Amygdala sensitivity for negative information as a neural marker for negative memory bias across psychiatric diagnoses

•We studied two depressotypic markers in a naturalistic psychiatric patient sample.•Self-referent negative memory bias as a neurocognitive depressotypic marker.•The amygdala's sensitivity for negative information as a neurobiological depressotypic marker.•The left amygdala's sensitivity ma...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychiatry research. Neuroimaging 2022-07, Vol.323, p.111481-111481, Article 111481
Hauptverfasser: Duyser, Fleur A., Vrijsen, Janna N., van Oort, Jasper, Collard, Rose M., Schene, Aart H., Tendolkar, Indira, van Eijndhoven, Philip F.
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container_title Psychiatry research. Neuroimaging
container_volume 323
creator Duyser, Fleur A.
Vrijsen, Janna N.
van Oort, Jasper
Collard, Rose M.
Schene, Aart H.
Tendolkar, Indira
van Eijndhoven, Philip F.
description •We studied two depressotypic markers in a naturalistic psychiatric patient sample.•Self-referent negative memory bias as a neurocognitive depressotypic marker.•The amygdala's sensitivity for negative information as a neurobiological depressotypic marker.•The left amygdala's sensitivity may be a neural correlate of negative memory bias. Self-referent negative memory bias is a known risk factor for depression, but recent evidence suggests its function as a transdiagnostic cognitive depressotypic marker. The amygdala's sensitivity for negative information is considered a neurobiological depressotypic marker. However, their relationship remains unknown. We transdiagnostically investigated the association between the amygdala's sensitivity, self-referent negative memory bias and its two components: negative endorsement bias and negative recall bias. Patients (n= 125) with (multimorbid) stress-related and neurodevelopmental psychiatric disorders and healthy controls (n= 78) performed an fMRI task to assess the amygdala's sensitivity for negative information and a task outside the scanner for the biases. Linear regression models assessed their associations. The left amygdala's sensitivity for negative information was significantly positively associated with negative recall bias in patients, but not controls. There were no significant associations with self-referent negative memory bias or negative endorsement bias or between the two depressotypic markers. Thus, the left amygdala's sensitivity for negative information may be considered a neural marker of negative memory bias across psychiatric diagnoses. Further research on the interactons with known determinants such as genetic predisposition is required to fully understand the relationship between the amygdala's sensitivity for negative information and these biases.
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subjects Emotion processing task
FMRI
Psychiatry
Self-referent encoding task
Transdiagnostic
title Amygdala sensitivity for negative information as a neural marker for negative memory bias across psychiatric diagnoses
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