Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, USA.
Department of Psychology, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana, USA.
Eur J Neurosci. 2022 Sep;56(6):4744-4765. doi: 10.1111/ejn.15777. Epub 2022 Jul 29.
Experiencing stress before an event can influence how that event is later remembered. In the current study, we examine how individual differences in one's physiological response to a stressor are related to changes to underlying brain states and memory performance. Specifically, we examined how changes in intrinsic amygdala connectivity relate to positive and negative memory performance as a function of stress response, defined as a change in cortisol. Twenty-five participants underwent a social stressor before an incidental emotional memory encoding task. Cortisol samples were obtained before and after the stressor to measure individual differences in stress response. Three resting state scans (pre-stressor, post-stressor/pre-encoding and post-encoding) were conducted to evaluate pre- to post-stressor and pre- to post-encoding changes to intrinsic amygdala connectivity. Analyses examined relations between greater cortisol changes and connectivity changes. Greater cortisol increases were associated with a greater decrease in prefrontal-amygdala connectivity following the stressor and a reversal in the relation between prefrontal-amygdala connectivity and negative vs. positive memory performance. Greater cortisol increases were also associated with a greater increase in amygdala connectivity with a number of posterior sensory regions following encoding. Consistent with prior findings in non-stressed individuals, pre- to post-encoding increases in amygdala-posterior connectivity were associated with greater negative relative to positive memory performance, although this was specific to lateral rather than medial posterior regions and to participants with the greatest cortisol changes. These findings suggest that stress response is associated with changes in intrinsic connectivity that have downstream effects on the valence of remembered emotional content.
经历事件前的压力会影响人们对该事件的记忆。在当前的研究中,我们探讨了个体对压力源的生理反应差异如何与大脑状态和记忆表现的变化相关。具体来说,我们研究了内在杏仁核连接的变化如何随着压力反应(定义为皮质醇的变化)而与积极和消极记忆表现相关。25 名参与者在进行偶然情绪记忆编码任务前经历了社交压力源。在压力源前后采集皮质醇样本,以测量压力反应的个体差异。进行了三次静息状态扫描(压力源前、压力源后/编码前和编码后),以评估内在杏仁核连接在压力源前后和编码前后的变化。分析了皮质醇变化与连接变化之间的关系。皮质醇增加较多与压力源后前额叶-杏仁核连接的下降幅度更大有关,并且前额叶-杏仁核连接与消极记忆表现与积极记忆表现之间的关系发生了逆转。皮质醇增加较多还与编码后杏仁核与多个后感觉区域的连接增加有关。与非应激个体的先前发现一致,杏仁核-后连接在编码前后的增加与消极记忆表现相对于积极记忆表现的增加有关,尽管这仅适用于外侧而非内侧后区,并且仅适用于皮质醇变化最大的参与者。这些发现表明,压力反应与内在连接的变化有关,这些变化对记忆情绪内容的效价有下游影响。