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Individual differences in anxiety and automatic amygdala response to fearful faces: A replication and extension of Etkin et al. (2004)

Trait anxiety refers to the stable tendency to attend to threats and experience fears and worries across many situations. According to the widely noticed, pioneering investigation by Etkin et al. (2004) trait anxiety is strongly associated with reactivity in the right basolateral amygdala to non-con...

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Autores principales: Günther, Vivien, Hußlack, Anja, Weil, Anna-Sophie, Bujanow, Anna, Henkelmann, Jeanette, Kersting, Anette, Quirin, Markus, Hoffmann, Karl-Titus, Egloff, Boris, Lobsien, Donald, Suslow, Thomas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7522800/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32980596
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2020.102441
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author Günther, Vivien
Hußlack, Anja
Weil, Anna-Sophie
Bujanow, Anna
Henkelmann, Jeanette
Kersting, Anette
Quirin, Markus
Hoffmann, Karl-Titus
Egloff, Boris
Lobsien, Donald
Suslow, Thomas
author_facet Günther, Vivien
Hußlack, Anja
Weil, Anna-Sophie
Bujanow, Anna
Henkelmann, Jeanette
Kersting, Anette
Quirin, Markus
Hoffmann, Karl-Titus
Egloff, Boris
Lobsien, Donald
Suslow, Thomas
author_sort Günther, Vivien
collection PubMed
description Trait anxiety refers to the stable tendency to attend to threats and experience fears and worries across many situations. According to the widely noticed, pioneering investigation by Etkin et al. (2004) trait anxiety is strongly associated with reactivity in the right basolateral amygdala to non-conscious threat. Although this observation was based on a sample of only 17 individuals, no replication effort has been reported yet. We reexamined automatic amygdala responsiveness as a function of anxiety in a large sample of 107 participants. Besides self-report instruments, we administered an indirect test to assess implicit anxiety. To assess early, automatic stages of emotion processing, we used a color-decision paradigm presenting brief (33 ms) and backward-masked fearful facial expressions. N = 56 participants were unaware of the presence of masked faces. In this subset of unaware participants, the relationship between trait anxiety and basolateral amygdala activation by fearful faces was successfully replicated in region of interest analyses. Additionally, a relation of implicit anxiety with masked fear processing in the amygdala and temporal gyrus was observed. We provide evidence that implicit measures of affect can be valuable predictors of automatic brain responsiveness and may represent useful additions to explicit measures. Our findings support a central role of amygdala reactivity to non-consciously perceived threat in understanding and predicting dispositional anxiety, i.e. the frequency of spontaneously occurring anxiety in everyday life.
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spelling pubmed-75228002020-10-02 Individual differences in anxiety and automatic amygdala response to fearful faces: A replication and extension of Etkin et al. (2004) Günther, Vivien Hußlack, Anja Weil, Anna-Sophie Bujanow, Anna Henkelmann, Jeanette Kersting, Anette Quirin, Markus Hoffmann, Karl-Titus Egloff, Boris Lobsien, Donald Suslow, Thomas Neuroimage Clin Regular Article Trait anxiety refers to the stable tendency to attend to threats and experience fears and worries across many situations. According to the widely noticed, pioneering investigation by Etkin et al. (2004) trait anxiety is strongly associated with reactivity in the right basolateral amygdala to non-conscious threat. Although this observation was based on a sample of only 17 individuals, no replication effort has been reported yet. We reexamined automatic amygdala responsiveness as a function of anxiety in a large sample of 107 participants. Besides self-report instruments, we administered an indirect test to assess implicit anxiety. To assess early, automatic stages of emotion processing, we used a color-decision paradigm presenting brief (33 ms) and backward-masked fearful facial expressions. N = 56 participants were unaware of the presence of masked faces. In this subset of unaware participants, the relationship between trait anxiety and basolateral amygdala activation by fearful faces was successfully replicated in region of interest analyses. Additionally, a relation of implicit anxiety with masked fear processing in the amygdala and temporal gyrus was observed. We provide evidence that implicit measures of affect can be valuable predictors of automatic brain responsiveness and may represent useful additions to explicit measures. Our findings support a central role of amygdala reactivity to non-consciously perceived threat in understanding and predicting dispositional anxiety, i.e. the frequency of spontaneously occurring anxiety in everyday life. Elsevier 2020-09-18 /pmc/articles/PMC7522800/ /pubmed/32980596 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2020.102441 Text en © 2020 The Author(s) http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Regular Article
Günther, Vivien
Hußlack, Anja
Weil, Anna-Sophie
Bujanow, Anna
Henkelmann, Jeanette
Kersting, Anette
Quirin, Markus
Hoffmann, Karl-Titus
Egloff, Boris
Lobsien, Donald
Suslow, Thomas
Individual differences in anxiety and automatic amygdala response to fearful faces: A replication and extension of Etkin et al. (2004)
title Individual differences in anxiety and automatic amygdala response to fearful faces: A replication and extension of Etkin et al. (2004)
title_full Individual differences in anxiety and automatic amygdala response to fearful faces: A replication and extension of Etkin et al. (2004)
title_fullStr Individual differences in anxiety and automatic amygdala response to fearful faces: A replication and extension of Etkin et al. (2004)
title_full_unstemmed Individual differences in anxiety and automatic amygdala response to fearful faces: A replication and extension of Etkin et al. (2004)
title_short Individual differences in anxiety and automatic amygdala response to fearful faces: A replication and extension of Etkin et al. (2004)
title_sort individual differences in anxiety and automatic amygdala response to fearful faces: a replication and extension of etkin et al. (2004)
topic Regular Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7522800/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32980596
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2020.102441
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