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  1. ANGER primes increased systolic blood pressure and the magnitude of this increase predicted reaction time prolongation. Within the brain, ANGER trials evoked an enhancement of activity within dorsal pons and an attenuation of activity within visual occipitotemporal and attentional parietal cortices.

  2. Dec 27, 2021 · Trait anger refers to the frequency and duration of anger episodes, whereas anger control refers to the ability to control and regulate this emotion. Finally, anger‐out represents the tendency to externalize anger, and anger‐in the tendency to internalize it (redirect it towards the self).

    • 10.1111/ejn.15537
    • 2022/01
    • Eur J Neurosci. 2022 Jan; 55(2): 510-527.
  3. Oct 24, 2019 · From a neuropsychological perspective, impulsive aggression and its treatment are usually conceptualized in most research as a closed executive functioning system, as though the behavior was the product of the person’s cerebral functioning only.

    • J. Gagnon, J.E. Quansah, W.S. Kim
    • 2019
  4. Jun 8, 2022 · Anger is important to treat, as anger control deficits have negative consequences. A lack of anger control was found to negatively impact mental health (Prabhu et al., 2014) and lead to poor and maladaptive decisions (Meissner et al., 2021).

  5. Scientists have identified a specific region of the brain called the amygdala, as the part of the brain that processes fear, triggers anger, and motivates us to act. It alerts us to danger...

  6. Nov 15, 2022 · Literature on anger revealed that our brain responds to threat before the prefrontal cortex can gauge the reaction’s prudence. In other words, the amygdala makes the brain counter the threat or fear before the prefrontal cortex can consider the extent of a reaction.

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  8. Although most neuroimaging studies have neglected the multidimensionality of anger and thus resulted in brain activations dispersed across the entire brain, there seems to be several reoccurring neural circuits subserving the subjective experience of human anger.