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- Title
Effect of Threat on Right dlPFC Activity during Behavioral Pattern Separation.
- Authors
Balderston, Nicholas L.; Hsiung, Abigail; Ernst, Monique; Grillon, Christian
- Abstract
It has long been established that individuals with anxiety disorders tend to overgeneralize attributes of fearful stimuli to nonfearful stimuli, but there is little mechanistic understanding of the neural system that supports overgeneralization. To address this gap in our knowledge, this study examined effect of experimentally induced anxiety in humans on generalization using the behavioral pattern separation (BPS) paradigm. Healthy subjects of both sexes encoded and retrieved novel objects during periods of safety and threat of unpredictable shocks while we recorded brain activity with fMRI. During retrieval, subjects were instructed to differentiate among new, old, and altered images. We hypothesized that the hippocampus and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) would play a key ro e in the effect of anxiety on BPS. The dlPFC, but not the hippocampus, showed increased activity for altered images compared with old images when retrieval occurred during periods of threat compared with safety. In addition, accuracy for altered items retrieved during threat was correlated with dlPFC activity. Together, these results suggest that overgeneralization in anxiety patients may be mediated by an inability to recruit the dlPFC, which mediates the cognitive control needed to overcome anxiety and differentiate between old and altered items during periods of threat.
- Subjects
ANXIETY disorders; FUNCTIONAL magnetic resonance imaging; HIPPOCAMPUS (Brain); PREFRONTAL cortex; HUMAN behavior
- Publication
Journal of Neuroscience, 2017, Vol 37, Issue 38, p9160
- ISSN
0270-6474
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0717-17.2017