Shackman Alexander J, Tromp Do P M, Stockbridge Melissa D, Kaplan Claire M, Tillman Rachael M, Fox Andrew S
Department of Psychology, Neuroscience and Cognitive Science Program, University of Maryland.
Department of Psychiatry, HealthEmotions Research Institute, Lane Neuroimaging Laboratory, University of Wisconsin, Madison.
Psychol Bull. 2016 Dec;142(12):1275-1314. doi: 10.1037/bul0000073. Epub 2016 Oct 10.
Dispositional negativity-the propensity to experience and express more frequent, intense, or enduring negative affect-is a fundamental dimension of childhood temperament and adult personality. Elevated levels of dispositional negativity can have profound consequences for health, wealth, and happiness, drawing the attention of clinicians, researchers, and policymakers. Here, we highlight recent advances in our understanding of the psychological and neurobiological processes linking stable individual differences in dispositional negativity to momentary emotional states. Self-report data suggest that 3 key pathways-increased stressor reactivity, tonic increases in negative affect, and increased stressor exposure-explain most of the heightened negative affect that characterizes individuals with a more negative disposition. Of these 3 pathways, tonically elevated, indiscriminate negative affect appears to be most central to daily life and most relevant to the development of psychopathology. New behavioral and biological data provide insights into the neural systems underlying these 3 pathways and motivate the hypothesis that seemingly "tonic" increases in negative affect may actually reflect increased reactivity to stressors that are remote, uncertain, or diffuse. Research focused on humans, monkeys, and rodents suggests that this indiscriminate negative affect reflects trait-like variation in the activity and connectivity of several key brain regions, including the central extended amygdala and parts of the prefrontal cortex. Collectively, these observations provide an integrative psychobiological framework for understanding the dynamic cascade of processes that bind emotional traits to emotional states and, ultimately, to emotional disorders and other kinds of adverse outcomes. (PsycINFO Database Record
气质性消极——体验和表达更频繁、强烈或持久的消极情绪的倾向——是儿童气质和成人性格的一个基本维度。气质性消极水平的升高会对健康、财富和幸福产生深远影响,从而引起临床医生、研究人员和政策制定者的关注。在此,我们重点介绍了我们在理解将气质性消极方面稳定的个体差异与瞬间情绪状态联系起来的心理和神经生物学过程方面的最新进展。自我报告数据表明,三条关键途径——对应激源反应性增加、消极情绪的持续性增加以及对应激源暴露增加——解释了具有更消极气质的个体所表现出的大部分增强的消极情绪。在这三条途径中,持续性升高的、不加区分的消极情绪似乎对日常生活最为关键,并且与精神病理学的发展最为相关。新的行为和生物学数据为这些途径背后的神经系统提供了见解,并激发了这样一种假设,即消极情绪看似“持续性”的增加实际上可能反映了对遥远、不确定或分散的应激源反应性的增加。针对人类、猴子和啮齿动物的研究表明,这种不加区分地消极情绪反映了包括中央扩展杏仁核和部分前额叶皮质在内的几个关键脑区的活动和连接性方面类似特质的差异。总体而言,这些观察结果为理解将情绪特质与情绪状态,最终与情绪障碍和其他不良后果联系起来的动态过程级联提供了一个综合的心理生物学框架。(《心理学文摘数据库记录》 )