Title of article
Emotion-related brain activity to conflicting socio-emotional cues in unmedicated depression
Author/Authors
Greening، نويسنده , , Steven G. and Osuch، نويسنده , , Elizabeth A. and Williamson، نويسنده , , Peter C. and Mitchell، نويسنده , , Derek G.V.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages
6
From page
1136
To page
1141
Abstract
AbstractBackground
alities in amygdala function have been implicated in major depression. However, results are inconsistent, and little is known about how the depressed brain encodes conflicting social signals. We sought to determine how the task relevance of socio-emotional cues impacts neural encoding of emotion in depression.
s
en medication-free depressed patients and 18 matched controls participated in an FMRI experiment. Whole-brain analyses and a region-of-interest approach was used to measure amygdala activity during the presentation of fearful, happy, or neutral target faces with congruent, incongruent, or neutral distracters.
s
r amygdala activity to target fearful faces was associated with depression, as was attenuated amygdala activity to target and peripheral happy faces. Although no group differences emerged in the amygdala to unattended fearful faces, we observed reduced ventrolateral and dorsomedial prefrontal activity in depressed individuals during this condition.
tions
atients had a history of anti-depressant use, though they were unmedicated for at least three months at testing.
sions
sion was associated with reduced amygdala reactivity to positive social stimuli. However, enhanced amygdala responsiveness to negative emotional cues was only observed to target (attended) expressions. The results highlight the need to further determine factors that affect emotional reactivity in depression.
Keywords
Major Depression , FMRI , attention , Amygdala , emotion , facial expressions
Journal title
Journal of Affective Disorders
Serial Year
2013
Journal title
Journal of Affective Disorders
Record number
1433985
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