Literature DB >> 20212004

Ventrolateral prefrontal cortex and the effects of task demand context on facial affect appraisal in schizophrenia.

David I Leitman1, Daniel H Wolf, James Loughead, Jeffrey N Valdez, Christian G Kohler, Colleen Brensinger, Mark A Elliott, Bruce I Turetsky, Raquel E Gur, Ruben C Gur.   

Abstract

Schizophrenia patients display impaired performance and brain activity during facial affect recognition. These impairments may reflect stimulus-driven perceptual decrements and evaluative processing abnormalities. We differentiated these two processes by contrasting responses to identical stimuli presented under different contexts. Seventeen healthy controls and 16 schizophrenia patients performed an fMRI facial affect detection task. Subjects identified an affective target presented amongst foils of differing emotions. We hypothesized that targeting affiliative emotions (happiness, sadness) would create a task demand context distinct from that generated when targeting threat emotions (anger, fear). We compared affiliative foil stimuli within a congruent affiliative context with identical stimuli presented in an incongruent threat context. Threat foils were analysed in the same manner. Controls activated right orbitofrontal cortex (OFC)/ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (VLPFC) more to affiliative foils in threat contexts than to identical stimuli within affiliative contexts. Patients displayed reduced OFC/VLPFC activation to all foils, and no activation modulation by context. This lack of context modulation coincided with a 2-fold decrement in foil detection efficiency. Task demands produce contextual effects during facial affective processing in regions activated during affect evaluation. In schizophrenia, reduced modulation of OFC/VLPFC by context coupled with reduced behavioural efficiency suggests impaired ventral prefrontal control mechanisms that optimize affective appraisal.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2010        PMID: 20212004      PMCID: PMC3023083          DOI: 10.1093/scan/nsq018

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci        ISSN: 1749-5016            Impact factor:   3.436


  49 in total

1.  Functional neuroanatomy of emotions: a meta-analysis.

Authors:  Fionnuala C Murphy; Ian Nimmo-Smith; Andrew D Lawrence
Journal:  Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci       Date:  2003-09       Impact factor: 3.282

2.  Top-down facilitation of visual recognition.

Authors:  M Bar; K S Kassam; A S Ghuman; J Boshyan; A M Schmid; A M Schmidt; A M Dale; M S Hämäläinen; K Marinkovic; D L Schacter; B R Rosen; E Halgren
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2006-01-03       Impact factor: 11.205

3.  Glutamate receptors and schizophrenia: opportunities and caveats.

Authors:  D C Javitt
Journal:  Mol Psychiatry       Date:  1996-03       Impact factor: 15.992

Review 4.  The cognitive control of emotion.

Authors:  Kevin N Ochsner; James J Gross
Journal:  Trends Cogn Sci       Date:  2005-05       Impact factor: 20.229

Review 5.  Speculation on the meaning of cerebral metabolic hypofrontality in schizophrenia.

Authors:  D R Weinberger; K F Berman
Journal:  Schizophr Bull       Date:  1988       Impact factor: 9.306

6.  Emotion processing and its relationship to social functioning in schizophrenia patients.

Authors:  Christine Hooker; Sohee Park
Journal:  Psychiatry Res       Date:  2002-09-15       Impact factor: 3.222

7.  Do schizophrenic patients show a disjunctive relationship among expressive, experiential, and psychophysiological components of emotion?

Authors:  A M Kring; J M Neale
Journal:  J Abnorm Psychol       Date:  1996-05

8.  Specificity of prefrontal dysfunction and context processing deficits to schizophrenia in never-medicated patients with first-episode psychosis.

Authors:  Angus W MacDonald; Cameron S Carter; John G Kerns; Stefan Ursu; Deanna M Barch; Avram J Holmes; V Andrew Stenger; Jonathan D Cohen
Journal:  Am J Psychiatry       Date:  2005-03       Impact factor: 18.112

9.  Facial emotion recognition in schizophrenia: intensity effects and error pattern.

Authors:  Christian G Kohler; Travis H Turner; Warren B Bilker; Colleen M Brensinger; Steven J Siegel; Stephen J Kanes; Raquel E Gur; Ruben C Gur
Journal:  Am J Psychiatry       Date:  2003-10       Impact factor: 18.112

10.  Abnormal superior temporal connectivity during fear perception in schizophrenia.

Authors:  David I Leitman; James Loughead; Daniel H Wolf; Kosha Ruparel; Christian G Kohler; Mark A Elliott; Warren B Bilker; Raquel E Gur; Ruben C Gur
Journal:  Schizophr Bull       Date:  2008-06-11       Impact factor: 9.306

View more
  10 in total

Review 1.  The development of the ventral prefrontal cortex and social flexibility.

Authors:  Eric E Nelson; Amanda E Guyer
Journal:  Dev Cogn Neurosci       Date:  2011-07       Impact factor: 6.464

2.  Neuroimaging predictors of cognitive performance across a standardized neurocognitive battery.

Authors:  David R Roalf; Kosha Ruparel; Raquel E Gur; Warren Bilker; Raphael Gerraty; Mark A Elliott; R Sean Gallagher; Laura Almasy; Michael F Pogue-Geile; Konasale Prasad; Joel Wood; Vishwajit L Nimgaonkar; Ruben C Gur
Journal:  Neuropsychology       Date:  2013-12-23       Impact factor: 3.295

3.  Common and disease-specific dysfunctions of brain systems underlying attentional and executive control in schizophrenia and bipolar disorder.

Authors:  Tobias Melcher; Sarah Wolter; Stefanie Falck; Eva Wild; Florian Wild; Eva Gruber; Peter Falkai; Oliver Gruber
Journal:  Eur Arch Psychiatry Clin Neurosci       Date:  2013-09-24       Impact factor: 5.270

Review 4.  Social cognition as an RDoC domain.

Authors:  Ruben C Gur; Raquel E Gur
Journal:  Am J Med Genet B Neuropsychiatr Genet       Date:  2015-11-26       Impact factor: 3.568

5.  Intact implicit processing of facial threat cues in schizophrenia.

Authors:  Jonathon R Shasteen; Amy E Pinkham; Skylar Kelsven; Kelsey Ludwig; B Keith Payne; David L Penn
Journal:  Schizophr Res       Date:  2015-12-08       Impact factor: 4.939

6.  Early sensory-perceptual processing deficits for affectively valenced inputs are more pronounced in schizophrenia patients with a history of violence than in their non-violent peers.

Authors:  Pierfilippo De Sanctis; John J Foxe; Pal Czobor; Glenn R Wylie; Stephanie M Kamiel; Jessica Huening; Mike Nair-Collins; Menahem I Krakowski
Journal:  Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci       Date:  2012-05-03       Impact factor: 3.436

7.  Autism spectrum disorders and schizophrenia: meta-analysis of the neural correlates of social cognition.

Authors:  Gisela Sugranyes; Marinos Kyriakopoulos; Richard Corrigall; Eric Taylor; Sophia Frangou
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2011-10-05       Impact factor: 3.240

8.  Neural correlates of emotion regulation in patients with schizophrenia and non-affected siblings.

Authors:  Lisette van der Meer; Marte Swart; Jorien van der Velde; Gerdina Pijnenborg; Durk Wiersma; Richard Bruggeman; André Aleman
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-06-18       Impact factor: 3.240

9.  Biases in facial and vocal emotion recognition in chronic schizophrenia.

Authors:  Thibaut Dondaine; Gabriel Robert; Julie Péron; Didier Grandjean; Marc Vérin; Dominique Drapier; Bruno Millet
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2014-08-22

10.  Impaired mixed emotion processing in the right ventrolateral prefrontal cortex in schizophrenia: an fMRI study.

Authors:  Ádám György Szabó; Kinga Farkas; Csilla Marosi; Lajos R Kozák; Gábor Rudas; János Réthelyi; Gábor Csukly
Journal:  BMC Psychiatry       Date:  2017-12-08       Impact factor: 3.630

  10 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.