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Post-Traumatic Stress Constrains the Dynamic Repertoire of Neural Activity.

Bratislav MišićBenjamin T DunkleyPaul A SedgeLeodante Da CostaZainab FatimaMarc G BermanSam M DoesburgAnthony R McIntoshRichard GrodeckiRakesh JetlyElizabeth W PangMargot J Taylor
Published in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2016)
The present study investigates the effects of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in combat-exposed soldiers. We find that soldiers with PTSD exhibit hypersynchrony in a circuit of temporal lobe areas associated with learning and memory function. This rigid functional architecture is associated with a decrease in signal variability in the same areas, suggesting that the observed hypersynchrony may constrain the expression of local dynamics, resulting in a reduced dynamic range. Our findings suggest that the re-experiencing of traumatic events in PTSD may result from functional networks becoming locked in configurations that reflect memories, emotions, and thoughts associated with the traumatic experience.
Keyphrases
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