PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Kryklywy, James H. AU - Lu, Amy AU - Roberts, Kevin H. AU - Rowan, Matt AU - Todd, Rebecca M. TI - Lateralization of autonomic output in response to limb-specific threat AID - 10.1523/ENEURO.0011-22.2022 DP - 2022 Aug 25 TA - eneuro PG - ENEURO.0011-22.2022 4099 - http://www.eneuro.org/content/early/2022/08/22/ENEURO.0011-22.2022.short 4100 - http://www.eneuro.org/content/early/2022/08/22/ENEURO.0011-22.2022.full AB - In times of stress or danger, the autonomic nervous system (ANS) signals the fight or flight response. A canonical function of ANS activity is to globally mobilize metabolic resources, preparing the organism to respond to threat. Yet a body of research has demonstrated that, rather than displaying a homogenous pattern across the body, autonomic responses to arousing events — as measured through changes in electrodermal activity (EDA) — can differ between right and left body locations. Surprisingly, an attempt to identify a function of ANS asymmetry consistent with its metabolic role has not been investigated. In the current study, we investigated whether asymmetric autonomic responses could be induced through limb-specific aversive stimulation. Participants were given mild electric stimulation to either the left or right arm while EDA was monitored bilaterally. In a group-level analyses, an ipsilateral EDA response bias was observed, with increased EDA response in the hand adjacent to the stimulation. This effect was observable in ∼50% of individual particpants. These results demonstrate that autonomic output is more complex than canonical interpretations suggest. We suggest that, in stressful situations, autonomic outputs can prepare either the whole-body fight or flight response, or a simply a limb-localized flick, which can effectively neutralize the threat while minimizing global resource consumption. These findings are consistent with recent theories proposing evolutionary leveraging of neural structures organized to mediate sensory responses for processing of cognitive emotional cues.Significance statementThe present study constitutes novel evidence for an autonomic nervous response specific to the side of the body exposed to direct threat. We identify a robust pattern of electrodermal response at the body location that directly receives aversive tactile stimulation. Thus, we demonstrate for the first time in contemporary research that the ANS is capable of location-specific outputs within single effector organs in response to small scale threat. This extends the canonical view of the role of ANS responses in stressful or dangerous stresses — that of provoking a ‘fight or flight’ response — suggesting a further role of this system: preparation of targeted limb-specific action, i.e., a flick.