The human amygdala parametrically encodes the intensity of specific facial emotions and their categorical ambiguity

Abstract

The human amygdala is a key structure for processing emotional facial expressions, but it remains unclear what aspects of emotion are processed. We investigated this question with three different approaches: behavioural analysis of 3 amygdala lesion patients, neuroimaging of 19 healthy adults, and single-neuron recordings in 9 neurosurgical patients. The lesion patients showed a shift in behavioural sensitivity to fear, and amygdala BOLD responses were modulated by both fear and emotion ambiguity (the uncertainty that a facial expression is categorized as fearful or happy). We found two populations of neurons, one whose response correlated with increasing degree of fear, or happiness, and a second whose response primarily decreased as a linear function of emotion ambiguity. Together, our results indicate that the human amygdala processes both the degree of emotion in facial expressions and the categorical ambiguity of the emotion shown and that these two aspects of amygdala processing can be most clearly distinguished at the level of single neurons.

References

  • Wang S1,2, Yu R3,4, Tyszka JM5, Zhen S4, Kovach C6, Sun S4, Huang Y4, Hurlemann R7, Ross IB8, Chung JM9, Mamelak AN9, Adolphs R1,2,5, Rutishauser U5,9. The human amygdala parametrically encodes the intensity of specific facial emotions and their categorical ambiguity. Nat Commun. 2017 Apr 21;8:14821. PMID: 28429707.