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The effects of acute stress on human prefrontal working memory systems
Authors:Porcelli Anthony J  Cruz Daniel  Wenberg Karen  Patterson Michael D  Biswal Bharat B  Rypma Bart
Affiliation:a Rutgers University, United States
b University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, United States
c University of Texas at Dallas, United States
d University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, United States
Abstract:We examined the relationship between acute stress and prefrontal-cortex (PFC) based working memory (WM) systems using behavioral (Experiment 1) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI; Experiment 2) paradigms. Subjects performed a delayed-response item-recognition task, with alternating blocks of high and low WM demand trials. During scanning, participants performed this task under three stress conditions: cold stress (induced by cold-water hand-immersion), a room temperature water control (induced by tepid-water hand-immersion), and no-water control (no hand-immersion). Performance was affected by WM demand, but not stress. Cold stress elicited greater salivary cortisol readings in behavioral subjects, and greater PFC signal change in fMRI subjects, than control conditions. These results suggest that, under stress, increases in PFC activity may be necessary to mediate cognitive processes that maintain behavioral organization.
Keywords:Stress   Cortisol   Cognition   Working memory   PFC   Amygdala   Cold
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