Worry and rumination elicit similar neural representations: neuroimaging evidence for repetitive negative thinking.

IF 2.5 3区 医学 Q2 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES Cognitive Affective & Behavioral Neuroscience Pub Date : 2024-11-19 DOI:10.3758/s13415-024-01239-z
Nikki A Puccetti, Caitlin A Stamatis, Kiara R Timpano, Aaron S Heller
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Abstract

Repetitive negative thinking (RNT) captures shared cognitive and emotional features of content-specific cognition, including future-focused worry and past-focused rumination. The degree to which these distinct but related processes recruit overlapping neural structures is undetermined, because most neuroscientific studies only examine worry or rumination in isolation. To address this, we developed a paradigm to elicit idiographic worries and ruminations during an fMRI scan in 39 young adults with a range of trait RNT scores. We measured concurrent emotion ratings and heart rate as a physiological metric of arousal. Multivariate representational similarity analysis revealed that regions distributed across default mode, salience, and frontoparietal control networks encode worry and rumination similarly. Moreover, heart rate did not differ between worry and rumination. Capturing the shared neural features between worry and rumination throughout networks supporting self-referential processing, memory, salience detection, and cognitive control provides novel empirical evidence to bolster cognitive and clinical models of RNT.

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忧虑和反刍会引发相似的神经表征:重复性负面思维的神经影像学证据。
重复性消极思维(RNT)捕捉了特定内容认知的共同认知和情感特征,包括以未来为中心的担忧和以过去为中心的反刍。由于大多数神经科学研究只是孤立地研究担忧或反刍,因此这些不同但相关的过程在多大程度上利用了重叠的神经结构尚未确定。为了解决这个问题,我们开发了一种范式,在对39名具有不同特质RNT得分的年轻人进行fMRI扫描时,诱发他们的特质性担忧和反刍。我们测量了同时出现的情绪评分和作为唤醒生理指标的心率。多变量表征相似性分析表明,分布于默认模式、显著性和额叶控制网络的区域对担忧和反刍的编码相似。此外,担心和反刍的心率也没有差异。在支持自我参照处理、记忆、显著性检测和认知控制的网络中捕捉担忧和反刍之间的共同神经特征,为支持RNT的认知和临床模型提供了新的经验证据。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
3.40%
发文量
64
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Cognitive, Affective, & Behavioral Neuroscience (CABN) offers theoretical, review, and primary research articles on behavior and brain processes in humans. Coverage includes normal function as well as patients with injuries or processes that influence brain function: neurological disorders, including both healthy and disordered aging; and psychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia and depression. CABN is the leading vehicle for strongly psychologically motivated studies of brain–behavior relationships, through the presentation of papers that integrate psychological theory and the conduct and interpretation of the neuroscientific data. The range of topics includes perception, attention, memory, language, problem solving, reasoning, and decision-making; emotional processes, motivation, reward prediction, and affective states; and individual differences in relevant domains, including personality. Cognitive, Affective, & Behavioral Neuroscience is a publication of the Psychonomic Society.
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