Emotional arousal in agenesis of the corpus callosum

While the processing of verbal and psychophysiological indices of emotional arousal have been investigated extensively in relation to the left and right cerebral hemispheres, it remains poorly understood how both hemispheres normally function together to generate emotional responses to stimuli. Draw...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of psychophysiology 2006-07, Vol.61 (1), p.47-56
Hauptverfasser: Paul, Lynn K., Lautzenhiser, Aaron, Brown, Warren S., Hart, Arch, Neumann, Dirk, Spezio, Michael, Adolphs, Ralph
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container_issue 1
container_start_page 47
container_title International journal of psychophysiology
container_volume 61
creator Paul, Lynn K.
Lautzenhiser, Aaron
Brown, Warren S.
Hart, Arch
Neumann, Dirk
Spezio, Michael
Adolphs, Ralph
description While the processing of verbal and psychophysiological indices of emotional arousal have been investigated extensively in relation to the left and right cerebral hemispheres, it remains poorly understood how both hemispheres normally function together to generate emotional responses to stimuli. Drawing on a unique sample of nine high-functioning subjects with complete agenesis of the corpus callosum (AgCC), we investigated this issue using standardized emotional visual stimuli. Compared to healthy controls, subjects with AgCC showed a larger variance in their cognitive ratings of valence and arousal, and an insensitivity to the emotion category of the stimuli, especially for negatively-valenced stimuli, and especially for their arousal. Despite their impaired cognitive ratings of arousal, some subjects with AgCC showed large skin-conductance responses, and in general skin-conductance responses discriminated emotion categories and correlated with stimulus arousal ratings. We suggest that largely intact right hemisphere mechanisms can support psychophysiological emotional responses, but that the lack of interhemispheric communication between the hemispheres, perhaps together with dysfunction of the anterior cingulate cortex, interferes with normal verbal ratings of arousal, a mechanism in line with some models of alexithymia.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.ijpsycho.2005.10.017
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source MEDLINE; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals Complete
subjects Adult
Affective Symptoms - physiopathology
Agenesis of Corpus Callosum
Agenesis of the corpus callosum
Arousal - physiology
Attention - physiology
Awareness - physiology
Cerebral Cortex - physiopathology
Cognition - physiology
Corpus Callosum - pathology
Corpus Callosum - physiopathology
Dominance, Cerebral - physiology
Emotional arousal
Emotional visual stimuli
Emotions - physiology
Female
Galvanic Skin Response - physiology
Gyrus Cinguli - physiopathology
Humans
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Male
Pattern Recognition, Visual - physiology
Reference Values
title Emotional arousal in agenesis of the corpus callosum
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