Individuals with depression display abnormal modulation of neural oscillatory activity during working memory encoding and maintenance

•Examined oscillatory activity during working memory encoding and maintenance in MDD.•Large cohort of MDD and controls balanced on age, sex, and working memory ability.•During encoding, MDD show less frontal theta and more occipital upper alpha.•During maintenance, MDD show less frontal theta and oc...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biological psychology 2019-11, Vol.148, p.107766-107766, Article 107766
Hauptverfasser: Murphy, O.W., Hoy, K.E., Wong, D., Bailey, N.W., Fitzgerald, P.B., Segrave, R.A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Examined oscillatory activity during working memory encoding and maintenance in MDD.•Large cohort of MDD and controls balanced on age, sex, and working memory ability.•During encoding, MDD show less frontal theta and more occipital upper alpha.•During maintenance, MDD show less frontal theta and occipital gamma and upper alpha.•Higher depression severity linked to greater magnitude of oscillatory abnormalities. To investigate neural oscillatory activity supporting working memory (WM) processing in depressed individuals and healthy controls. Forty-six participants with Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) and 41 healthy controls balanced on age, gender, and WM ability completed a Sternberg verbal WM task with concurrent electroencephalography recording. Oscillatory activity was calculated for upper alpha, theta, and gamma frequency bands during WM encoding and maintenance. WM performance did not differ between groups. When compared to healthy controls, depressed individuals displayed reduced frontal-midline theta power and increased occipital upper alpha power during WM encoding, and reductions in frontal-midline theta power and occipital gamma and upper alpha power during WM maintenance. Higher depression severity was associated with greater reductions upper alpha and gamma power during WM maintenance. Depressed individuals displayed prominent alterations in oscillatory activity during WM encoding and maintenance, indicating that the neural processes which support WM processing are altered in MDD even when no cognitive impairments are observed.
ISSN:0301-0511
1873-6246
DOI:10.1016/j.biopsycho.2019.107766