Investigating the Subcortical Route to the Amygdala Across Species and in Disordered Fear Responses

Over the past few decades, evidence has come to light that there is a rapid subcortical shortcut that transmits visual information to the amygdala, effectively bypassing the visual cortex. This pathway purportedly runs from the superior colliculus to the amygdala via the pulvinar, and thus presents...

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Main Author: Jessica McFadyen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2019-04-01
Series:Journal of Experimental Neuroscience
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/1179069519846445
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spelling doaj-a69204f7e0f045ed879cf7ee815c377f2020-11-25T03:03:33ZengSAGE PublishingJournal of Experimental Neuroscience1179-06952019-04-011310.1177/1179069519846445Investigating the Subcortical Route to the Amygdala Across Species and in Disordered Fear ResponsesJessica McFadyenOver the past few decades, evidence has come to light that there is a rapid subcortical shortcut that transmits visual information to the amygdala, effectively bypassing the visual cortex. This pathway purportedly runs from the superior colliculus to the amygdala via the pulvinar, and thus presents a methodological challenge to study noninvasively in the human brain. Here, we present our recent work where we reliably reconstructed the white matter structure and directional flow of neural signal along this pathway in over 600 healthy young adults. Critically, we found structure-function relationships for the pulvinar-amygdala connection, where people with greater fibre density had stronger functional neural coupling and were also better at recognising fearful facial expressions. These results tie together recent anatomical evidence from other visual primates with very recent optogenetic research on rodents demonstrating a functional role of this pathway in producing fear responses. Here, we discuss how this pathway might operate alongside other thalamo-cortical circuits (such as pulvinar to middle temporal area) and how its structure and function may change according to the sensory input it receives. This newly established circuit might play a potentially important role in autism and/or anxiety disorders.https://doi.org/10.1177/1179069519846445
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jessica McFadyen
spellingShingle Jessica McFadyen
Investigating the Subcortical Route to the Amygdala Across Species and in Disordered Fear Responses
Journal of Experimental Neuroscience
author_facet Jessica McFadyen
author_sort Jessica McFadyen
title Investigating the Subcortical Route to the Amygdala Across Species and in Disordered Fear Responses
title_short Investigating the Subcortical Route to the Amygdala Across Species and in Disordered Fear Responses
title_full Investigating the Subcortical Route to the Amygdala Across Species and in Disordered Fear Responses
title_fullStr Investigating the Subcortical Route to the Amygdala Across Species and in Disordered Fear Responses
title_full_unstemmed Investigating the Subcortical Route to the Amygdala Across Species and in Disordered Fear Responses
title_sort investigating the subcortical route to the amygdala across species and in disordered fear responses
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Journal of Experimental Neuroscience
issn 1179-0695
publishDate 2019-04-01
description Over the past few decades, evidence has come to light that there is a rapid subcortical shortcut that transmits visual information to the amygdala, effectively bypassing the visual cortex. This pathway purportedly runs from the superior colliculus to the amygdala via the pulvinar, and thus presents a methodological challenge to study noninvasively in the human brain. Here, we present our recent work where we reliably reconstructed the white matter structure and directional flow of neural signal along this pathway in over 600 healthy young adults. Critically, we found structure-function relationships for the pulvinar-amygdala connection, where people with greater fibre density had stronger functional neural coupling and were also better at recognising fearful facial expressions. These results tie together recent anatomical evidence from other visual primates with very recent optogenetic research on rodents demonstrating a functional role of this pathway in producing fear responses. Here, we discuss how this pathway might operate alongside other thalamo-cortical circuits (such as pulvinar to middle temporal area) and how its structure and function may change according to the sensory input it receives. This newly established circuit might play a potentially important role in autism and/or anxiety disorders.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/1179069519846445
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