Thompson Khalil, King Kendrick, Nahmias Eddy, Fani Negar, Kvaran Trevor, Tone Erin B, Turner Jessica A
Department of Psychology, Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Department of Philosophy, Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Chronic Stress (Thousand Oaks). 2019 Jan-Dec;3. doi: 10.1177/2470547019848648. Epub 2019 Jun 7.
Social anxiety is characterized by a tendency to overestimate the likelihood of negative outcomes and consequences before, during, and after interpersonal interactions with social partners. Recent evidence suggests that a network of brain regions critical for perspective-taking, threat appraisal, and uncertainty resolution may function atypically in those prone to social anxiety. In this study, we used functional magnetic resonance imaging to examine neural activity in specific regions of interest in a sample of young adults who endorsed high or low levels of social anxiety.
We recruited 31 college student volunteers (age: 18-28 years), categorized as having high or low anxiety based on their Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale-Self Report scores. These participants were each scanned while playing the iterated Prisoner's Dilemma game with three computerized confederates, two of whom they were deceived to believe were human co-players. This study focuses on data collected during play with the presumed humans. Regions of interest were defined for the temporoparietal junction, anterior midcingulate, and dorsomedial prefrontal cortex. Average weighted mean blood-oxygen-level-dependent signals for each subject were extracted and analyzed using mixed design analyses of variance to detect group differences in activation during decision-making, anticipation, and appraisal of round outcomes during the game.
Behavior analysis revealed that the high-anxiety group was more likely to defect than the low-anxiety group. Neuroimaging analysis showed that the high-anxiety group exhibited elevated blood-oxygen-level-dependent activity relative to the low-anxiety group in all three regions during the social feedback appraisal phase but not during decision-making or the anticipation of interaction outcomes.
These findings provide evidence that some behaviors linked to cognitive biases associated with social anxiety may be mediated by a network of regions involved in recognizing and processing directed social information. Future investigation of the neural basis of cognition and bias in social anxiety using the prisoner's dilemma and other economic-exchange tasks is warranted. These tasks appear to be highly effective, functional magnetic resonance imaging-compatible methods of probing altered cognition and behavior associated with anxiety and related conditions.
社交焦虑的特征是在与社交伙伴进行人际互动之前、期间和之后,倾向于高估负面结果和后果的可能性。最近的证据表明,对于换位思考、威胁评估和不确定性解决至关重要的大脑区域网络,在那些容易产生社交焦虑的人身上可能表现异常。在本研究中,我们使用功能磁共振成像来检查一组认可高或低社交焦虑水平的年轻成年人样本中特定感兴趣区域的神经活动。
我们招募了31名大学生志愿者(年龄:18 - 28岁),根据他们的利博维茨社交焦虑量表自我报告得分分为高焦虑或低焦虑组。这些参与者在与三名计算机模拟同伴玩重复囚徒困境游戏时分别接受扫描,其中两名他们被欺骗以为是人类共同玩家。本研究重点关注与假定人类玩家游戏期间收集的数据。为颞顶联合区、前扣带回中部和背内侧前额叶皮质定义了感兴趣区域。提取每个受试者的平均加权血氧水平依赖信号,并使用混合设计方差分析进行分析,以检测游戏期间决策、预期和回合结果评估过程中激活的组间差异。
行为分析表明,高焦虑组比低焦虑组更有可能背叛。神经影像学分析显示,在社交反馈评估阶段,高焦虑组相对于低焦虑组在所有三个区域的血氧水平依赖活动均升高,但在决策或互动结果预期期间未升高。
这些发现提供了证据,表明与社交焦虑相关的认知偏差有关的一些行为可能由参与识别和处理定向社交信息的区域网络介导。有必要使用囚徒困境和其他经济交换任务对社交焦虑中认知和偏差的神经基础进行进一步研究。这些任务似乎是探测与焦虑及相关病症相关的认知和行为改变的高效、与功能磁共振成像兼容的方法。