Anderson A K, Phelps E A
Department of Psychology, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06511-8205, USA.
Neuroreport. 1998 Nov 16;9(16):3607-13.
A recent case study found that bilateral damage to the amygdala impairs the normal appraisal of vocal expressions of fear. However, the single source of evidence for this auditory emotion-processing impairment is from a patient with extra-amygdaloid damage that may include the basal ganglia, which have been shown to be important for prosody evaluation. In this study we provide evidence of preserved evaluation of vocal expressions of fear in a female patient (S.P.) with bilateral damage to the amygdala but with intact basal ganglia. This same patient has previously been shown to be impaired in the evaluation of facial expressions, including fear. These results indicate that the analysis of nonverbal signals of fear from different input channels are dissociable, being at least partially dependent on different brain structures. We suggest that the amygdala, in conjunction with the basal ganglia, may support the normal appraisal of auditory signals of danger.
最近的一项病例研究发现,杏仁核双侧受损会损害对恐惧声音表达的正常评估。然而,这种听觉情绪处理障碍的唯一证据来源是一名患有杏仁核外损伤(可能包括基底神经节)的患者,而基底神经节已被证明对韵律评估很重要。在本研究中,我们提供了证据表明,一名女性患者(S.P.)杏仁核双侧受损但基底神经节完整,其对恐惧声音表达的评估功能保存。此前已表明,该患者在包括恐惧在内的面部表情评估方面存在障碍。这些结果表明,来自不同输入通道的恐惧非语言信号分析是可分离的,至少部分依赖于不同的脑结构。我们认为,杏仁核与基底神经节协同作用,可能支持对危险听觉信号的正常评估。