2012
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2011.10.090
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Inflammation selectively enhances amygdala activity to socially threatening images

Abstract: Although social withdrawal is a prominent symptom of sickness, the mechanisms associated with this behavioral change remain unclear. In animals, the amygdala is a key neural region involved in sickness-induced social withdrawal. Consistent with this, in humans, heightened amygdala activity to negative social cues is associated with social avoidance tendencies. Based on these findings, we investigated whether an experimental inflammatory challenge selectively increased amygdala activity to socially threatening … Show more

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Cited by 215 publications
(173 citation statements)
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“…To date, two broad categories of social experience have been found to be altered as a function of inflammation. Specifically, inflammation alters neural sensitivity to negative social stimuli or experiences (eg, social rejection, receiving negative social feedback, and viewing threatening faces; Eisenberger et al, 2009;Inagaki et al, 2012;Muscatell et al, 2016) as well as sensitivity to positive social stimuli or experiences (eg, viewing close others and receiving positive social feedback; Inagaki et al, 2015;Muscatell et al, 2016). A heightened sensitivity to both positive and negative social stimuli may help an individual to more quickly determine which individuals might be supportive and provide help in times of need and which individuals will not and should be avoided.…”
Section: Effects Of Inflammation On Social Behavior In Humansmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…To date, two broad categories of social experience have been found to be altered as a function of inflammation. Specifically, inflammation alters neural sensitivity to negative social stimuli or experiences (eg, social rejection, receiving negative social feedback, and viewing threatening faces; Eisenberger et al, 2009;Inagaki et al, 2012;Muscatell et al, 2016) as well as sensitivity to positive social stimuli or experiences (eg, viewing close others and receiving positive social feedback; Inagaki et al, 2015;Muscatell et al, 2016). A heightened sensitivity to both positive and negative social stimuli may help an individual to more quickly determine which individuals might be supportive and provide help in times of need and which individuals will not and should be avoided.…”
Section: Effects Of Inflammation On Social Behavior In Humansmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Finally, other work has examined how an inflammatory challenge affects neural sensitivity specifically to threatening social stimuli (eg, images of fearful faces), compared with threatening non-social stimuli (eg, images of snakes) as well as matched control stimuli (non-threatening social images: happy faces, and non-threatening non-social images: household objects; Inagaki et al, 2012). Based on work showing that both social and non-social threatening stimuli activate the amygdala (Hariri et al, 2002), analyses examined whether endotoxin, as compared with placebo, led to greater activation of the amygdala in response to these socially threatening images.…”
Section: Neural Sensitivity To Negative Social Experiencementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Given the importance of amygdala and hippocampus in fear conditioning (Duvarci and Pare, 2014;LeDoux, 2000;Maren et al, 2013;Wolff et al, 2014) and stress-related psychiatric disorders (Harmer, 2013;Phelps and LeDoux, 2005;Price and Drevets, 2010; 31 Sheline et al, 2001), it is noteworthy that amygdala and vHIPP, together with other brain regions, exhibited increased levels of kynurenines. In healthy humans, LPS induced increased amygdala reactivity to fearful faces (Inagaki et al, 2012). Amygdala volume was reduced in MDD patients with reduced KYNA/QUIN plasma ratios (Savitz et al, 2015).…”
Section: Integrating Current Findings With Existing Evidence For Kyn-mentioning
confidence: 99%