Friday, February 11, 2011

Social Judgment

Article:The Human Amygdala in Social Judgment
Authors:RalphAdolphs,DanielTranel&AntonioR.Damasio
Published in Nature

This article discusses the role of the amygdala in social judgment, specifically in judging others based on their trustworthiness and approachability. Subjects were asked to rate pictures of people based on these two qualities. Participants with lesions in the amygdala rated the negative faces more positively than the controls.
In addition, the researchers also wanted to test how the participants judged people based on verbal descriptions without looking at a picture. The brain damaged patients made normal judgments, meaning that lesion patients’ visual processing is affected. This suggests that people with damaged amygdalas have a problem retrieving information from past experiences, which would be triggered by a visual stimulus.
It is interesting that the amygdala is involved in visual processing of emotional cues as well as in fear. It makes sense that people with damaged amygdalas would not pick up on negative faces as easily because displays of fear and negativity are somewhat similar. Is there a different part of the brain that would cause brain-damaged patients to have different judgments to verbal descriptions of people?


Thursday, February 10, 2011

Moral Decision Making and Brain Lesion

Article: Brain-damaged people give insights into morality
Published by CNN

After talking about moral decision making in class today, I was interested in finding an article that discussed it. It has been found that the ventromedial prefrontal cortex is involved in social emotions like empathy and guilt, and recent findings also show its role in making judgments in life-or-death situations. The study tested six people with brain damage to the ventromedial prefrontal cortex, twelve with damage to other brain regions, and twelve who were healthy. The results showed that the brain lesion patients responded similarly to the others when having to decide between what’s right and wrong, but when death was involved, their answers changed.
People with brain lesions in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex were more likely to choose the option that killed one person in order to save a group of others. They even said they would kill their own child to save other people’s lives.
It seems like people with damage to this area are operating in a logical manner, based on what they think is better for the future. The fact that they would choose to give up their own child’s life to save another’s is an extremely interesting point. How can we test what goes on in their minds, leading them to make such decisions? I wonder if the same answers apply when someone is just being harmed, not necessarily killed.

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

TMS and identifying emotion

Article: Transcranial magnetic stimulation of medial−frontal cortex impairs the processing of angry facial expressions
Authors: C. J. Harmer, K. V. Thilo, J. C. Rothwell & G. M. Goodwin
Published in Nature Neuroscience


It has been shown that different neural circuits of the brain are linked to recognizing different emotions. In this article, participants were asked to distinguish between angry and neutral faces, male and female faces, and happy and neutral faces. Transcranial magnetic stimulation over the medial-frontal cortex impairs the processing of angry emotion, but not happiness. In fact, TMS had opposite effects in recognizing the two emotions. After TMS, participants responded slower when trying to identify anger and faster when trying to identify happiness, yet there were no differences in accuracy.
Perhaps participants reacted faster to displays of happy emotion because it is more ideal. As humans, we would rather be happier than sad, and we have learned how seeing other people happy makes us happy. Maybe the tracks in the brain that are responsible for recognizing anger are not as easily activated because we subconsciously don’t want them to be activated.

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Body Dysmorphic Disorder

Article:
Toward a Neurobiology of Body Dysmorphic Disorder
Authors: Sanjaya Saxena, MD, and Jamie D. Feusner, MD
Published in Primary Psychology

Body dysmorphic disorder (BDD) is the preoccupation of physical appearance or the obsession with a body part that leads to serious anxiety and distress. Yes, we all have our insecurities about appearance, but BDD takes these to the extreme. Patients often have distorted views of their appearances. Many of these disorders involve delusional beliefs. BDD is often paired with or causes other types of disorders, including eating disorders, mood disorders, social anxiety disorders, and personality disorders.
The article asserts that various types of body dysmorphic disorders may be related to brain lesions. Research has found that the right temporal lobe and the posterior parietal lobe is involved in body perception, meaning lesions in these areas produce symptoms of BDD such as abnormal visual perception, distortion of body image, depressed mood, anxiety, somatic preoccupations, and delusion. One man with right temporal lobe epilepsy developed a belief that he smelled so bad that everyone around him could notice it.
I find it so interesting how an impairment of the brain could lead to becoming obsessed with one particular part of the body. Another case describes a man with damage to his left hemisphere, which caused him to become obsessed with the size and shape of his nose. With the complexities of the brain, I wonder if neuroscientists will ever be able to pinpoint certain spots that connect to self-image of specific parts of the body. Also, how does the brain affect different levels of self-esteem? What makes one person’s self-image so much more positive than another’s?

link to video:
http://www.bing.com/videos/watch/video/what-is-body-dysmorphic-disorder/69fuu62

Monday, February 7, 2011

Frontal Lobe Lesion and Humor

Article: People With Brain Injury to Frontal Lobe Don’t Get Certain Types of Humor
Published by the Centre for Neuro Skills


Damage to the right frontal lobe affects how people respond to certain types of jokes. The study discussed in this article tested adults between the ages of 18 and 70, half with brain lesions and half without. They found that people with right anterior frontal lobe damage were most affected when it comes to appreciating humor, including written and verbal jokes and funny cartoons. Compared to the control group as well as people with lesions in other brain areas, they did not smile or laugh as much, and they chose the wrong punch lines for written jokes. The study also found that brain lesion patients of this type had a preference for slapstick humor, which is often inappropriate.
We have discussed in class and I have read about the frontal lobe’s role in emotions and personality. It makes sense that patients with brain lesions in the frontal lobe would respond to jokes (or not respond) in ways that contrast with the control groups or other lesion patients. I have known that emotions, personality, and humor are all interrelated, but I never thought about the causal relationships. At times I think humor is able to affect my emotions, but this article asserts that our brain, and the center for emotion, affects my ability to be affected by humor.

Friday, February 4, 2011

rTMS and Depression

Article: "Resetting the Brain"
By: Christine Gorman
Published by TIME, partnership with CNN

After talking about transcranial magnetic stimulation in class, I was very interested to learn more about how it can treat disorders that affect social interaction, such as depression. As we discussed in class, the brain is both a chemical and electrical organ. Depression medication like Zoloft and Prozac target the chemical, which is where rTMS comes in. The article states that doctors are unsure of how rTMS actually works, but there is some speculation. It is certain that it is not the magnetic pulses, but rather the magnetic currents the pulses create that have an effect on the nerve cells in the brain. Martha, the subject of this article, had rTMS treatment five times a week for six weeks, and felt different after three.
The author compares rTMS to rebooting a computer. Because people with depression have an imbalance in their brains (the expression, “the wires are crossed”), the electric current sends shocks to the cortex, basically restarting the brain nad giving it a boost.
I think this is a fascinating technique, although it seems kind of scary. I think it is worth trying under severe circumstances, but I wonder what problems rTMS could cause if something went wrong.

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Get Out of My Personal Space

Article: Personal space regulation by the human amygdala
Authors: Daniel P Kennedy, Jan Gläscher, J Michael Tyszka & Ralph Adolph
Published by Nature Neuroscience 12, 1226 - 1227 (2009)
Published online: 30 August 2009 | doi:10.1038/nn.2381

How is the brain involved in the regulation of personal space? Previous research has shown that the amygdala is involved in social approach and avoidance, but not much is known about personal space. After this experiment, it was found that the amygdala is involved in recognition of personal space, and is activated when an individual is next to others. One lesion patient was compared with people without amygdalar damage, and they analyzed each participant’s comfort level at different distances to a confederate.
The participant with amygdala lesion lacked discomfort even at very close distances (almost touching) to the experimenter. In instances where healthy people felt uncomfortable, the lesion patient felt comfortable. The article states that even the confederate, who knew what was going on, felt uncomfortable in the situation. However, the article does point out that the lesion patient was aware that others have discomfort when she did not.
Although personal space is subjective to each individual, there are cultural definitions of personal space. For instance, I know that Italians’ cultural standard of personal space is closer than Americans’. Does this have implications on how the amygdala develops or how it responds in people of different cultures?