Cargando…

Resisting aggression in social contexts: The influence of life-course persistent antisocial behavior on behavioral and neural responses to social feedback

Early adulthood has long been recognized as a potential turning point for the development of antisocial behavior, due to changes in social contexts and ongoing psychological and neurobiological maturation. However, it remains unclear how different developmental trajectories of antisocial behavior, t...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: van de Groep, Ilse H., Bos, Marieke G.N., Jansen, Lucres M.C., Kocevska, Desana, Bexkens, Anika, Cohn, Moran, van Domburgh, Lieke, Popma, Arne, Crone, Eveline A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8892163/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35245790
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2022.102973
_version_ 1784662089224159232
author van de Groep, Ilse H.
Bos, Marieke G.N.
Jansen, Lucres M.C.
Kocevska, Desana
Bexkens, Anika
Cohn, Moran
van Domburgh, Lieke
Popma, Arne
Crone, Eveline A.
author_facet van de Groep, Ilse H.
Bos, Marieke G.N.
Jansen, Lucres M.C.
Kocevska, Desana
Bexkens, Anika
Cohn, Moran
van Domburgh, Lieke
Popma, Arne
Crone, Eveline A.
author_sort van de Groep, Ilse H.
collection PubMed
description Early adulthood has long been recognized as a potential turning point for the development of antisocial behavior, due to changes in social contexts and ongoing psychological and neurobiological maturation. However, it remains unclear how different developmental trajectories of antisocial behavior, their neural underpinnings, and individual differences in psychopathic traits may help explain the distinct developmental outcomes of individuals who persist in or desist from antisocial behavior in early adulthood - such as how they respond to others in social contexts. Therefore, in the current study, young adults (aged 18–30, 68% male) with a persistent or desistant antisocial trajectory (N = 54), as well as healthy controls (N = 39), completed the Social Network Aggression Task, during which they received positive, neutral, or negative feedback on a personal profile and got the opportunity to retaliate by blasting a loud noise. On a behavioral level, results indicated that in all groups, negative peer feedback evoked higher retaliatory aggression, compared to positive and neutral feedback. On a neural level, when receiving social feedback, individuals with persistent or desistent trajectories showed both similar and dissociable patterns of neural activity; desisting and persisting trajectory groups showed higher activity in the Insula, and the desisting trajectory group showed higher activity in dlPFC. Finally, when participants retaliated, they showed increased dlPFC and ACC activity following positive relative to neutral and negative feedback, where ACC activity correlated most strongly with inhibition of retaliatory responses in the desisting trajectory group. Together, these findings provide novel insights in dissociable patterns of brain activity that may increase our understanding of the mechanisms underlying different developmental trajectories of antisocial behavior.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8892163
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher Elsevier
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-88921632022-03-04 Resisting aggression in social contexts: The influence of life-course persistent antisocial behavior on behavioral and neural responses to social feedback van de Groep, Ilse H. Bos, Marieke G.N. Jansen, Lucres M.C. Kocevska, Desana Bexkens, Anika Cohn, Moran van Domburgh, Lieke Popma, Arne Crone, Eveline A. Neuroimage Clin Regular Article Early adulthood has long been recognized as a potential turning point for the development of antisocial behavior, due to changes in social contexts and ongoing psychological and neurobiological maturation. However, it remains unclear how different developmental trajectories of antisocial behavior, their neural underpinnings, and individual differences in psychopathic traits may help explain the distinct developmental outcomes of individuals who persist in or desist from antisocial behavior in early adulthood - such as how they respond to others in social contexts. Therefore, in the current study, young adults (aged 18–30, 68% male) with a persistent or desistant antisocial trajectory (N = 54), as well as healthy controls (N = 39), completed the Social Network Aggression Task, during which they received positive, neutral, or negative feedback on a personal profile and got the opportunity to retaliate by blasting a loud noise. On a behavioral level, results indicated that in all groups, negative peer feedback evoked higher retaliatory aggression, compared to positive and neutral feedback. On a neural level, when receiving social feedback, individuals with persistent or desistent trajectories showed both similar and dissociable patterns of neural activity; desisting and persisting trajectory groups showed higher activity in the Insula, and the desisting trajectory group showed higher activity in dlPFC. Finally, when participants retaliated, they showed increased dlPFC and ACC activity following positive relative to neutral and negative feedback, where ACC activity correlated most strongly with inhibition of retaliatory responses in the desisting trajectory group. Together, these findings provide novel insights in dissociable patterns of brain activity that may increase our understanding of the mechanisms underlying different developmental trajectories of antisocial behavior. Elsevier 2022-02-26 /pmc/articles/PMC8892163/ /pubmed/35245790 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2022.102973 Text en © 2022 The Authors https://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
van de Groep, Ilse H.
Bos, Marieke G.N.
Jansen, Lucres M.C.
Kocevska, Desana
Bexkens, Anika
Cohn, Moran
van Domburgh, Lieke
Popma, Arne
Crone, Eveline A.
Resisting aggression in social contexts: The influence of life-course persistent antisocial behavior on behavioral and neural responses to social feedback
title Resisting aggression in social contexts: The influence of life-course persistent antisocial behavior on behavioral and neural responses to social feedback
title_full Resisting aggression in social contexts: The influence of life-course persistent antisocial behavior on behavioral and neural responses to social feedback
title_fullStr Resisting aggression in social contexts: The influence of life-course persistent antisocial behavior on behavioral and neural responses to social feedback
title_full_unstemmed Resisting aggression in social contexts: The influence of life-course persistent antisocial behavior on behavioral and neural responses to social feedback
title_short Resisting aggression in social contexts: The influence of life-course persistent antisocial behavior on behavioral and neural responses to social feedback
title_sort resisting aggression in social contexts: the influence of life-course persistent antisocial behavior on behavioral and neural responses to social feedback
topic Regular Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8892163/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35245790
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2022.102973
work_keys_str_mv AT vandegroepilseh resistingaggressioninsocialcontextstheinfluenceoflifecoursepersistentantisocialbehavioronbehavioralandneuralresponsestosocialfeedback
AT bosmariekegn resistingaggressioninsocialcontextstheinfluenceoflifecoursepersistentantisocialbehavioronbehavioralandneuralresponsestosocialfeedback
AT jansenlucresmc resistingaggressioninsocialcontextstheinfluenceoflifecoursepersistentantisocialbehavioronbehavioralandneuralresponsestosocialfeedback
AT kocevskadesana resistingaggressioninsocialcontextstheinfluenceoflifecoursepersistentantisocialbehavioronbehavioralandneuralresponsestosocialfeedback
AT bexkensanika resistingaggressioninsocialcontextstheinfluenceoflifecoursepersistentantisocialbehavioronbehavioralandneuralresponsestosocialfeedback
AT cohnmoran resistingaggressioninsocialcontextstheinfluenceoflifecoursepersistentantisocialbehavioronbehavioralandneuralresponsestosocialfeedback
AT vandomburghlieke resistingaggressioninsocialcontextstheinfluenceoflifecoursepersistentantisocialbehavioronbehavioralandneuralresponsestosocialfeedback
AT popmaarne resistingaggressioninsocialcontextstheinfluenceoflifecoursepersistentantisocialbehavioronbehavioralandneuralresponsestosocialfeedback
AT croneevelinea resistingaggressioninsocialcontextstheinfluenceoflifecoursepersistentantisocialbehavioronbehavioralandneuralresponsestosocialfeedback