Repeated fMRI in measuring the activation of the amygdala without habituation when viewing faces displaying negative emotions.
Jennifer SpohrsJulia E BoschLisa DommesPetra BeschonerJulia C StinglFranziska GeiserKatharina SchneiderJörg BreitfeldRoberto VivianiPublished in: PloS one (2018)
Functional imaging studies of affective disorders have demonstrated abnormal activity in the amygdala in response to emotionally salient stimuli. Since in other studies this response has been shown to habituate during the scanning session, it is not clear if it may be of use in monitoring disease progression or remission, or in monitoring the effects of therapy, as habituation may confound normalisation of response. We investigated here amygdala activation in healthy participants exposed to displays of emotional facial expressions in a sample of N = 31 individuals assessed twice in an interval of three weeks. At this interval no habituation could be detected, suggesting the validity of this imaging assay in repeated assessments of amygdalar reactivity. However, the fusiform gyrus and the inferior frontal lobes showed decreases in activations that may be related to the role of these areas in encoding visual and emotional aspects of the stimuli.
Keyphrases
- functional connectivity
- resting state
- high resolution
- prefrontal cortex
- case control
- temporal lobe epilepsy
- high throughput
- systemic lupus erythematosus
- high intensity
- disease activity
- working memory
- cell therapy
- transcranial direct current stimulation
- atomic force microscopy
- gestational age
- soft tissue
- single molecule