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Neural correlates of attention bias to masked facial threat cues: Examining children at-risk for social anxiety disorder

BACKGROUND: Behavioral inhibition (BI) is an early-appearing temperament trait and a robust predictor of social anxiety disorder (SAD). Both BI and anxiety may have distinct patterns of emotion processing marked by heightened neural responses to threat cues. BI and anxious children display similar f...

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Autores principales: Auday, Eran S., Taber-Thomas, Bradley C., Pérez-Edgar, Koraly E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6050468/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30023170
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2018.04.003
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author Auday, Eran S.
Taber-Thomas, Bradley C.
Pérez-Edgar, Koraly E.
author_facet Auday, Eran S.
Taber-Thomas, Bradley C.
Pérez-Edgar, Koraly E.
author_sort Auday, Eran S.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Behavioral inhibition (BI) is an early-appearing temperament trait and a robust predictor of social anxiety disorder (SAD). Both BI and anxiety may have distinct patterns of emotion processing marked by heightened neural responses to threat cues. BI and anxious children display similar frontolimbic patterns when completing an emotion-face attention bias task with supraliminal presentation. Anxious children also show a distinct neural response to the same task with subliminal face presentations, probing stimulus-driven attention networks. We do not have parallel data available for BI children, limiting our understanding of underlying affective mechanisms potentially linking early BI to the later emergence of anxiety. METHOD: We examined the neural response to subliminal threat presentation during an emotion-face masked dot-probe task in children oversampled for BI (N = 67; 30 BI, 9–12 yrs). RESULTS: Non-BI children displayed greater activation versus BI children in several regions in response to threat faces versus neutral faces, including striatum, prefrontal and temporal lobes. When comparing congruent and incongruent trials, which require attention disengagement, BI children showed greater activation than non-BI children in the cerebellum, which is implicated in rapidly coordinating information processing, aversive conditioning, and learning the precise timing of anticipatory responses. CONCLUSIONS: Non-BI children may more readily engage rapid coordinated frontolimbic circuitry to salient stimuli, whereas BI children may preferentially engage subcortical circuitry, in response to limbic “alarms” triggered by subliminal threat cues. These data help reveal the extent to which temperamental risk shares similar neurocircuitry previously documented in anxious adolescents and young adults in response to masked threat.
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spelling pubmed-60504682018-07-18 Neural correlates of attention bias to masked facial threat cues: Examining children at-risk for social anxiety disorder Auday, Eran S. Taber-Thomas, Bradley C. Pérez-Edgar, Koraly E. Neuroimage Clin Regular Article BACKGROUND: Behavioral inhibition (BI) is an early-appearing temperament trait and a robust predictor of social anxiety disorder (SAD). Both BI and anxiety may have distinct patterns of emotion processing marked by heightened neural responses to threat cues. BI and anxious children display similar frontolimbic patterns when completing an emotion-face attention bias task with supraliminal presentation. Anxious children also show a distinct neural response to the same task with subliminal face presentations, probing stimulus-driven attention networks. We do not have parallel data available for BI children, limiting our understanding of underlying affective mechanisms potentially linking early BI to the later emergence of anxiety. METHOD: We examined the neural response to subliminal threat presentation during an emotion-face masked dot-probe task in children oversampled for BI (N = 67; 30 BI, 9–12 yrs). RESULTS: Non-BI children displayed greater activation versus BI children in several regions in response to threat faces versus neutral faces, including striatum, prefrontal and temporal lobes. When comparing congruent and incongruent trials, which require attention disengagement, BI children showed greater activation than non-BI children in the cerebellum, which is implicated in rapidly coordinating information processing, aversive conditioning, and learning the precise timing of anticipatory responses. CONCLUSIONS: Non-BI children may more readily engage rapid coordinated frontolimbic circuitry to salient stimuli, whereas BI children may preferentially engage subcortical circuitry, in response to limbic “alarms” triggered by subliminal threat cues. These data help reveal the extent to which temperamental risk shares similar neurocircuitry previously documented in anxious adolescents and young adults in response to masked threat. Elsevier 2018-04-12 /pmc/articles/PMC6050468/ /pubmed/30023170 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2018.04.003 Text en © 2018 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Regular Article
Auday, Eran S.
Taber-Thomas, Bradley C.
Pérez-Edgar, Koraly E.
Neural correlates of attention bias to masked facial threat cues: Examining children at-risk for social anxiety disorder
title Neural correlates of attention bias to masked facial threat cues: Examining children at-risk for social anxiety disorder
title_full Neural correlates of attention bias to masked facial threat cues: Examining children at-risk for social anxiety disorder
title_fullStr Neural correlates of attention bias to masked facial threat cues: Examining children at-risk for social anxiety disorder
title_full_unstemmed Neural correlates of attention bias to masked facial threat cues: Examining children at-risk for social anxiety disorder
title_short Neural correlates of attention bias to masked facial threat cues: Examining children at-risk for social anxiety disorder
title_sort neural correlates of attention bias to masked facial threat cues: examining children at-risk for social anxiety disorder
topic Regular Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6050468/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30023170
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2018.04.003
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