Balderston Nicholas L, Hsiung Abigail, Ernst Monique, Grillon Christian
Section on Neurobiology of Fear and Anxiety, National Institute of Mental Health, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892
Section on Neurobiology of Fear and Anxiety, National Institute of Mental Health, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892.
J Neurosci. 2017 Sep 20;37(38):9160-9171. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0717-17.2017. Epub 2017 Aug 21.
It has long been established that individuals with anxiety disorders tend to overgeneralize attributes of fearful stimuli to nonfearful stimuli, but there is little mechanistic understanding of the neural system that supports overgeneralization. To address this gap in our knowledge, this study examined effect of experimentally induced anxiety in humans on generalization using the behavioral pattern separation (BPS) paradigm. Healthy subjects of both sexes encoded and retrieved novel objects during periods of safety and threat of unpredictable shocks while we recorded brain activity with fMRI. During retrieval, subjects were instructed to differentiate among new, old, and altered images. We hypothesized that the hippocampus and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) would play a key role in the effect of anxiety on BPS. The dlPFC, but not the hippocampus, showed increased activity for altered images compared with old images when retrieval occurred during periods of threat compared with safety. In addition, accuracy for altered items retrieved during threat was correlated with dlPFC activity. Together, these results suggest that overgeneralization in anxiety patients may be mediated by an inability to recruit the dlPFC, which mediates the cognitive control needed to overcome anxiety and differentiate between old and altered items during periods of threat. Anxiety and posttraumatic stress disorder patients generalize fear to nonfearful fear stimuli, making it difficult to regulate anxiety. Understanding how anxiety affects generalization is key to understanding the overgeneralization experienced by these patients. We examined this relationship in healthy subjects by studying how threat of shock affects neural responses to previously encountered stimuli. Although previous studies point to hippocampal involvement, we found that threat affected activity in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC), rather than the hippocampus, when subjects encountered slightly altered versions of the previously encountered items. Importantly, this dlPFC activity predicted performance for these items. Together, these results suggest that the dlPFC is important for discrimination during elevated anxiety and that overgeneralization may reflect a deficit in dlPFC-mediated cognitive control.
长期以来,人们已经确定,患有焦虑症的个体倾向于将恐惧刺激的属性过度泛化到非恐惧刺激上,但对于支持这种过度泛化的神经系统,我们几乎没有机制上的理解。为了填补我们在这方面的知识空白,本研究使用行为模式分离(BPS)范式,研究了实验诱导的人类焦虑对泛化的影响。在安全和不可预测的电击威胁期间,我们用功能磁共振成像(fMRI)记录大脑活动,同时,健康的男女受试者对新物体进行编码和检索。在检索过程中,受试者被要求区分新的、旧的和改变后的图像。我们假设海马体和背外侧前额叶皮层(dlPFC)在焦虑对BPS的影响中起关键作用。与安全期间的检索相比,当在威胁期间进行检索时,与旧图像相比,dlPFC(而非海马体)对改变后的图像表现出活动增加。此外,在威胁期间检索到的改变项目的准确性与dlPFC活动相关。总之,这些结果表明,焦虑症患者的过度泛化可能是由于无法激活dlPFC介导的,在威胁期间克服焦虑并区分旧项目和改变项目所需的认知控制。焦虑症和创伤后应激障碍患者将恐惧泛化到非恐惧刺激上,使得难以调节焦虑。了解焦虑如何影响泛化是理解这些患者所经历的过度泛化的关键。我们通过研究电击威胁如何影响对先前遇到的刺激的神经反应,在健康受试者中研究了这种关系。尽管先前的研究指出海马体参与其中,但我们发现,当受试者遇到先前遇到的项目的轻微改变版本时,威胁影响的是背外侧前额叶皮层(dlPFC)的活动,而非海马体的活动。重要的是,这种dlPFC活动预测了这些项目的表现。总之,这些结果表明,dlPFC在焦虑加剧时的辨别中很重要,并且过度泛化可能反映了dlPFC介导的认知控制缺陷。