Have we met before? Neural correlates of emotional learning in women with social phobia
Autor: | Laeger, Inga, Keuper, Kati, Heitmann, Carina, Kugel, Harald, Dobel, Christian, Eden, Annuschka, Arolt, Volker, Zwitserlood, Pienie, Dannlowski, Udo, Zwanzger, Peter |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2014 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Psychiatric Status Rating Scales Brain Mapping Online Research Papers Emotions Association Learning Brain Neuropsychological Tests Amygdala Magnetic Resonance Imaging Facial Expression Pattern Recognition Visual Phobic Disorders Reading Memory Face Humans Female Social Behavior Photic Stimulation |
Popis: | Altered memory processes are thought to be a key mechanism in the etiology of anxiety disorders, but little is known about the neural correlates of fear learning and memory biases in patients with social phobia. The present study therefore examined whether patients with social phobia exhibit different patterns of neural activation when confronted with recently acquired emotional stimuli.Patients with social phobia and a group of healthy controls learned to associate pseudonames with pictures of persons displaying either a fearful or a neutral expression. The next day, participants read the pseudonames in the magnetic resonance imaging scanner. Afterwards, 2 memory tests were carried out.We enrolled 21 patients and 21 controls in our study. There were no group differences for learning performance, and results of the memory tests were mixed. On a neural level, patients showed weaker amygdala activation than controls for the contrast of names previously associated with fearful versus neutral faces. Social phobia severity was negatively related to amygdala activation. Moreover, a detailed psychophysiological interaction analysis revealed an inverse correlation between disorder severity and frontolimbic connectivity for the emotionalneutral pseudonames contrast.Our sample included only women.Our results support the theory of a disturbed cortico limbic interplay, even for recently learned emotional stimuli. We discuss the findings with regard to the vigilance-avoidance theory and contrast them to results indicating an oversensitive limbic system in patients with social phobia. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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