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. 2020 Nov 30:305:111186.
doi: 10.1016/j.pscychresns.2020.111186. Epub 2020 Sep 10.

Neural correlates of subjective arousal and valence in health and panic disorder

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Free article

Neural correlates of subjective arousal and valence in health and panic disorder

L M Wade-Bohleber et al. Psychiatry Res Neuroimaging. .
Free article

Abstract

Aberrant emotion processing is a core characteristic of panic disorder (PD). Findings concerning the underlying neural pathways remain inconsistent. We applied functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) in the context of a task based on the circumplex model of affect. This model links affective states to two underlying neurophysiological systems: arousal and valence. Twenty-two healthy participants and 20 participants with PD rated arousal and valence in response to affective faces during fMRI. In healthy controls, we found that arousal modulated the hemodynamic response in the parahippocampus, the ventromedial prefrontal cortex and the cuneus during face perception. Valence and extreme ratings of valence modulated the hemodynamic response in temporal, parietal, somatosensory, premotor and cerebellar regions. Comparing healthy controls to participants with PD, we found that healthy controls showed a stronger modulation of the hemodynamic response during face perception associated with extreme ratings of valence in the parahippocampus and the supplementary motor area. This suggests parahippocampal dysfunction in the processing of highly valenced affective faces in PD, which may underlie aberrant contextualization of strong affective stimuli. Our findings need to be interpreted with care as they were adjusted for multiple comparisons using a liberal correction procedure.

Keywords: Affective faces; Circumplex model of affect; Functional magnetic resonance imaging; Panic disorder.

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