
Scientists have captured the split-second workings of the brain's fear circuitry in people viewing frightful faces. The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) researchers visualized this fleeting activity in the brain's fear hub, called the amygdala, using a lightning-fast brain imaging technique called magnetoencephalography (MEG). They showed that such rapid, fear-related neural processes can now be studied non-invasively in living humans, with time resolution that other types of scanners can't even come close to matching.
Until now, scientists studying mental illnesses have been limited in their ability to see emotion circuits at work deep in the human brain. Brain circuits operate on a millisecond time-scale. Yet the predominant functional brain imaging tool, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), can only see activity that lasts for at least one second. So fMRI studies could be missing some important action. By contrast, MEG tracks electro-magnetic activity, millisecond-by-millisecond. What remained to be demonstrated was whether MEG is sensitive enough to detect relatively weak signals emanating from deep seats of emotion - the amygdala and hippocampus.
To test MEG's mettle, Brian Cornwell, PhD, Christian Grillon, PhD, of the NIMH Mood and Anxiety Disorders Program, and colleagues, scanned 14 healthy participants while they matched angry and fearful facial expressions, as well as geometric shapes, which served as a control. Previous fMRI studies had shown that viewing such faces triggers a resonse in the amygdala.
Faces evoked greater activation of the left amygdala, in addition to other areas known to be involved in processing emotional faces. The non-emotional geometric shapes failed to similarly evoke this emotion-related circuitry. The scanner pinpointed the amygdala's reaction with millisecond precision. A follow-up experiment with seven participants helped confirm that the response was traceable to the emotional content of the faces rather than to the identity of the actor portraying them.
Perfecting tools capable of capturing the human brain's split-second response to a threatening stimulus has challenged neuroscientists. "Our results suggest that MEG can greatly enhance our ability to investigate rapid fear-related neural activity on a time scale impossible with other non-invasive brain imaging techniques," said Cornwell.
Another recent MEG study by NIMH researchers suggests that MEG may show promise as a tool for predicting antidepressant response. As they gain confidence in the technique's ability to visualize emotional circuit activity, the researchers hope to make more use of it in studies of mood and anxiety disorders.
Cornwell BR, Carver FW, Coppola R, et al. Evoked amygdala responses to negative faces revealed by adaptive MEG beamformers. Brain Res. 2008 Oct 7; doi:10.1016/j.brainres.2008.09.068 [Abstract]
Cornwell BR, Johnson LL, Holroyd T, et al. Human hippocampal and parahippocampal theta during goal-directed spatial navigation predicts performance on a virtual Morris water maze. J Neurosci. 2008 Jun 4;28(23):5983-90. [Abstract]