Skip to main content

Gating of visual processing by physiological need.

Citation
Burgess, C. R., et al. “Gating Of Visual Processing By Physiological Need.”. Current Opinion In Neurobiology, pp. 16-23.
Center University of Michigan
Author Christian R Burgess, Yoav Livneh, Rohan N Ramesh, Mark L Andermann
Abstract

Physiological need states and associated motivational drives can bias visual processing of cues that help meet these needs. Human neuroimaging studies consistently show a hunger-dependent, selective enhancement of responses to images of food in association cortex and amygdala. More recently, cellular-resolution imaging combined with circuit mapping experiments in behaving mice have revealed underlying neuronal population dynamics and enabled tracing of pathways by which hunger circuits influence the assignment of value to visual objects in visual association cortex, insular cortex, and amygdala. These experiments begin to provide a mechanistic understanding of motivation-specific neural processing of need-relevant cues in healthy humans and in disease states such as obesity and other eating disorders.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Current opinion in neurobiology
Volume
49
Number of Pages
16-23
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
1873-6882
DOI
10.1016/j.conb.2017.10.020
Alternate Journal
Curr. Opin. Neurobiol.
PMID
29125986
PMCID
PMC5889964
Download citation