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Chunk #66 — The Theory of Urgency — Brain Pathways Related to Emotion-Based Action

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Emotion-based dispositions to rash action: positive and negative urgency.
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At times, the experience of intense emotion, and its accompanying potential actions, is inconsistent with one's long-term goals. The OFC, perhaps particularly the left VM PFC, provides a biasing signal to avoid immediate reward, and thus maintain one's pursuit of one's longer-term goals. Davidson (2003) refers to this process as affect-guided planning and anticipation: with healthy left VM PFC functioning, one gains access to the emotion associated with anticipated outcomes consistent with one's long-term goals. The ability to do so is, Davidson argues, the hallmark of adaptive, emotion-based decision making. At times, long-term affect-guided planning is difficult: the experience of intense emotions unrelated to one's long-term interests may disrupt processing with regard to those interests (Gray, 1999; Preston, Buchanan, Stansfield, & Bechara, 2007). But healthy functioning of the left VM PFC helps one maintain an affective connection to one's longer-term goals, and thus plan accordingly.