Author:
Xiao Jiayang,Adkinson Joshua A.,Allawala Anusha B.,Banks Garrett,Bartoli Eleonora,Fan Xiaoxu,Mocchi Madaline,Pascuzzi Bailey,Pulapaka Suhruthaa,Franch Melissa C.,Mathew Sanjay J.,Mathura Raissa K.,Myers John,Pirtle Victoria,Provenza Nicole R,Shofty Ben,Watrous Andrew J.,Pitkow Xaq,Goodman Wayne K.,Pouratian Nader,Sheth Sameer,Bijanki Kelly R.,Hayden Benjamin Y.
Abstract
SUMMARYIn daily life, we must recognize others’ emotions so we can respond appropriately. This ability may rely, at least in part, on neural responses similar to those associated with our own emotions. We hypothesized that the insula, a cortical region near the junction of the temporal, parietal, and frontal lobes, may play a key role in this process. We recorded local field potential (LFP) activity in human neurosurgical patients performing two tasks, one focused on identifying their own emotional response and one on identifying facial emotional responses in others. We found matching patterns of gamma- and high-gamma band activity for the two tasks in the insula. Three other regions (MTL, ACC, and OFC) clearly encoded both self- and other-emotions, but used orthogonal activity patterns to do so. These results support the hypothesis that the insula plays a particularly important role in mediating between experienced vs. observed emotions.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory