Healthy individuals maintain adaptive stimulus evaluation under predictable and unpredictable threat

Klinkenberg, I.A.G., Rehbein, M.A., Steinberg, C., Klahn, A.L., Zwanzger, P., Zwitserlood, P., & Junghöfer, M.

Forschungsartikel (Zeitschrift)

Zusammenfassung

The anxiety inducing paradigms such as the threat-of-shock paradigm have provided ample data on the emotional processing of predictable and unpredictable threat, but little is known about the processing of aversive, threat-irrelevant stimuli in these paradigms. We investigated how the predictability of threat influences the neural visual processing of threat-irrelevant fearful and neutral faces. Thirty-two healthy individuals participated in an NPU-threat test, consisting of a safe or neutral condition (N) and a predictable (P) as well as an unpredictable (U) threat condition, using audio-visual threat stimuli. In all NPU-conditions, we registered participants' brain responses to threat-irrelevant faces via magnetoencephalography. The data showed that increasing unpredictability of threat evoked increasing emotion regulation during face processing predominantly in dorsolateral prefrontal cortex regions during an early to mid-latency time interval. Importantly, we obtained only main effects but no significant interaction of facial expression and conditions of different threat predictability, neither in behavioral nor in neural data. Healthy individuals with average trait anxiety are thus able to maintain adaptive stimulus evaluation processes under predictable and unpredictable threat conditions.

Details zur Publikation

Seiten: 12
Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2016
Sprache, in der die Publikation verfasst istEnglisch