WOULD YOU LIKE TO HELP US IN OUR FIGHT AGAINST MENTAL ILLNESS ?

Publication
Neuroimage , Internet (/Sep/2009)
:804-14
Published 2009
The INTEGRATE Model draws on the framework of 'integrative neuroscience' to bring together brain-body and behavioral concepts of emotion, thinking and feeling and their regulation. The key organizing principle is the drive to 'minimize danger and maximize reward' that determines what is significant to us at each point in time. Traits of 'negativity bias' reflect the tendency to perceive danger rather than reward related information, and this bias influences emotion, thinking and feeling processes. Here, we examined a self-report measure of Negativity Bias in relation to its impact on brain and body correlates of emotion processing. The contributions of the serotonin transporter (5-HTT-LPR) allelic variants and early life stress to both negativity bias and these correlates were also examined. Data were accessed in collaboration with the Brain Resource International Database (BRID) which provides standardized data across these domains of measurement. From an initial sample of 303 nonclinical subjects from the BRID, subjects scoring one standard deviation below (n=55) and above (n=47) the mean on the measure of negativity bias were identified as 'Negativity Bias' and 'Positivity Bias' groups for analysis, respectively. These subjects had been genotyped for 5-HTT-LPR Short allele versus LL homozygote status, and completed the early life stress scale, and recording of startle responses and heart rate for conscious and nonconscious fear conditions. A matched subset (n=39) of BRID subjects completed functional MRI with the same facial emotion tasks. The Negativity Bias (compared to Positivity Bias) group was distinguished by both arousal and brain function correlates: higher startle amplitude, higher heart rate for conscious and nonconscious fear conditions, and heightened activation in neural circuitry for both fear conditions. Regions of heightened activation included brainstem and bilateral amygdala, anterior cingulate and ventral and dorsal medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) for conscious fear, and in brainstem and right-sided amygdala, anterior cingulate and ventral, mPFC for nonconscious fear. The 5-HTT-LPR Short allele (versus LL) conferred a similar pattern of arousal and neural activation. For those with the 5-HTT-LPR Short allele, the addition of early life stress contributed to enhanced negativity bias, and to further effects on heart rate and neural activation for nonconscious fear in particular. These findings suggest that traits of negativity bias impact brain-body arousal correlates of fear circuitry. Both genetic variation and life stressors contribute to the impact of negativity bias. Given that negativity bias is a feature of conditions such as depression and associated biological alterations, the findings have implications for translation into clinical decision support.
PDF available from the following link
- Elsevier Science

- Swets Information Services

- Imperial College London, UK

- University of Wisconsin-Madison

- UCL Library Services

- University of New Mexico Health Sciences Library and Informatics Center

- University of Colorado Denver, Health Sciences Library

- CASPUR

- B-on Biblioteca do Conhecimento, Portugal

- CSIRO Library

- Universitaetsbibliothek Regensburg

- Arizona Health Sciences Library

- University of Georgia Libraries

- University of Oxford

- CHANG GUNG UNIVERSITY

- Lancaster University

- National Yang Ming University

- Harvard University Library

- Victoria College/University of Houston-Victoria, TX

- Medicinsk Bibliotek Sydvestjysk Sygehus, Denmark

- Maccabi Health Services, Israel

- BIBLIOTECA MEDICA ARCISPEDALE S.MARIA NUOVA, Italy

- Tel-Hai Academic College, Israel

- Tel Aviv University Library of Life Sciences & Medicine, Israel

- Hadassah college-Jerusalem, Israel

- Genentech Inc., South San Francisco, CA

- Emek Yezreel Academic College, Israel

- Drexel University Libraries

- Danish Veterinary and Agricultural Library

- University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa

- Ruppin College, Israel

- University of Mississippi Medical Center Library

- Regionshospitalet Viborg, Skive, Denmark

- Boise State University Libraries

- University of the Sciences in Philadelphia

- CEVEAS-LIBRARY, Modena, Italy

- University of Southampton, United Kingdom

- University of South Alabama Biomedical Library

- Region Hovedstad, Denmark

- Region Midtjylland, Denmark

- Region Syddanmark, Denmark

- Clalit Health Services Community Division, Tel Aviv, Israel

- University of Cape Town Libraries

- Central Medical Library, UMCG & University of Groningen, The Netherlands

- King's College London

- Kyoto University Library

- INRA, France

- Talecris Biotherapeutics

- University of Antwerp - Library

- Twente University Library

All information contained in this site remains the property of The Brain Dynamics Centre.
Use of this site is governed by Australian & International copright laws.
Latest Publication
Designed by Creatio
Powered by