Figures and Tables
From the following article:
Cognitive neuroscience of emotional memory
Kevin S LaBar & Roberto Cabeza
Nature Reviews Neuroscience 7, 54-64 (January 2006)
doi:10.1038/nrn1825
Figure 1
Potential mechanisms by which the amygdala mediates the influence of emotional arousal on memory.
Figure 2
-Adrenergic receptor blockade in healthy adults during encoding produces similar deficits to amygdala damage on a test of emotional memory.
Figure 3
Two routes to emotional remembering: arousal- and valence-mediated subsequent memory effects.
Figure 4
Interactions between the amygdala and medial temporal lobe memory system during encoding predict emotional retention advantages and recollection-based emotional retrieval.
Figure 5
Successful retrieval of emotionally arousing memories from long-term storage depends on the amygdala and medial temporal lobe memory system.
Figure 6
Studies of patients with rare brain lesions reveal dissociable contributions of the amygdala and hippocampus to conditioned fear learning.
Figure 7
Functional neuroimaging of healthy adults during conditioned fear acquisition reveals activation in a thalamo–amygdalo–cingulate network.
