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Negative bias effects during audiovisual emotional processing in major depression disorder
Authors:Liyuan Li  Rong Li  Fei Shen  Xuyang Wang  Ting Zou  Chijun Deng  Chong Wang  Jiyi Li  Hongyu Wang  Xinju Huang  Fengmei Lu  Zongling He  Huafu Chen
Affiliation:1. The Clinical Hospital of Chengdu Brain Science Institute, High‐Field Magnetic Resonance Brain Imaging Key Laboratory of Sichuan Province, School of Life Science and Technology, University of Electronic Science and Technology of China, Chengdu P. R. China ; 2. Sichuan Provincial Center for Mental Health, The Center of Psychosomatic Medicine of Sichuan Provincial People''s Hospital, University of Electronic Science and Technology of China, Chengdu P. R. China
Abstract:Aberrant affective neural processing and negative emotional bias are trait‐marks of major depression disorders (MDDs). However, most research on biased emotional perception in depression has only focused on unimodal experimental stimuli, the neural basis of potentially biased emotional processing of multimodal inputs remains unclear. Here, we addressed this issue by implementing an audiovisual emotional task during functional MRI scanning sessions with 37 patients with MDD and 37 gender‐, age‐ and education‐matched healthy controls. Participants were asked to distinguish laughing and crying sounds while being exposed to faces with different emotional valences as background. We combined general linear model and psychophysiological interaction analyses to identify abnormal local functional activity and integrative processes during audiovisual emotional processing in MDD patients. At the local neural level, MDD patients showed increased bias activity in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) while listening to negative auditory stimuli and concurrently processing visual facial expressions, along with decreased dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) activity in both the positive and negative visual facial conditions. At the network level, MDD exhibited significantly decreased connectivity in areas involved in automatic emotional processes and voluntary control systems during perception of negative stimuli, including the vmPFC, dlPFC, insula, as well as the subcortical regions of posterior cingulate cortex and striatum. These findings support a multimodal emotion dysregulation hypothesis for MDD by demonstrating that negative bias effects may be facilitated by the excessive ventral bottom‐up negative emotional influences along with incapability in dorsal prefrontal top‐down control system.
Keywords:audiovisual emotional processing   major depression disorder   negative bias effects
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