Depression: Perspectives from Affective Neuroscience
University of Wisconsin–Madison
Indexed incrossrefpubmed
Abstract
Depression is a disorder of the representation and regulation of mood and emotion. The circuitry underlying the representation and regulation of normal emotion and mood is reviewed, including studies at the animal level, human lesion studies, and human brain imaging studies. This corpus of data is used to construct a model of the ways in which affect can become disordered in depression. Research on the prefrontal cortex, anterior cingulate, hippocampus, and amygdala is reviewed and abnormalities in the structure and function of these different regions in depression is considered. The review concludes with proposals for the specific types of processing abnormalities that result from dysfunctions in different…
Citation impact
1,135
total citations
- FWCI
- 22.16
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 183
Citations per year
Authors
4Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Psychology
- Amygdala
- Mood
- Neuroscience
- Affect (linguistics)
- Prefrontal cortex
- Anterior cingulate cortex
- Depression (economics)
No related works found for this paper.