| Literature DB >> 34021042 |
Sukhbinder Kumar1, Pradeep Dheerendra2, Mercede Erfanian3, Ester Benzaquén2, William Sedley4, Phillip E Gander5, Meher Lad4, Doris E Bamiou6,7, Timothy D Griffiths2,5,8.
Abstract
Misophonia is a common disorder characterized by the experience of strong negative emotions of anger and anxiety in response to certain everyday sounds, such as those generated by other people eating, drinking, and breathing. The commonplace nature of these "trigger" sounds makes misophonia a devastating disorder for sufferers and their families. How such innocuous sounds trigger this response is unknown. Since most trigger sounds are generated by orofacial movements (e.g., chewing) in others, we hypothesized that the mirror neuron system related to orofacial movements could underlie misophonia. We analyzed resting state fMRI (rs-fMRI) connectivity (N = 33, 16 females) and sound-evoked fMRI responses (N = 42, 29 females) in misophonia sufferers and controls. We demonstrate that, compared with controls, the misophonia group show no difference in auditory cortex responses to trigger sounds, but do show: (1) stronger rs-fMRI connectivity between both auditory and visual cortex and the ventral premotor cortex responsible for orofacial movements; (2) stronger functional connectivity between the auditory cortex and orofacial motor area during sound perception in general; and (3) stronger activation of the orofacial motor area, specifically, in response to trigger sounds. Our results support a model of misophonia based on "hyper-mirroring" of the orofacial actions of others with sounds being the "medium" via which action of others is excessively mirrored. Misophonia is therefore not an abreaction to sounds, per se, but a manifestation of activity in parts of the motor system involved in producing those sounds. This new framework to understand misophonia can explain behavioral and emotional responses and has important consequences for devising effective therapies.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Conventionally, misophonia, literally "hatred of sounds" has been considered as a disorder of sound emotion processing, in which "simple" eating and chewing sounds produced by others cause negative emotional responses. Our data provide an alternative but complementary perspective on misophonia that emphasizes the action of the trigger-person rather than the sounds which are a byproduct of that action. Sounds, in this new perspective, are only a "medium" via which action of the triggering-person is mirrored onto the listener. This change in perspective has important consequences for devising therapies and treatment methods for misophonia. It suggests that, instead of focusing on sounds, which many existing therapies do, effective therapies should target the brain representation of movement.Entities:
Keywords: auditory; fMRI; mirror neurons; misophonia; motor system; resting state connectivity
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34021042 PMCID: PMC8244967 DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0261-21.2021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurosci ISSN: 0270-6474 Impact factor: 6.167
List of sounds used in the sound-evoked experiment (Kumar et al., 2017)
| Trigger sounds | Unpleasant sounds | Neutral sounds |
|---|---|---|
| Apple crunching | Baby crying | Busy cafe |
| Coughing and sniffing | Belch sound | Fan sound |
| Crisps eating | Buzzer sound | Faucet sound |
| Breathing sound | Buzzing bees | Hair dryer sound |
| Cutlery sounds | Dentist drill | Helicopter sound |
| Eating food sound 1 | Female crying | Kettle boiling |
| Eating food sound 2 | Male crying | Toilet flush |
| Eating salad and cutlery | Multiple dogs barking | Traffic sound |
| Gulping water | Vomit sound | Vacuum cleaner |
| Slurping | Multiple infants crying | Washing machine |
| Eating with slurping | Alarm sound | Rain sound |
| Sniffing | Toddler crying | Shower sound |
| Chewing | Jack hammer | Phone ringing |
| Packet opening and eating | Female scream | Brushing teeth |
Demographics and questionnaire scores (mean ± SD) for the two groups
| Misophonia | Control | |
|---|---|---|
| Number of subjects ( | 16 | 17 |
| Sex (female) | 8 | 8 |
| Age (mean ± SD) | 38.7 ± 10.3 | 35.6 ± 9.6 |
| Misophonia Questionnaire ( | 42.6 ± 10.7 | 17.6 ± 8.8 |
| Amsterdam Questionnaire (mean ± SD) ( | 15.5 ± 3.4 | — |
Figure 1.Resting state functional connectivity of () right PT, () right V2, () right vPMC (the black curve in the top panel indicates the boundary of part of vPMC, which shows stronger connectivity to PT), and () left anterior insula. Connectivity of each of these seed regions was analyzed with the rest of the brain (seed-to-voxel analysis). The results shown are cluster-corrected with a cluster defining threshold of p = 0.001. The top row shows the seed regions; the middle two rows show the connectivity pattern overlaid on the sagittal and coronal sections of the structural image; the bottom row shows bar plots of connectivity strength in the two groups. Data in the bar plots represent mean ± SEM.
List of brain areas that show significant change in resting state connectivity in misophonia compared with controls
| Region name | MNI coordinates (mm) of the maxima | No. of voxels | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stronger connectivity to right V2 in misophonia compared with controls | |||
| Right vPMC | 58, 0, 24 | 221 | 4.34 |
| Right anterior insula | 34, 2,10 | 180 | 4.88 |
| Right parietal operculum/PT | 30, −34, 20 | 136 | 4.94 |
| Stronger connectivity to left V1 in misophonia compared with controls | |||
| Right anterior insula | 42, 8, −10 | 169 | 4.51 |
| Left planum polare/STG | −60, 6, −4 | 118 | 4.84 |
| Lateral occipital cortex, occipital pole | 22, −84, 14 | 978 | 5.57 |
| Stronger connectivity to right vPMC in misophonia compared with controls | |||
| Occipital cortex, middle temporal gyrus | 40, −64, 2 | 342 | 5.78 |
| Brainstem | −2, −10, −34 | 230 | 6.91 |
| Fusiform gyrus | 24, −72, −12 | 204 | 5.03 |
| Anterior insula, planum polare, STG | 42, 6, −6 | 165 | 4.64 |
| Stronger connectivity to the left anterior insula in misophonia compared with controls | |||
| Motor/somatosensory cortex (M1/S1) | −18, −16, 78 | 383 | 4.82 |
| Cerebellum (lobule 6) | 28, −54, −22 | 150 | 5.24 |
Figure 2.Sound-evoked functional connectivity of right orofacial motor cortex. The orofacial motor ROI (top) is selected from the resting state connectivity analysis. The two middle rows show brain regions with increased connectivity in the misophonia group in response to all sounds. Bar plot in the bottom row plots connectivity strengths in the two groups in response to sounds. The results shown are cluster-corrected with a cluster defining threshold of p = 0.001. Data in the bar plots represent mean ± SEM.
Figure 3.Activation of orofacial motor cortex and auditory cortex in response to three categories of sounds. , The orofacial motor area represents a statistically significant (p = 0.002) group × sound category interaction. , Bar plots represent β values for the orofacial motor cortex for the two groups in response to three sound categories. , Plots of variation of β values with the rating of misophonic distress in misophonia sufferers and of annoyance in control subjects. No group × sound category interaction is seen in the auditory cortex (, middle column), which is confirmed by the bar plots of activation (, first and third column) in response to sounds for the two groups. , Middle column: white represents HG; black represents PT. Data in the bar plots represent mean ± SEM.