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Personality Influences the Neural Responses to Viewing Facial Expressions of Emotion
Authors:
CALDER, A.J. EWBANK, M., & Passamonti, L.
Reference:
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B, 366(1571), 1684-1701
Year of publication:
2011
CBU number:
7190
Abstract:
Cognitive research has long been aware of the relationship between individual differences in personality and performance on behavioural tasks. However, within the field of cognitive neuroscience, the way in which such differences manifest at a neural level has received relatively little attention. We review recent research addressing the relationship between personality traits and the neural response to viewing facial signals of emotion. In one section, we discuss work demonstrating the relationship between anxiety and the amygdala response to facial signals of threat. A second section considers research showing that individual differences in reward drive (Behavioural Activation System), a trait linked to aggression, influence the neural responsivity and connectivity between brain regions implicated in aggression when viewing facial signals of anger. Finally, we address recent criticisms of this approach and conclude that when used appropriately, analyses examining the relationship between personality and brain activity provide a useful tool for understanding the neural basis of facial expression processing and emotion processing in general.
URL:
MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit

