Temporal lobectomy evidence for the role of the amygdala in early emotional face and body processing

Eleanor Moses, Jenna Scambler, Jessica Taubert, Ada H Y Lo, Kate Thompson, Beatrice de Gelder, Alan J. Pegna*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

The amygdala is believed to make invaluable contributions to visual emotion processing. Yet how this subcortical body contributes to emotion perception across time is contended. Here, we measured differences in the perceptual processing of emotional stimuli after unilateral temporal lobe and amygdala resection (TLR) in humans, using EEG. Through mass univariate analysis of brain activity, we compared responses to fearful and neutral faces (left TLR N = 8, right TLR N = 8, control N = 8), and fearful and neutral bodies (left TLR N = 9, right TLR N = 9, control N = 9). We found that TLR impaired the early-stage perceptual processing of emotional stimuli seen in the control group. Indeed, in controls a heightened responses to fearful faces was found in the 140–170 ms time window, over temporoparietal electrodes. This effect was also present in the left TLR group but disappeared in the right TLR group. For emotional bodies, brain activity was differentially sensitive to fearful stimuli at 90–120 ms in the control group, but this effect was eliminated in both TLR groups. Collectively, these results reveal the amygdala contributes to the early stages of perceptual processing that discriminate emotional stimuli from neutral stimuli. Further, they emphasize the unique role of the right medial temporal structures such as the amygdala in emotional face perception.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberENEURO.0114-24.2024
Pages (from-to)1-12
JournaleNeuro
Volume12
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Feb 2025

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