Although we, in fact, showed enhanced attention to threatening (angry) facial expressions after right prefrontal cortex rTMS
+(2), our finding is in accordance with the valence model. Threat can be displayed by fearful and angry facial expressions, but whereas fear is a withdrawal-related emotion associated with relatively more right-sided activity of the prefrontal cortex, anger is an approach-related emotion associated with relatively more left prefrontal cortex activity
+(4). The local inhibitory effects of slow rTMS of the right prefrontal cortex induce relatively more left prefrontal cortex activity and thus enhance attention to angry faces
+(2). Slow rTMS of the right prefrontal cortex should contrariwise reduce attention to fearful faces since there is clearly relatively less right prefrontal activity. In agreement, we recently demonstrated reduced attention to fearful faces in a placebo-controlled study of slow rTMS over the right prefrontal cortex
+(4). These findings concur with the reductions in fear-related PTSD symptoms by McCann et al.
+(3) Moreover, rTMS-EEG research indicates that the reductions in attention to fearful faces
+(4) are anxiolytically mediated and that the local inhibitory effects of right prefrontal cortex rTMS result in excitation of the left prefrontal cortex
+(5). Such left prefrontal cortex excitation after slow rTMS of the right prefrontal cortex is not counterintuitive but is defensibly due to reductions in transcallosal inhibition, a crucial mechanism in the valence model of emotion.