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Anger is relate positively to the amygdala. It seems that people with higher scores in anxiety scale, are more suspitable to anger and amygdala reactivity, in men but not in women. It further suggest that heightened amygdala reactivity to angry faces may be uniquely involved in the expression of reactive aggression in men<ref>[http://www.carrelab.com/Carre_et_al_2011_SCAN.pdf Justin M. Carre ́, Patrick M. Fisher, Stephen B. Manuck, and Ahmad R. Hariri, Interaction between trait anxiety and trait anger predict amygdala reactivity to angry facial expressions in men but not women]</ref>.
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Anger is relate positively to the [[amygdala]]. individual differences in trait anger are positively correlated with bilateral dorsal amygdala reactivity to angry facial expressions, but only among men with elevated trait anxiety scores. It seems that people with higher scores in anxiety scale, are more suspitable to anger and amygdala reactivity, in men but not in women. It further suggest that heightened amygdala reactivity to angry faces may be uniquely involved in the expression of reactive aggression in men<ref>[http://www.carrelab.com/Carre_et_al_2011_SCAN.pdf Justin M. Carre ́, Patrick M. Fisher, Stephen B. Manuck, and Ahmad R. Hariri, Interaction between trait anxiety and trait anger predict amygdala reactivity to angry facial expressions in men but not women]</ref>.
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Latest revision as of 01:47, 21 September 2012

Anger is relate positively to the amygdala. individual differences in trait anger are positively correlated with bilateral dorsal amygdala reactivity to angry facial expressions, but only among men with elevated trait anxiety scores. It seems that people with higher scores in anxiety scale, are more suspitable to anger and amygdala reactivity, in men but not in women. It further suggest that heightened amygdala reactivity to angry faces may be uniquely involved in the expression of reactive aggression in men[1].

References