Abstract

Amygdala is an intensively researched brain structure involved in social processing and multiple major clinical disorders, but its functions are not well understood. The functions of a brain structure are best hypothesized on the basis of neuroanatomical connectivity findings, and of behavioral, neuroimaging, neuropsychological and physiological findings. Among the heaviest neuroanatomical interconnections of amygdala are those with perirhinal cortex (PRC), but these are little considered in the theoretical literature. PRC integrates complex, multimodal, meaningful and fine-grained distributed representations of objects and conspecifics. Consistent with this connectivity, amygdala is hypothesized to contribute meaningful and fine-grained representations of intangible knowledge for integration by PRC. Behavioral, neuroimaging, neuropsychological and physiological findings further support amygdala mediation of a diversity of such representations. These representations include subjective valence, impact, economic value, noxiousness, importance, ingroup membership, social status, popularity, trustworthiness and moral features. Further, the formation of amygdala representations is little understood, and is proposed to be often implemented through embodied cognition mechanisms. The hypothesis builds on earlier work, and makes multiple novel contributions to the literature. It highlights intangible knowledge, which is an influential but insufficiently researched factor in social and other behaviors. It contributes to understanding the heavy but neglected amygdala-PRC interconnections, and the diversity of amygdala-mediated intangible knowledge representations. Amygdala is a social brain region, but it does not represent species-typical social behaviors. A novel proposal to clarify its role is postulated. The hypothesis is also suggested to illuminate amygdala’s involvement in several core symptoms of autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Specifically, novel and testable explanations are proposed for the ASD symptoms of disorganized visual scanpaths, apparent social disinterest, preference for concrete cognition, aspects of the disorder’s heterogeneity, and impairment in some activities of daily living. Together, the presented hypothesis demonstrates substantial explanatory potential in the neuroscience, social and clinical domains.

Highlights

  • Amygdala is a complex brain structure, that is located in medial temporal lobe, and comprises some 13 nuclei and cortical areas in monkey (Freese and Amaral, 2009)

  • Monkeys were presented with two cues on each trial. They could freely choose by means of saccades to one cue to consume a fruit juice reward immediately (‘‘spend choices’’), or they could choose by saccades to the other cue to defer consumption, and accumulate multiple fruit juice rewards (‘‘save choices’’), which were further augmented with ‘‘interest.’’ Single cell recording of amygdala neurons during the performance of this task, revealed that separate populations of amygdala neurons proactively represented the economic value and length of plans, and that these were predictive of subsequent actions

  • These findings suggest there is a failure of enhancement of otherwise intact auditory and visual cortical processing in autism spectrum disorder (ASD) individuals

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Amygdala is a complex brain structure, that is located in medial temporal lobe, and comprises some 13 nuclei and cortical areas in monkey (Freese and Amaral, 2009). Amygdala is likely involved in further cognitive functions, and has long been suggested to mediate importance, significance, salience and so forth (Geschwind, 1965; Gloor et al, 1982; Amaral and Price, 1984; Sander et al, 2003; LaBar and Warren, 2009; Phelps, 2009; Adolphs, 2010; Pessoa and Adolphs, 2010). These proposals are built upon but reconceptualized and elaborated further in this hypothesis article. The functions of brain structures are best understood through connectivity findings, and through behavioral, physiological and related findings (Behrens and Johansen-Berg, 2005; Passingham and Wise, 2012), so such findings pertaining to amygdala and related regions will be examined in the two sections, respectively

Amygdala Connectivity
Perirhinal Cortex
Subjective Valence Representation
Impact Representation
Economic Value Representation
Noxiousness Representation
Importance Representation
Exclusiveness Representation
Ingroup Membership Representation
Social Status Representation
Popularity Representation
Trustworthiness Representation
Moral Representations
Further Observations and Summary
Significance for Social Processing
CAUTIONS AND DIRECTIONS FOR FUTURE RESEARCH
Findings
CONCLUSION
Full Text
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