Cognitive Affective & Behavioral Neuroscience
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Published By Springer - Psychonomic Society

1531-135x, 1530-7026

Author(s):  
Jordan E. Pierce ◽  
R. James R. Blair ◽  
Kayla R. Clark ◽  
Maital Neta

AbstractDuring cognitive reappraisal, an individual reinterprets the meaning of an emotional stimulus to regulate the intensity of their emotional response. Prefrontal cortex activity has been found to support reappraisal and is putatively thought to downregulate the amygdala response to these stimuli. The timing of these regulation-related responses during the course of a trial, however, remains poorly understood. In the current fMRI study, participants were instructed to view or reappraise negative images and then rate how negative they felt following each image. The hemodynamic response function was estimated in 11 regions of interest for the entire time course of the trial including image viewing and rating. Notably, within the amygdala there was no evidence of downregulation in the early (picture viewing) window of the trial, only in the late (rating) window, which also correlated with a behavioral measure of reappraisal success. With respect to the prefrontal regions, some (e.g., inferior frontal gyrus) showed reappraisal-related activation in the early window, whereas others (e.g., middle frontal gyrus) showed increased activation primarily in the late window. These results highlight the temporal dynamics of different brain regions during emotion regulation and suggest that the amygdala response to negative images need not be immediately dampened to achieve successful cognitive reappraisal.


Author(s):  
Arianna Moccia ◽  
Alexa M. Morcom

AbstractPeople often want to recall events of a particular kind, but this selective remembering is not always possible. We contrasted two candidate mechanisms: the overlap between retrieval cues and stored memory traces, and the ease of recollection. In two preregistered experiments (Ns = 28), we used event-related potentials (ERPs) to quantify selection occurring before retrieval and the goal states — retrieval orientations — thought to achieve this selection. Participants viewed object pictures or heard object names, and one of these sources was designated as targets in each memory test. We manipulated cue overlap by probing memory with visual names (Experiment 1) or line drawings (Experiment 2). Results revealed that regardless of which source was targeted, the left parietal ERP effect indexing recollection was selective when test cues overlapped more with the targeted than non-targeted information, despite consistently better memory for pictures. ERPs for unstudied items also were more positive-going when cue overlap was high, suggesting that engagement of retrieval orientations reflected availability of external cues matching the targeted source. The data support the view that selection can act before recollection if there is sufficient overlap between retrieval cues and targeted versus competing memory traces.


Author(s):  
Meryl Rueppel ◽  
Kristin A. Mannella ◽  
Kate D. Fitzgerald ◽  
Hans S. Schroder

Author(s):  
Maedeh Ghasemi ◽  
Mojdeh Navidhamidi ◽  
Fatemeh Rezaei ◽  
Armin Azizikia ◽  
Nasrin Mehranfard

Author(s):  
Qianying Ma ◽  
Min Pu ◽  
Naem P. Haihambo ◽  
Kris Baetens ◽  
Elien Heleven ◽  
...  

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