AI Article Synopsis

  • 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.

Article Abstract

One of the hallmarks of anxiety disorders is impaired cognitive control, affecting working memory (WM). The dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) is critical for WM; however, it is still unclear how dlPFC activity relates to WM impairments in patients. Forty-one healthy volunteers and 32 anxiety (general and/or social anxiety disorder) patients completed the Sternberg WM paradigm during safety and unpredictable shock threat. On each trial, a series of letters was presented, followed by brief retention and response intervals. On low- and high-load trials, subjects retained the series (five and eight letters, respectively) in the original order, while on sort trials, subjects rearranged the series (five letters) in alphabetical order. We sampled the blood oxygenation level-dependent activity during retention using a bilateral anatomical dlPFC mask. Compared to controls, patients showed increased reaction time during high-load trials, greater right dlPFC activity and reduced dlPFC activity during threat. These results suggest that WM performance for patients and controls may rely on distinct patterns of dlPFC activity with patients requiring bilateral dlPFC activity. These results are consistent with reduced efficiency of WM in anxiety patients. This reduced efficiency may be due to an inefficient allocation of dlPFC resources across hemispheres or a decreased overall dlPFC capacity.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7759210PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/scan/nsaa146DOI Listing

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