Co-corresponding
author Donnisa Edmonds. Credit: Northwestern University
We've all been
there. Moments after leaving a party, your brain is suddenly filled with
intrusive thoughts about what others were thinking. "Did they think I
talked too much?" "Did my joke offend them?" "Were they
having a good time?"
In a new Northwestern Medicine study, scientists
sought to better understand how humans evolved to become so skilled at thinking
about what's happening in other peoples' minds. The findings could have
implications for one day treating psychiatric conditions such as anxiety and depression.
"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."
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.
Senior and co-corresponding author Rodrigo Braga
explains where the different regions of the brain are located. Credit:
Northwestern University
Often referred to as our "lizard brain," the amygdala is
typically associated with detecting threats and processing fear. A classic
example of the amygdala in action is someone's physiological and emotional response to seeing a snake: startled body, racing heart,
sweaty palms. But the amygdala also does other things, Braga said.
"For instance, the amygdala is responsible for social behaviors like
parenting, mating, aggression and the navigation of social-dominance
hierarchies," said Braga, an assistant professor of neurology at
Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. "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."
The study was published Nov. 22 in the journal Science
Advances.
High-resolution brain scans were key
Within the amygdala, there's a specific part called the medial nucleus that is very important for social behaviors. 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.
An image of a
brain scan during an MRI. Credit: Northwestern University
This was only possible because of functional magnetic resonance imaging
(fMRI), a noninvasive brain-imaging technique that measures brain activity by
detecting changes in blood oxygen levels. A collaborator at the University of
Minnesota and co-author on the study, Kendrick Kay, provided Braga and
co-corresponding author Donnisa Edmonds with fMRI data from six study
participants' brains, as part of the Natural Scenes Dataset (NSD). These
high-resolution scans enabled the scientists to see details of the social
cognitive network that had never been detected on lower-resolution brain scans.
What's more, they were able to replicate the findings up to two times in each
individual.
"One of the most exciting things is we were able to identify network
regions we weren't able to see before," said Edmonds, a neuroscience Ph.D.
candidate in Braga's lab at Northwestern. "That's something that had been
underappreciated before our study, and we were able to get at that because we
had such high-resolution data."
Potential treatment of anxiety, depression
Both anxiety and depression involve amygdala hyperactivity, which can
contribute to excessive emotional responses and impaired emotional regulation,
Edmonds said. Currently, someone with either condition could receive deep brain stimulation for treatment, but since the
amygdala is located deep within the brain, directly behind the eyes, it means
having an invasive, surgical procedure. Now, with this study's findings, a much
less-invasive procedure, transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS),
might be able to use knowledge about this brain connection to improve
treatment, the authors said.
"Through this knowledge that the amygdala is connected to other brain
regions—potentially some that are closer to the skull, which is an easier
region to target—that means people who do TMS could target the amygdala instead
by targeting these other regions," Edmonds said.
The study is titled, "The human social cognitive network contains multiple regions within the amygdala." Other Northwestern co-authors include Christina Zelano, Joseph J. Salvo, Nathan Anderson, Maya Lakshman and Qiaohan Yang.
Source: Overthinking what you said? It's your 'lizard brain' talking to newer, advanced parts of your brain


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