Spilled morning coffee ruined your whole day? Blame your 'lizard brain'

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The amygdala, sometimes referred to as the 'lizard brain', can be a sensitive soul that likes to bear a grudge, according to US and UK scientists. They asked participants to complete a psychological wellbeing assessment and eight daily telephone interviews to assess their mood. They also came into the lab for a brain scan as they viewed negative, positive, and neutral images, with neutral images in between. The scans showed the amygdala activated when participants were shown negative images, and people whose amygdala failed to calm down when shown a subsequent neutral image tended to stay in a bad mood all day. They also tended to express worse psychological wellbeing in the assessments and phone interviews.

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From: Society for Neuroscience

Negative Mood Linked to Prolonged Amygdala Activity

Similar brain activity patterns to negative and subsequent neutral stimuli connected to increase in negative mood

How the amygdala responds to viewing negative and subsequent neutral stimuli may impact our daily mood, according to new research published in JNeurosci.

The amygdala evaluates the environment to find potential threats. If a threat does 

appear, the amygdala can stay active and respond to new stimuli like they are threatening too. This is helpful when you are in a dangerous situation, but less so when spilling your coffee in the morning keeps you on edge for the rest of the day.

In a recent study, Puccetti et al. examined data collected from the “Midlife in the US” longitudinal study. Participants completed a psychological wellbeing assessment and eight daily telephone interviews to assess their mood. They also came into the lab for an fMRI task: they viewed negative, positive, and neutral images with a picture of a neutral facial expression in between each image.

When the amygdala activated in a similar pattern as the participants viewed negative images and the neutral faces that followed, this persistent activity predicted increases in negative daily mood and decreases in positive daily mood. In turn, participants who experienced increased positive mood displayed greater psychological wellbeing. These results suggest amygdala activity influences how a person feels day-to-day, which can impact overall psychological wellbeing.

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JNeurosci
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Organisation/s: University of Miami, USA
Funder: John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Research Network, National Institute on Aging.
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