Both anxiety and depression involve amygdala hyperactivity, which can contribute to excessive emotional responses
A team of scientists has uncovered newer
parts of the brain, that support social interactions, and are connected to and
in constant communication with the ancient amygdala region—a discovery which
can help treat psychiatric conditions such as anxiety and depression.
In a new study by
Chicago-based Northwestern Medicine in the US and published in the journal
Science Advances, scientists sought to better understand how humans evolved to
become so skilled at thinking about what’s happening in other peoples’ minds.
“We spend a lot of time wondering, ‘What is that person
feeling, thinking? Did I say something to upset them?’” said senior author
Rodrigo Braga.
The parts of the
brain that allow us to do this are in regions of the human brain that have
expanded recently in our evolution, and that implies that it’s a recently
developed process.
“In essence, you’re putting yourself in someone else’s mind
and making inferences about what that person is thinking when you cannot really
know,” Braga added.
The study found
the more recently evolved and advanced parts of the human brain that support
social interactions — called the social cognitive network — are connected to
and in constant communication with an ancient part of the brain called the
amygdala.
Often referred to as our “lizard brain,” the amygdala
typically is associated with detecting threats and processing fear.
“The amygdala is responsible for social behaviours like
parenting, mating, aggression and the navigation of social-dominance hierarchies,”
said Braga, adding that previous studies have found co-activation of the
amygdala and social cognitive network, but “our study is novel because it shows
the communication is always happening.”
Within the amygdala, there’s a specific part called the medial
nucleus that is very important for social behaviours.
This study was the first to show the amygdala’s medial
nucleus is connected to newly evolved social cognitive network regions, which
are involved in thinking about other people.
This link to the amygdala helps shape the function of the
social cognitive network by giving it access to the amygdala’s role in
processing emotionally important content, said scientists.
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