| Literature DB >> 26594159 |
Sjoerd J H Ebisch1, Annalisa Bello2, Grazia F Spitoni2, Mauro G Perrucci1, Vittorio Gallese3, Giorgia Committeri1, Concetta Pastorelli4, Luigi Pizzamiglio2.
Abstract
The present study aimed at investigating the relationship between Emotional Susceptibility (ES), an aspect of the personality trait Neuroticism, and individual differences in the neural responses in anterior insula to primary sensory stimuli colored by affective valence, i.e., distasting or pleasantly tasting oral stimuli. In addition, it was studied whether intrinsic functional connectivity patterns of brain regions characterized by such differential responses could be related to ES. To this purpose 25 female participants underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging scanning, while being involved in a flavor experiment. During the experiment, flavor stimuli were administered consisting of small amounts of liquid with a different affective valence: neutral, pleasant, unpleasant. The results showed that individual differences in ES trait predicted distinct neural activity patterns to the different stimulus conditions in a region of left anterior insula that a previous meta-analysis revealed to be linked with olfacto-gustatory processing. Specifically, low ES was associated with enhanced neural responses to both pleasant and unpleasant stimuli, compared to neutral stimuli. By contrast, high ES participants showed equally strong neural responses to all types of stimuli without differentiating between the neutral and affective stimuli. Finally, during a task-free state, high ES trait appeared also to be related to decreased intrinsic functional connectivity between left anterior insula and left cerebellum. Our findings show that individual differences in ES are associated with differential anterior insula responses to primary sensory (flavor) stimuli as well as to intrinsic functional cortico-cerebellar connectivity, the latter suggesting a basis in the brain intrinsic functional architecture of the regulation of emotional experiences.Entities:
Keywords: cerebellum; emotion; emotional susceptibility; gustation; individual differences; insula; personality traits; taste
Year: 2015 PMID: 26594159 PMCID: PMC4633483 DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2015.00297
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Behav Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5153 Impact factor: 3.558
Results of the pilot study.
| Mass concentration (ρ | 0.25/0.5 | 0.5/0.5 | 1.0/0.5 | 0.005/0.5 | 0.01/0.5 | 0.015/0.5 | ||
| Intensity (VAS; mean in mm ± standard deviation) | 54.4 ± 12.5 | 75.2 ± 27.9 | 28.8 ± 17.4 | 73.8 ± 11.1 | 85.5 ± 37.2 | 86.9 ± 39.5 | ||
| Pleasantness rating | P | P | U | U | U | U | ||
P, pleasant; U, unpleasant. VAS, Visual Analog Scale. Artichoke serum was kept constant across the different unpleasant solutions. The selected solutions for the fMRI study are indicated in bold italics.
Figure 1Timeline of the experimental procedure and picture of the used materials for the liquid administration. Ω represents the auditory cue received by the experimenter.
Behavioral data obtained during the fMRI experiment: number of stimulus category recognition errors and reaction times for the low and high ES group.
| Low ES | 1.15 ± 1.52 | 0.23 ± 0.44 | 0.15 ± 0.38 | 1062 ± 358 | 3264 ± 1470 | 3201 ± 1133 |
| High ES | 0.27 ± 0.65 | 0.36 ± 0.92 | 0.36 ± 0.92 | 1086 ± 421 | 2998 ± 1129 | 3239 ± 1316 |
Anatomical and statistical details regarding modulation of neural activity by experimental condition (i.e., differentiating between neutral, pleasant, unpleasant stimuli) in flavor processing in the low and high ES group.
| Right posterior parietal cortex | 33, −54, 36 | 1944 | 17.44 | 0.000021 |
| Left posterior parietal cortex | −33, −61, 38 | 270 | 12.19 | 0.000221 |
| Right superior temporal gyrus | 45, −30, 8 | 891 | 17.48 | 0.000021 |
| Left superior temporal gyrus | −54, −31, 16 | 378 | 14.29 | 0.000082 |
| Right posterior parahippocampal gyrus | 15, −39, −5 | 2916 | 19.33 | 0.000010 |
| Right anterior parahippocampal gyrus | 17, 0, −11 | 486 | 15.10 | 0.000057 |
| Right ventral mid insula | 37, −3, −9 | 432 | 11.11 | 0.000384 |
| Left extrastriate cortex | −35, −82, 33 | 540 | 15.90 | 0.000040 |
| Right inferior frontal gyrus | 47, 30, 6 | 1890 | 20.87 | 0.000008 |
| Left Cerebellum | −15, −52, −19 | 4266 | 18.61 | 0.000019 |
| Left middle frontal gyrus | −56, 18, 34 | 2619 | 22.70 | 0.000004 |
| Left precentral gyrus | −37, −1, 39 | 432 | 20.69 | 0.000009 |
| Right anterior insula | 39, 6, 6 | 999 | 20.98 | 0.000008 |
| Right ventral precentral gyrus | 61, −9, 35 | 837 | 29.63 | 0.000001 |
| Right middle occipital gyrus | 28, −83, 21 | 297 | 14.99 | 0.000078 |
| Right middle temporal gyrus | 58, −21, −14 | 621 | 13.73 | 0.000135 |
| Right posterior parietal cortex | 28, −76, 38 | 864 | 14.33 | 0.000104 |
| Left posterior parietal cortex | −30, −70, 42 | 945 | 17.68 | 0.000026 |
Figure 2Group statistical maps of the group (low ES, high ES) × experimental condition (unpleasant, pleasant, neutral) interaction effect showing a statistically significant cluster in left anterior insula [. Graphs show 95% Confidence Intervals (CI) of the beta values for each condition separated by ES group, compared to baseline. *significant effect of contrast at p < 0.05 based on post-hoc analysis.
Anatomical and statistical details regarding modulation of left anterior insula activity in flavor processing by ES.
| Left anterior insula | −32, 11, 7 | 432 | Low ES | 0.10 (± 0.04) | 0.15 (± 0.05) | −0.02 (± 0.04) | 10.44 | <0.001 |
| High ES | 0.14 (± 0.03) | 0.08 (± 0.03) | 0.14 (± 0.03) | |||||
Figure 3Group statistical maps of intrinsic functional connectivity analysis based on the left anterior insula seed ROI showing significantly higher connectivity (.