eprintid: 17278
rev_number: 28
eprint_status: archive
userid: 602
dir: disk0/00/01/72/78
datestamp: 2009-10-29 10:47:07
lastmod: 2010-07-08 07:59:50
status_changed: 2010-07-08 07:59:50
type: thesis
metadata_visibility: show
item_issues_count: 0
creators_name: Harrison, N.A.
title: Role of the autonomic nervous system in emotional experience and social communication of distress
ispublished: unpub
subjects: 26100
subjects: 13100
divisions: F83
divisions: F69
note: Authorisation for digitisation not received
abstract: Influential theories of emotion propose that afferent bodily information is central to the experience of emotional feeling states. Neuroanatomical studies suggest a phylogenetically unique afferent neural system in primates that conveys information regarding motivationally salient aspects of the physiological condition of the viscera and other bodily organs and supports a representation of homeostatic afferent activity engendering sensations including nausea, pain and muscular aches. This thesis focuses on brain-body interactions in neural signalling of sickness and communication of emotional distress.

I begin by presenting investigations into the role of visceral afferents travelling with the autonomic nerves in the central communication of bodily inflammation and the mechanisms underlying cognitive, emotional and motivational components of sickness. Using a model of inflammation (Typhoid vaccination) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRl) I show that peripheral inflammation activates the hierarchy of brain regions encoding a representation of bodily state consistent with an autonomic afferent mechanism, wherein differential insula, subgenual cingulate and substantia nigra activity predict fatigue, mood change and psychomotor retardation respectively.

I then investigate the role of organ specific autonomic signals in the differential responses to bloody (mutilation) and core-ingestive forms of disgust. I present fMRl, heart rate and electrogastrogram data which suggest organ-specificity in bodily responses to different forms of disgust related to these distinct peripheral channels.

Finally I present data investigating the role of autonomic signals in the communication of distress and demonstrate that pupillary signals selectively modulate perception of another’s sadness. Using fMRl and pupillometry I show that another’s pupillary signals in the context of sadness modulate activity within the observer’s brain in face processing regions. Further in sadness observed pupil size leads to a contagious mirroring of the observer’s own pupil size via a mechanism that recruits brainstem pupillary control (Edinger Westphal) nuclei.
date: 2009-02
vfaculties: VFBRS
vfaculties: VFBRS
thesis_class: doctoral_md_only
language: eng
thesis_view: UCL_Thesis
full_text_status: none
pages: 290
institution: UCL (University College London)
department: Wellcome Department of Imaging Neuroscience / Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience
thesis_type: Doctoral
citation:        Harrison, N.A.;      (2009)    Role of the autonomic nervous system in emotional experience and social communication of distress.                   Doctoral thesis , UCL (University College London).