LOOKING UNDER THE HOOD OF THE DOT-PROBE TASK: AN fMRI STUDY IN ANXIOUS YOUTH
Autor: | Ashley McFarland, Neal D. Ryan, Ronald E. Dahl, Greg J. Siegle, Cecile D. Ladouceur, Rebecca B. Price, Jennifer S. Silk |
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Rok vydání: | 2014 |
Předmět: |
Generalized anxiety disorder
Separation anxiety disorder Hippocampus Attentional bias medicine.disease Developmental psychology Psychiatry and Mental health Clinical Psychology medicine.anatomical_structure medicine Anxiety Disengagement theory medicine.symptom Reactivity (psychology) Psychology Anterior cingulate cortex |
Zdroj: | Depression and Anxiety. 31:178-187 |
ISSN: | 1091-4269 |
DOI: | 10.1002/da.22255 |
Popis: | Author(s): Price, Rebecca B; Siegle, Greg J; Silk, Jennifer S; Ladouceur, Cecile D; McFarland, Ashley; Dahl, Ronald E; Ryan, Neal D | Abstract: BackgroundAnxious youth have shown altered behavioral performance on the dot-probe task, but neural activation patterns provoked by the task remain poorly understood. In particular, neural mechanisms of threat disengagement, a clinically relevant construct, have been inadequately explored.MethodDuring fMRI acquisition, 121 youth (ages 9-13; 90 with Generalized Anxiety Disorder, Separation Anxiety Disorder, and/or Social Phobia; 31 nonanxious controls) completed a dot-probe task, which required participants to identify the location of a dot replacing either a neutral or fearful face in a pair containing both faces. We assessed neural substrates of threat disengagement by comparing congruent trials (in which the dot replaces the fearful face) to incongruent trials (in which the dot replaces the neutral face).ResultsAcross subjects, decreased rostrodorsal anterior cingulate cortex (rdACC) activity was observed specifically during incongruent trials. Nonanxious youth showed a convergent pattern in bilateral parahippocampal and hippocampal regions, whereas anxious youth showed an opposing pattern in these limbic areas, suggesting less integration of response across cortical and limbic areas relevant to threat appraisal. Reduced functional connectivity between rdACC and left parahippocampus/hippocampus was associated with greater anxiety.ConclusionsIn the largest dot-probe fMRI sample to date, both anxious and nonanxious youth showed a neural pattern consistent with successful disengagement of threat reactivity in the rdACC. However, anxious youth showed evidence of abnormal disengagement in bilateral parahippocampal/hippocampal clusters when attention was directed away from threat. Early interventions targeting neural mechanisms of threat disengagement may be beneficial, for example, by increasing integration across rdACC and limbic regions. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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