The neuroscience of sadness: A multidisciplinary synthesis and collaborative review.

Credit to the illustrator: Irene de Diego (airin.dd@gmail.com)

Resumen

Sadness is typically characterized by raised inner eyebrows, lowered corners of the mouth, reduced walking speed, and slumped posture. Ancient subcortical circuitry provides a neuroanatomical foundation, extending from dorsal periaqueductal grey to subgenual anterior cingulate, the latter of which is now a treatment target in disorders of sadness. Electrophysiological studies further emphasize a role for reduced left relative to right frontal asymmetry in sadness, underpinning interest in the transcranial stimulation of left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex as an antidepressant target. Neuroimaging studies – including meta-analyses – indicate that sadness is associated with reduced cortical activation, which may contribute to reduced parasympathetic inhibitory control over medullary cardioacceleratory circuits. Reduced cardiac control may – in part – contribute to epidemiological reports of reduced life expectancy in affective disorders, effects equivalent to heavy smoking. We suggest that the field may be moving toward a theoretical consensus, in which different models relating to basic emotion theory and psychological constructionism may be considered as complementary, working at different levels of the phylogenetic hierarchy.

Publicación
Neuroscience and Biobehavioural Reviews 111 (2020) pp. 199-228
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Juan A. Arias
Investigador Doctoral

Mis intereses incluyen Biología, Neurociencias, Bioestadística, Neuroimagen, Aprendizaje Estadístico y Comunicación Científica.

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