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Neural recordings track how neurons link environments to emotional events.
Whenever something bad happens to us, brain systems responsible for mediating emotions kick in to prevent it from happening again. When we get stung by a wasp, the association between pain and wasps is encoded in the region of the brain called the amygdala, which connects simple stimuli with basic emotions.
But the brain does more than simple associations; it also encodes lots of other stimuli that are less directly connected with the harmful event—things like the place where we got stung or the wasps’ nest in a nearby tree. These are combined into complex emotional models of potentially threatening circumstances.
Till now, we didn’t know exactly how these models are built. But we’re beginning to understand how it’s done.
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Incredible how the brain doesn’t just remember the sting, but builds an entire map of the experience location, context, even small cues. Makes you realize how deeply our minds work to protect us, sometimes even overreacting to keep us safe.
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