Publications by authors named "Abigail Hsiung"

When people feel curious, they often seek information to resolve their curiosity. Reaching resolution, however, does not always occur in a single step but instead may follow the accumulation of information over time. Here, we investigated changes in curiosity over a dynamic information-gathering process and how these changes related to affective and cognitive states as well as behavior.

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The hippocampus has been a focus of memory research since H.M's surgery abolished his ability to form new memories, yet its mechanistic role in memory remains debated. Here, we identify a candidate memory mechanism: an anticipatory hippocampal "convergence state", observed while awaiting valuable information, and which predicts subsequent learning.

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Article Synopsis
  • Anxiety disorders involve inappropriate reactions to threats that are far away or unclear, making it crucial to understand how the brain functions in these conditions.
  • During an fMRI study, individuals with anxiety (ANX) showed less activation in areas like the ventromedial prefrontal cortex and anterior hippocampus when in safe zones, which healthy controls (HC) activated more.
  • Conversely, ANX exhibited heightened activity in brain regions like the insula and amygdala in dangerous situations, suggesting they process emotional cues in their environment differently.
  • These results imply that people with anxiety encounter challenges in tuning their emotional reactions based on context.
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  • Research shows that anxiety disorders impair cognitive control, particularly affecting working memory (WM).
  • In a study, anxiety patients displayed slower reaction times and different patterns of dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) activity compared to healthy individuals during working memory tasks.
  • These findings suggest that anxiety patients may rely on both sides of the dlPFC for WM, indicating reduced efficiency and capacity in managing cognitive tasks.
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Despite interest in exercise as a treatment for anxiety disorders the mechanism behind the anxiolytic effects of exercise is unclear. Two observations motivate the present work. First, engagement of attention control during increased working memory (WM) load can decrease anxiety.

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Background: Research supports the anxiolytic effect of exercise, but the mechanism underlying this effect is unclear. This study examines the influence of exercise in healthy controls on two distinct defensive states implicated in anxiety disorders: fear, a phasic response to a predictable threat, and anxiety, a sustained response to an unpredictable threat.

Methods: Thirty-four healthy volunteers (17 male, age M = 26.

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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.

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The purpose of this protocol is to explain how to examine the relationship between working memory processes and anxiety by combining the Sternberg Working Memory (WM) and the threat of shock paradigms. In the Sternberg WM paradigm, subjects are required to maintain a series of letters in the WM for a brief interval and respond by identifying whether the position of a given letter in the series matches a numerical prompt. In the threat of shock paradigm, subjects are exposed to alternating blocks where they are either at risk of receiving unpredictable presentations of a mild electric shock or are safe from the shock.

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Anxiety disorders affect approximately 1 in 5 (18%) Americans within a given 1 year period, placing a substantial burden on the national health care system. Therefore, there is a critical need to understand the neural mechanisms mediating anxiety symptoms. We used unbiased, multimodal, data-driven, whole-brain measures of neural activity (magnetoencephalography) and connectivity (fMRI) to identify the regions of the brain that contribute most prominently to sustained anxiety.

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