Division of Psychology and Language Sciences, University College London (UCL), UK, and Child Neuropsychology Section, University Hospital Rheinisch-Westfälische Technische Hochschule (RWTH), Aachen, Germany.
University Hospital RWTH Aachen and JARA Translational Brain Medicine, Aachen and Jülich, Germany.
J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 2014 Dec;53(12):1328-1337.e8. doi: 10.1016/j.jaac.2014.09.004. Epub 2014 Sep 28.
Nonhuman and human studies have documented the adverse effects of early life stress (ELS) on emotion regulation and underlying neural circuitry. Less is known about how these experiences shape social processes and neural circuitry. In this study, we thus investigated how ELS affects children's perception of, and neural response to, negative social experiences in a social exclusion paradigm (Cyberball).
Twenty-five foster or adopted children with ELS (age 10.6 ± 1.8 years, 13 male and 12 female) and 26 matched nonseparated controls (age 10.38 ± 1.7 years, 12 male and 14 female) took part in a Cyberball paradigm during functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI).
During peer rejection, children with ELS reported significantly more feelings of exclusion and frustration than nonseparated controls. On the neural level, children with ELS showed reduced activation in the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC) and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC), and reduced connectivity between dlPFC-dACC, areas previously implicated in affect regulation. Conversely, children with ELS showed increased neural activation in brain regions involved in memory, arousal, and threat-related processing (middle temporal gyrus, thalamus, ventral tegmental area) relative to controls during social exclusion. The number of separation experiences before entering the permanent family predicted reductions in fronto-cingulate recruitment. The relationship between early separations and self-reported exclusion was mediated by dlPFC activity.
The findings suggest that ELS leads to alterations in neural circuitry implicated in the regulation of socioemotional processes. This neural signature may underlie foster children's differential reactivity to rejection in everyday life and could increase risk for developing affective disorders.
非人类和人类研究已经记录了早期生活压力(ELS)对情绪调节和潜在神经回路的不良影响。关于这些经历如何塑造社会过程和神经回路,人们知之甚少。在这项研究中,我们因此调查了 ELS 如何影响儿童在社会排斥范式(Cyberball)中对负面社会体验的感知和神经反应。
25 名经历过 ELS 的寄养或收养儿童(年龄 10.6 ± 1.8 岁,男性 13 名,女性 12 名)和 26 名未分离的对照组儿童(年龄 10.38 ± 1.7 岁,男性 12 名,女性 14 名)在功能磁共振成像(fMRI)期间参与了 Cyberball 范式。
在同伴拒绝期间,经历过 ELS 的儿童比未分离的对照组报告了更多的排斥感和挫败感。在神经水平上,经历过 ELS 的儿童的背侧前扣带皮层(dACC)和背外侧前额叶皮层(dlPFC)的激活减少,并且 dlPFC-dACC 之间的连接减少,这些区域以前与情感调节有关。相反,与对照组相比,经历过 ELS 的儿童在社会排斥期间显示出与记忆、唤醒和与威胁相关的处理相关的大脑区域(中颞叶、丘脑、腹侧被盖区)的神经激活增加。进入永久家庭之前的分离经历次数预测了前额扣带招募的减少。早期分离与自我报告的排斥之间的关系由 dlPFC 活动介导。
这些发现表明,ELS 导致了调节社会情感过程的神经回路的改变。这种神经特征可能是寄养儿童对日常生活中拒绝的不同反应的基础,并可能增加患情感障碍的风险。