首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Hemodynamic correlates of emotion regulation in frontal lobe epilepsy patients and healthy participants
Authors:Anissa Benzait  Valentina Krenz  Martin Wegrzyn  Anna Doll  Friedrich Woermann  Kirsten Labudda  Christian G. Bien  Johanna Kissler
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology, Bielefeld University, Bielefeld Germany ; 2. Department of Psychology, University of Hamburg, Hamburg Germany ; 3. Department of Epileptology (Mara Hospital), Medical School, Bielefeld University, Bielefeld Germany ; 4. Center of Excellence Cognitive Interaction Technology (CITEC), Bielefeld University, Bielefeld Germany
Abstract:The ability to regulate emotions is indispensable for maintaining psychological health. It heavily relies on frontal lobe functions which are disrupted in frontal lobe epilepsy. Accordingly, emotional dysregulation and use of maladaptive emotion regulation strategies have been reported in frontal lobe epilepsy patients. Therefore, it is of clinical and scientific interest to investigate emotion regulation in frontal lobe epilepsy. We studied neural correlates of upregulating and downregulating emotions toward aversive pictures through reappraisal in 18 frontal lobe epilepsy patients and 17 healthy controls using functional magnetic resonance imaging. Patients tended to report more difficulties with impulse control than controls. On the neural level, patients had diminished activity during upregulation in distributed left‐sided regions, including ventrolateral and dorsomedial prefrontal cortex, angular gyrus and anterior temporal gyrus. Patients also showed less activity than controls in the left precuneus for upregulation compared to downregulation. Unlike controls, they displayed no task‐related activity changes in the left amygdala, whereas the right amygdala showed task‐related modulations in both groups. Upregulation‐related activity changes in the left inferior frontal gyrus, insula, orbitofrontal cortex, anterior and posterior cingulate cortex, and precuneus were correlated with questionnaire data on habitual emotion regulation. Our results show that structural or functional impairments in the frontal lobes disrupt neural mechanisms underlying emotion regulation through reappraisal throughout the brain, including posterior regions involved in semantic control. Findings on the amygdala as a major target of emotion regulation are in line with the view that specifically the left amygdala is connected with semantic processing networks.
Keywords:amygdala, emotion regulation, fMRI, frontal lobe epilepsy, reappraisal, top‐  down
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号