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1
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0026874654
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On traits and temperament: general and specific factors of emotional experience and their relation to the five-factor model
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(1992)
J Pers
, vol.60
, pp. 441-476
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Watson1
Clark2
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3
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0029107645
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Emotion: clues from the brain
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JT Spence, JM Barley, DJ Foss, Annual Reviews, Inc, Palo Alto, California
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(1995)
Annual Review of Psychology
, vol.46
, pp. 209-235
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LeDoux1
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5
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0025409965
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Topographic organization of neurons in the acoustic thalamus that project to the amygdala
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(1990)
J Neurosci
, vol.10
, pp. 1043-1054
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LeDoux1
Farb2
Ruggiero3
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6
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0022486368
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Disruption of auditory but not visual learning by destruction of intrinsic neurons in the rat medial geniculate body
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(1986)
Brain Res
, vol.371
, pp. 395-399
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LeDoux1
Iwata2
Pearl3
Reis4
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7
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43949154216
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Synchronized sleep oscillations and their paroxysmal developments
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of special interest, Provides an overview of recent animal studies of the role of the amygdala in conditioned fear and the neurotransmitters involved in this process. Treatments that decrease opiate and GABA transmission increase the excitability of amygdala output neurons in the basolateral nucleus and improve aversive conditioning, whereas treatments that decrease excitability of these neurons retard aversive conditioning.
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(1994)
Trends in Neurosciences
, vol.17
, pp. 201-214
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Davis1
Rainnie2
Cassell3
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10
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0027954434
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Depolarization-induced release of corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) in primary neuronal cultures of the amygdala
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(1994)
Neuropeptides
, vol.26
, pp. 113-121
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Cratty1
Birkle2
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11
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0028128691
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Restraint stress increases corticotropin-releasing hormone mRNA content in the amygdala and paraventricular nucleus
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(1994)
Brain Res
, vol.656
, pp. 182-186
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Kalin1
Takahashi2
Chen3
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12
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0028197644
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Corticosterone effects on corticotropin-releasing hormone mRNA in the central nucleus of the amygdala and the parvocellular region of the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamuls
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(1994)
Brain Res
, vol.640
, pp. 105-112
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Makino1
Gold2
Schulkin3
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13
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0027471787
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The neurobiology of fear
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of outstanding interest, Overview of recent studies in rhesus monkeys on the neuroanatomical and neurochemical substrates of unconditioned, naturally occuring fear reactions. Individual differences in behavioral measures of fearfulness are associated with specific biological processes.
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(1993)
Sci Am
, vol.268
, pp. 94-107
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Kalin1
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14
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0001217382
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Cerebral asymmetry, emotion, and affective style
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of outstanding interest, RJ Davidson, K Hugdahl, MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, Overview of recent studies from the author's laboratory on individual differences in electrophysiological measures of prefrontal and anterior temporal activation asymmetry. These studies indicate that such individual differences in measures of activation asymmetry are stable over time and predict dispositional mood and reactivity to emotion elicitors.
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(1995)
Brain asymmetry
, pp. 361-387
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Davidson1
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15
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0028366277
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The effect of kindling of different nuclei in the left and right amygdala on anxiety in the rat
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(1994)
Physiol Behav
, vol.55
, pp. 1-12
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Adamec1
Morgan2
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17
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0027231864
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The contribution of the amygdala to normal and abnormal emotional states
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of special interest, Review of lesion studies in monkeys that examine the role of the amygdala in stimulus-reward associations and consider the implications of these data for human psychopathology.
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(1993)
Trends Neurosci
, vol.16
, pp. 328-333
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Aggleton1
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18
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0027501064
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Extinction of emotional learning: contribution of medial prefrontal cortex
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of special interest, Important study that demonstrates that lesions of medial prefrontal cortex in rats interfere with the normal process of extinction of a classically conditioned aversive response. Suggests an important role for the prefrontal cortex in the inhibition of activity in the amygdala.
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(1993)
Neurosci Lett
, vol.163
, pp. 109-113
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Morgan1
Romanski2
LeDoux3
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19
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0028210530
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The effect of medial frontal cortex lesions on cardiovascular conditioned emotional responses in the rat
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(1994)
Brain Res
, vol.643
, pp. 181-193
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Frysztak1
Neafsey2
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21
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0027413784
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The covert learning of affective valence does not require structures in hippocampal system or amygdala
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of outstanding interest, An important case study of a patient with bilateral damage to the mesial temporal lobe, including the hippocampus and amygdala. Despite displaying a profound anterograde amnesia for faces, this patient was able to form new associations between specific faces and reward, thus indicating that medial temporal lobe structures are not required for this form of emotional learning.
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(1993)
J Cogn Neurosci
, vol.5
, pp. 79-88
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Tranel1
Damasio2
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22
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0028670570
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Impaired recognition of emotion in facial expressions following bilateral damage to the human amygdala
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(1994)
Nature
, vol.372
, pp. 669-672
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Adolphs1
Tranel2
Damasio3
Damasio4
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24
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0002468777
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Lateralization of psychopathology in response to focal brain injury
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of special interest, RJ Davidson, K Hugdahl, MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, Review of the human brain damage literature on effects of unilateral strokes on affective symptomatology.
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(1995)
Brain asymmetry
, pp. 693-711
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Robinson1
Downhill2
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28
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84965506962
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VOLUNTARY SMILING CHANGES REGIONAL BRAIN ACTIVITY
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of outstanding interest, This study was the first to show that voluntary production of smiling produces some of the same electrophysiological changes that occur during spontaneous enjoyment. The results have important implications for the role of facial expression in regulating neural processes associated with emotion.
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(1993)
Psychological Science
, vol.4
, pp. 342-345
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Ekman1
Davidson2
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29
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0027434724
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Frontal brain asymmetry and emotional reactivity: a biological substrate of affective style
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of outstanding interest, This study found that subjects with greater left-sided prefrontal electrophysiological activation during a resting baseline reported more intense positive affect to a positive film clip and less intense negative affect to a negative film clip compared with subjects showing right-sided prefrontal activation. This work highlights the importance of individual differences in prefrontal activation asymmetry as a correlate of stable differences in positive and negative emotional reactivity.
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(1993)
Psychophysiology
, vol.30
, pp. 82-89
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Wheeler1
Davidson2
Tomarken3
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30
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0027488899
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Emotion-related hemisphere asymmetry: subjective emotional responses to laterally presented films
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of special interest, When subjects are presented with emotional film clips that are presented hemiretinally, they report more intense negative emotion when negative film clips are presented to the left visual field compared with presentations of the same film clips to the right visual field in a separate group of subjects.
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(1993)
Cortex
, vol.29
, pp. 431-448
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Wittling1
Roschmann2
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34
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0028503645
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Dopamine and the structure of personality: relation of agonist-induced dopamine activity to positive emotionality
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2 receptor agonist bromocriptine and found that those subjects displaying a more robust response had higher levels of dispositional positive affect. The authors interpret their findings as supporting the role of dopamine in individual differences in positive affect.
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(1994)
J Pers Soc Psychol
, vol.67
, pp. 485-498
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Depue1
Luciana2
Arbisi3
Collins4
Leon5
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36
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0028337250
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Frontal brain activation in repressors and non-repressors
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of special interest, Subjects with greater left-sided electrophysiological prefrontal activation were found to score highly on personality measures that reflect the tendency to minimize negative affect.
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(1994)
J Abnorm Psychol
, vol.103
, pp. 339-349
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Tomarken1
Davidson2
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41
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0027327137
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Pictures as prepulse: attention and emotion in startle modification
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of special interest, Affect-modulated startle (eyeblink reflex) can be separated from attention-based startle reflex attenuation when affect is elicited using 6 s presentations of pictures. Shows how the startle probe measure reflects both attentional and affective components of information processing.
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(1993)
Psychophysiology
, vol.30
, pp. 541-545
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Bradley1
Cuthbert2
Lang3
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44
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0027962427
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Modulation of the acoustic startle response by film-induced fear and sexual arousal
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(1994)
Psychophysiology
, vol.31
, pp. 565-571
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Jansen1
Frijda2
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45
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0027194435
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Emotional learning, hedonic change, and the startle probe
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of special interest, Acoustic startle reflex is potentiated by a previously neutral stimulus that has been paired with a shock in a classical conditioning paradigm. An important study with human subjects paralleling research on fear-potentiated startle in non-humans.
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(1993)
J Abnorm Psychol
, vol.102
, pp. 453-465
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Hamm1
Greenwald2
Bradley3
Lang4
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50
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0028172570
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β-adrenergic activation and memory for emotional events
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of outstanding interest, Propanolol reduces memory for emotional material. An important finding concerning the relationship between peripheral physiological activity and emotion. Implies that peripheral autonomic activity plays a causal role in the encoding of emotional memory.
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(1994)
Nature
, vol.371
, pp. 702-704
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Cahill1
Prins2
Weber3
McGaugh4
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52
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0003021939
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The psychophysiology of emotion
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of special interest, M Lewis, J Haviland, Guilford Press, New York, A very thorough review of physiological activity related to emotional phenomena. Emphasizes the literature related to the issue of emotion-specific autonomic activity, concluding that the evidence in support of such a claim is inconclusive.
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(1993)
Handbook of emotion
, pp. 119-142
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Cacioppo1
Klein2
Berntson3
Hatfield4
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53
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0001185720
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Complexities in the search for emotion-specific physiology
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of special interest, P Ekman, RJ Davidson, Oxford University Press, New York, A brief review of the central and autonomic substrates of emotion. Argues that if differentiation among discrete emotions is to be found, it will be in patterns of central nervous system activity that overlap with those contributing to cognition.
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(1994)
The nature of emotion: fundamental questions
, pp. 237-242
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Davidson1
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