Posttraumatic stress disorder and the social brain: Affect-related disruption of the default and mirror networks.
Kevin M TanLisa J BurklundMichelle G CraskeMatthew D LiebermanPublished in: Depression and anxiety (2019)
The array of social cognitive processes subserved by DMN and MNS appear to be inordinately selective for emotional stimuli in PTSD. However, core affective processes do not appear to be the primary instigators of such selectivity. Instead, we propose that affective attentional biases may instigate widespread affect-selectivity throughout the social brain. Affect labeling training may inhibit such biases. These accounts align with numerous reports of affect-biased attentional processes in PTSD.