Department of Psychology, Yale University, New Haven, CT, 06520, United States.
Department of Psychology, Yale University, New Haven, CT, 06520, United States; Department of Neuroscience, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, 06510, United States; Kavli Institute for Neuroscience, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, 06511, United States.
Behav Brain Res. 2021 Aug 6;411:113356. doi: 10.1016/j.bbr.2021.113356. Epub 2021 May 11.
Located medially within the temporal lobes, the amygdala is a formation of heterogenous nuclei that has emerged as a target for investigations into the neural bases of both primitive and complex behaviors. Although modern neuroscience has eschewed the practice of assigning broad functions to distinct brain regions, the amygdala has classically been associated with regulating negative emotional processes (such as fear or aggression), primarily through research performed in rodent models. Contemporary studies, particularly those in non-human primate models, have provided evidence for a role of the amygdala in other aspects of cognition such as valuation of stimuli or shaping social behaviors. Consequently, many modern perspectives now also emphasize the amygdala's role in processing positive affect and social behaviors. Importantly, several recent experiments have examined the intersection of two seemingly autonomous domains; how both valence/value and social stimuli are simultaneously represented in the amygdala. Results from these studies suggest that there is an overlap between valence/value processing and the processing of social behaviors at the level of single neurons. These findings have prompted researchers investigating the neurophysiological mechanisms underlying social interactions to question what contributions reward-related processes in the amygdala make in shaping social behaviors. In this review, we will examine evidence, primarily from primate neurophysiology, suggesting that value-related processes in the amygdala interact with the processing of social stimuli, and explore holistic hypotheses about how these amygdalar interactions might be instantiated.
杏仁核位于颞叶的内侧,是一个异质核团的形成,它已成为研究原始和复杂行为的神经基础的目标。尽管现代神经科学已经避免了将广泛的功能分配给特定的大脑区域的做法,但杏仁核一直与调节消极情绪过程(如恐惧或攻击)有关,主要是通过在啮齿动物模型中进行的研究。当代研究,特别是在非人类灵长类动物模型中的研究,为杏仁核在认知的其他方面(如刺激的评估或塑造社会行为)提供了证据。因此,许多现代观点现在也强调了杏仁核在处理积极情绪和社会行为中的作用。重要的是,最近的几项实验研究了两个看似自主的领域之间的交叉点;即情绪/价值和社会刺激如何在杏仁核中同时被表示。这些研究的结果表明,在单个神经元的水平上,存在着价值/价值处理和社会行为处理之间的重叠。这些发现促使研究社交互动的神经生理学机制的研究人员质疑杏仁核中与奖励相关的过程在塑造社会行为中做出了什么贡献。在这篇综述中,我们将主要从灵长类动物神经生理学的角度来探讨证据,这些证据表明杏仁核中的与价值相关的过程与社会刺激的处理相互作用,并探讨关于这些杏仁核相互作用如何实现的整体假说。