-19.
  8. ^ Turner, Paradiso, Marvel, Pierson, Boles Ponto, Hichwa, Robinson (2007). Neuropsychologia 2007 March 25; 45(6): 1331–1341
  9. ^ Martin-Solch C, Magyar S, Kunig G, Missimer J, Schultz W, Leenders KL. Changes in brain activation associated with reward processing in smokers and nonsmokers. A positron emission tomography study. Experimental Brain Research (2001) 139(3):278–286
  10. ^ Sell LA, Morris J, Bearn J, Frackowiak RS, Friston KJ, Dolan RJ. Activation of reward circuitry in human opiate addicts. European Journal of Neuroscience (1999) 11(3):1042–1048
  11. ^ Holstege G, Georgiadis JR, Paans AM, Meiners LC, van der Graaf FH, Reinders AA. Brain activation during human male ejaculation. Journal of Neuroscience (2003) 23(27):9185–9193
  12. ^ Cacioppo, J.T., & Gardner, W.L. (1999). Emotion. Annual Review of Psychology, 50, 191-214.
  13. ^ Davidson, R.J. (2000). Cognitive neuroscience needs affective neuroscience (and vice versa). Brain & Cognition, 42, 89-92.
  14. ^ Picard, R. W., S Papert, W Bender, B Blumberg, C Breazeal, D Cavallo, T Machover, M Resnick, D Roy & C Strohecker (2004). Affective Learning – a manifesto. BT Technology Journal, 22(4), 253-269.
  15. ^ Havas,D.A., Glenberg, A.M. , Rinck, M. (2007). Emotion simulation during language comprehension. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review. 14(3), 436-441.
  16. ^ Wicker, B. (2003). Both of Us Disgusted in My Insula: The Common Neural Basis of Seeing and Feeling Disgust. Neuron.40(3),655
  17. ^ Niedenthal, P. M. (2007). Embodying emotion. Science, 316, 1002-1005

[edit] Additional References

[edit] Further reading

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