Neural Control of Vascular Reactions: Impact of Emotion and Attention
Adult
Male
Brain Mapping
Functional Neuroimaging
Emotions
2800 General Neuroscience
Brain
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
330 Economics
03 medical and health sciences
Cognition
0302 clinical medicine
10007 Department of Economics
Image Processing, Computer-Assisted
Humans
Arterial Pressure
Attention
Female
Photic Stimulation
DOI:
10.1523/jneurosci.0747-13.2014
Publication Date:
2014-03-19T16:35:10Z
AUTHORS (7)
ABSTRACT
This study investigated the neural regions involved in blood pressure reactions to negative stimuli and their possible modulation by attention. Twenty-four healthy human subjects (11 females; age = 24.75 ± 2.49 years) participated in an affective perceptual load task that manipulated attention to negative/neutral distractor pictures. fMRI data were collected simultaneously with continuous recording of peripheral arterial blood pressure. A parametric modulation analysis examined the impact of attention and emotion on the relation between neural activation and blood pressure reactivity during the task. When attention was available for processing the distractor pictures, negative pictures resulted in behavioral interference, neural activation in brain regions previously related to emotion, a transient decrease of blood pressure, and a positive correlation between blood pressure response and activation in a network including prefrontal and parietal regions, the amygdala, caudate, and mid-brain. These effects were modulated by attention; behavioral and neural responses to highly negative distractor pictures (compared with neutral pictures) were smaller or diminished, as was the negative blood pressure response when the central task involved high perceptual load. Furthermore, comparing high and low load revealed enhanced activation in frontoparietal regions implicated in attention control. Our results fit theories emphasizing the role of attention in the control of behavioral and neural reactions to irrelevant emotional distracting information. Our findings furthermore extend the function of attention to the control of autonomous reactions associated with negative emotions by showing altered blood pressure reactions to emotional stimuli, the latter being of potential clinical relevance.
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