What is affective neuroscience?
The study of emotions in neuroscience.
Emotions are difficult to define, which is important for debates such as…?
Whether animals and infants have emotions in the same way we experience them
In what ways are emotions important for our survival?
What are the two components of emotions?
- Subjective emotional feeling.
What changes in the ANS does an emotional response elicit?
What does activation of the Sympathetic Nervous System cause?
When is SNS useful?
Short term emergency, e.g. fear, anger, sexual arousal.
How can ANS changes be detected?
- Galvanic skin response
What hormonal changes does an emotional response elicit?
The adrenal glands produce cortisol, adrenaline and noradrenaline when stressed, giving a supply of oxygen and glucose to the brain and muscles (rapid energy).
What is the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and what does it do?
Among other things, controls stress reactions.
hypothalamus, CRF (cortisol releasing factor), pituitary gland, ACTH, adrenal gland, cortisol released.
What are the typical actions in terms of body posture and gestures caused by an emotional response?
Fight/flight/freeze
What are Ekman’s 6 primary emotions?
Happiness, sadness, fear, anger, surprise and disgust. Said to be universal and innate, some definitely are, e.g. blind children laughing.
What are the two neural circuits which produce facial expressions?
Voluntary and involuntary (spontaneous)
What bodily systems are associated with the voluntary neural circuit?
- Pyramidal tract (motor cortex)
What bodily systems are associated with the involuntary neural circuit?
- Extrapyramidal tract (insula, basal ganglia).
What are subjective feelings?
Awareness/conscious experience of emotions. Difficult to investigate.
According to Damasio, what are subjective feelings the result of?
Integration of environment and body (emotional response).
What comes first out of emotional response and subjective feeling according to the James-Lange theory (1984)?
2. Subjective feeling
What are the two main criticisms of the James-Lange theory?
What does Cannon-Bard theory (1927) suggest?
Subjective feelings cause physiological changes.
What are criticisms of Cannon-Bard theory?
Historically, what has been searched for with regard to emotions in the brain?
A single emotional centre, with a focus on the limbic system (Broca), popularised by Paul McLean in 1952.
What can we conclude about subjective feelings and emotional responses?
They aren’t strictly one before the other and we need a better understanding of their neural basis to understand their interaction.
What did James Papez do in the 1930s?
Highlight a bidirectional circuit of brain structures involved in emotion, including the neocortex, cingulate gyrus, hippocampus, hypothalamus and thalamus.