2022
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-04964-y
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Neurotensin orchestrates valence assignment in the amygdala

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Cited by 43 publications
(37 citation statements)
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“…The brain devotes an essential thalamic mechanism for distinguishing the direction of emotional signals, relying on the production and release of neurotensin for rewards, but punishment learning comes for free [ 101 ]. Publications by reputable laboratories support our working hypothesis on the contrasting metabolisms positive and negative emotions.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The brain devotes an essential thalamic mechanism for distinguishing the direction of emotional signals, relying on the production and release of neurotensin for rewards, but punishment learning comes for free [ 101 ]. Publications by reputable laboratories support our working hypothesis on the contrasting metabolisms positive and negative emotions.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rapid switching of a high-dimensional resting state shrinks the variance as activations collapse into lower-dimensional attractor dynamics [ 10 , 98 , 99 ] based on whether experiences represent positive or negative charge [ 100 ]. The brain devotes an essential thalamic mechanism for distinguishing the direction of emotional signals, relying on the production and release of neurotensin for rewards, but punishment learning comes for free [ 101 ]. The above results strongly suggest that positive and negative emotions have contrasting energy metabolisms, and correlate to endothermic or exothermic cycles, respectively.…”
Section: Thermodynamic Regulation Of the Neural Systemmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…However, an unresolved mystery in current models of amygdala function is the discrepancy in timescales between the activity of amygdala complex neurons and the conditioned behaviors that they drive. Neurons in the amygdala exhibit increased responses to a conditioned stimulus (CS), but these are often only transient, lasting less than a second from the onset of a sensory stimulus (Goosens and Maren, 2004;Li et al, 2022;Quirk et al, 1995Quirk et al, , 1995Tye et al, 2008;Whittle et al, 2021). This does not match the behaviors that can be elicited by these stimuli, which include defensive responses expressed for the full duration of the threat presentation that would be essential to survive or evade threats in the real world.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%