Authors
Matthew D Lieberman, Ahmad Hariri, Johanna M Jarcho, Naomi I Eisenberger, Susan Y Bookheimer
Publication date
2005/6/1
Journal
Nature neuroscience
Volume
8
Issue
6
Pages
720-722
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group US
Description
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was used to examine the nature of amygdala sensitivity to race. Both African-American and Caucasian-American individuals showed greater amygdala activity to African-American targets than to Caucasian-American targets, suggesting that race-related amygdala activity may result from cultural learning rather than from the novelty of other races. Additionally, verbal encoding of African-American targets produced significantly less amygdala activity than perceptual encoding of African-American targets.
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