Our
long-range goal is to understand how cognitive and emotional brain
systems interact in the generation of complex behavior. As a step
forward to this goal, we are currently investigating how visual
attention and emotional processing interact in the brain. Cognitive and
emotional systems have been largely considered to function separately
from one another. However, a deeper understanding of the brain function
and associated behavior requires studying interactions between the
systems. Recent techniques, including functional neuroimaging (such as
fMRI), allow the study of several brain systems simultaneously and pave
the way for the study of interactions in the brain. By studying
cognitive-emotional interactions we expect to make contributions to
understanding the neural basis of behavior. At the same time, we expect
our work to have clinical implications. For example, a better
understanding of emotion-attention interactions may have implications
in the treatment of phobias and posttraumatic stress disorder, because
a better understanding of the basic mechanisms would be expected to
clarify the processes leading to the onset of syndromes.
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