Stanford Mood and Anxiety Disorders Laboratory, Department of Psychology, Stanford University, 450 Serra Mall, Jordan Hall, Building 420, Room 142, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.
Psychol Sci. 2013 Mar 1;24(3):334-44. doi: 10.1177/0956797612457380. Epub 2013 Jan 17.
Recurrent uncontrollable negative thoughts are a hallmark of depressive episodes. Deficits in cognitive control have been proposed to underlie this debilitating aspect of depression. Here, we used functional neuroimaging during an emotional working memory (WM) task to elucidate the neural correlates of these difficulties in cognitive control. In a WM manipulation involving depressed participants, the dorsal anterior cingulate and parietal and bilateral insular cortices were activated significantly more when negative words were removed from WM than when they were maintained in WM; in contrast, nondepressed participants exhibited stronger neural activations in these regions for positive than for negative material. These findings implicate anomalous activation of components of the task-positive network, known to be modulated by cognitive effort, in depression-associated difficulties in expelling negative material from WM. Future studies should examine the association between these aberrations and the maintenance of depressive symptoms.
反复出现的无法控制的消极想法是抑郁发作的一个标志。认知控制缺陷被认为是抑郁症这种使人虚弱的方面的基础。在这里,我们在进行情绪工作记忆 (WM) 任务的功能性神经影像学研究中,阐明了这些认知控制困难的神经相关性。在一项涉及抑郁参与者的 WM 操作中,当从 WM 中删除负面单词时,背侧前扣带和顶叶以及双侧脑岛皮层的激活显著增加;相比之下,非抑郁参与者在这些区域对积极材料的神经激活比消极材料更强。这些发现表明,与认知努力有关的任务正网络的组成部分的异常激活与抑郁症患者从 WM 中驱逐负面材料的困难有关。未来的研究应该检查这些异常与维持抑郁症状之间的关系。