AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how the ventral anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) suppresses the amygdala during emotion regulation, specifically in women with emotional distress disorders.
  • There was no behavioral evidence of emotional conflict adaptation while a significant impact of congruent adaptation was found, indicating specific impairment in emotion regulation.
  • Increased connectivity between the ventral ACC and amygdala during emotional conflict was linked to greater instability in emotions in real-life situations, suggesting this impairment contributes to daily affective instability in these individuals.

Article Abstract

Emotional conflict adaptation involving ventral anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) suppression of the amygdala is thought to be important in emotion regulation, with evidence of impaired implicit emotion regulation in emotional distress disorders. However, it is unclear how this impairment is associated with daily-life emotion dysregulation in emotional distress disorders. In the current study, female participants with an emotional distress disorder (N = 27) were scanned with MRI while completing an implicit emotion conflict regulation task that involved identifying the facial expression of an image while ignoring an overlaid congruent or incongruent affect label. Participants then completed two weeks of ambulatory assessment of daily-life emotion dysregulation. Consistent with previous research on comorbid emotional distress disorders (Etkin and Schatzberg, 2011), there was no behavioral effect of emotional conflict adaptation (p = .701) but a significant effect of congruent adaptation (p = .006), suggesting impairment is specific to implicit emotional conflict regulation. Additionally, there was no neural evidence of emotional conflict adaptation in the ventral ACC and amygdala (ps > .766). Further, in our primary psychophysiological interactions analyses, we examined ventral ACC-amygdala functional connectivity. As hypothesized, increased ventral ACC-amygdala functional connectivity for emotional conflict adaptation was associated with increased daily-life affective instability (p = .022), but not mean daily-life negative affect (p = .372). Overall, results provide behavioral and neural evidence of impaired implicit emotional conflict adaptation in individuals with emotional distress disorders and suggests that this impairment is related to daily-life affective instability in these disorders.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2021.107905DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

emotional conflict
28
conflict adaptation
20
emotional distress
20
distress disorders
16
functional connectivity
12
emotional
12
implicit emotional
12
conflict regulation
12
daily-life emotion
12
emotion dysregulation
12

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!