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Rare genetic disease makes scientists reconsider what the 'seat of fear' in the brain really is

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CitrixNews Staff
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Rare genetic disease makes scientists reconsider what the 'seat of fear' in the brain really is
A collage photo of a white double helix on a blue background. Overlaid on top are images of a brain scan, a map, an older woman and younger man and a painting of a woman with dark hair and flowers. Researchers are looking at rare genetic diseases to understand more about the brain. (Image credit: Knowable Magazine) Share this article 0 Join the conversation Add us as a preferred source on Google Newsletter Subscribe to our newsletter

The wind picks up dust from the unpaved road one afternoon in December as Jack van Honk turns into a ramshackle neighborhood in Lambert's Bay, on the west coast of South Africa. A stocky woman in a red patterned sundress steps out of a small home painted palest sea green, her ochre-dirt yard crowded with potted plants, many medicinal. She smiles broadly, deep wrinkles creasing a face that is cherubic and yet careworn beyond her 47 years. "Doctor! I missed you," she beams, her husky voice barely more than a hoarse whisper.

Maria carries a rare genetic mutation that is almost unknown outside of southern Africa. Its effects have been to calcify a part of the brain called the basolateral amygdala, and to thicken and scar the vocal cords. A friend of Maria with the same condition lives several hours inland, and sometimes they meet when van Honk brings them to Cape Town for brain scans and other tests. "It helps to know I'm not alone," Maria says.

Maria lives with a rare genetic disorder that damages part of the amygdala — a brain region increasingly linked not just to fear, but to how humans weigh the needs of others.

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Social neuroscientist Jack van Honk has spent two decades studying people with Urbach-Wiethe disease in South Africa.

(Image credit: Richard Stone)

MRI scan of a person with Urbach-Wiethe disease. Arrows indicate bilateral calcification in the basolateral amygdala, a brain region involved in fear-learning and social decision-making.

(Image credit: David Terburg)

"It appears that they can't trade off their own benefit versus the benefit of others."

Tobias Kalenscher, psychologist at the University of Dusseldorf

Scientists suspect communication between the basolateral amygdala and the ventromedial prefrontal cortex helps people balance self-interest with concern for others when making social decisions.

(Image credit: Knowable Magazine)RELATED STORIES

Richard StoneSenior international correspondent

Richard Stone is the senior international correspondent for Science Magazine.

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Originally reported by Live Science