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Jan 15, 2016 · From The Quarterly, January 2016 Dr. Huda Akil is one of the world’s leading experts on what scientists call the neurobiology of emotions. She and her colleagues are now two decades into an investigation of what goes on in the brain when we experience emotions, with the objective of discovering new ways to target imbalances and biological abnormalities that contribute to depression, anxiety ...
- Bipolar Illness
Brain Structure Study in Children Suggests Biological...
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Connections with Brain’s Emotion Center Tied to Symptoms of...
- Scientific Council
The BBRF Scientific Council guides the Foundation to fund...
- Depression
Connections with Brain’s Emotion Center Tied to Symptoms of...
- Bipolar Illness
This model helps us understand that emotions are not the result of isolated brain activities but are the outcome of intricate interactions within our neural networks. Furthermore, we explore the concept of emotional geographies, which extends our understanding of emotions beyond the biological to the spatial and environmental.
The amygdala has received a great deal of attention from researchers interested in understanding the biological basis for emotions, especially fear and anxiety (Blackford & Pine, 2012; Goosens & Maren, 2002; Maren, Phan, & Liberzon, 2013). The amygdala is composed of various subnuclei, including the basolateral complex and the central nucleus (Figure 2).
Abstract. Emotion feeling is a phase of neurobiological activity, the key component of emotions and emotion-cognition interactions. Emotion schemas, the most frequently occurring emotion experiences, are dynamic emotion-cognition interactions that may consist of momentary/ situational responding or enduring traits of personality that emerge over developmental time.
This section will outline some of the most well-known theories explaining our emotional experience and provide insight into the biological bases of emotion. This section closes with a discussion of the ubiquitous nature of facial expressions of emotion and our abilities to recognize those expressions in others.
2. A locationist account of the brain basis of emotion. A locationist account of emotion assumes that the category emotion and individual categories such as anger, disgust, fear, happiness, sadness (and perhaps a few others) are respected by the body and brain (see Barrett 2006a for a discussion).
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Jan 1, 2009 · Neurobiological Basis of Emotions Irene Daum, Hans J. Markowitsch, and Marie Vanderkerckhove Abstract Experiencing emotions, the ability to identify emotions in others, and