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Article
Nature Neuroscience  3, 1049 - 1056 (2000)
doi:10.1038/79871

Subcortical and cortical brain activity during the feeling of self-generated emotions

Antonio R. Damasio, Thomas J. Grabowski, Antoine Bechara, Hanna Damasio, Laura L.B. Ponto, Josef Parvizi & Richard D. Hichwa

Department of Neurology (Division of Cognitive Neuroscience) and PET Imaging Center, University of Iowa College of Medicine, 200 Hawkins Drive, Iowa City, Iowa 52242, USA

Correspondence should be addressed to Antonio R. Damasio antonio-damasio@uiowa.edu
In a series of [15O]PET experiments aimed at investigating the neural basis of emotion and feeling, 41 normal subjects recalled and re-experienced personal life episodes marked by sadness, happiness, anger or fear. We tested the hypothesis that the process of feeling emotions requires the participation of brain regions, such as the somatosensory cortices and the upper brainstem nuclei, that are involved in the mapping and/or regulation of internal organism states. Such areas were indeed engaged, underscoring the close relationship between emotion and homeostasis. The findings also lend support to the idea that the subjective process of feeling emotions is partly grounded in dynamic neural maps, which represent several aspects of the organism's continuously changing internal state.

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Nature Neuroscience
ISSN: 1097-6256
EISSN: 1546-1726
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