41 research outputs found

    A neurophysiological deficit in early visual processing in schizophrenia patients with auditory hallucinations: Visual N1 and auditory hallucinations in schizophrenia

    Get PDF
    Existing 67-channel ERPs, obtained during recognition and working memory paradigms with words or faces, were used to examine early visual processing in schizophrenia patients prone to auditory hallucinations (AH, n = 26) or not (NH, n = 49) and healthy controls (HC, n = 46). Current source density (CSD) transforms revealed distinct, strongly left- (words) or right-lateralized (faces; N170) inferior-temporal N1 sinks (150 ms) in each group. N1 was quantified by temporal PCA of peak-adjusted CSDs. For words and faces in both paradigms, N1 was substantially reduced in AH compared with NH and HC, who did not differ from each other. The difference in N1 between AH and NH was not due to overall symptom severity or performance accuracy, with both groups showing comparable memory deficits. Our findings extend prior reports of reduced auditory N1 in AH, suggesting a broader early perceptual integration deficit that is not limited to the auditory modality

    Neuronal Generator Patterns At Scalp Elicited By Lateralized Aversive Pictures Reveal Consecutive Stages Of Motivated Attention

    Get PDF
    Event-related potential (ERP) studies have provided evidence for an allocation of attentional resources to enhance perceptual processing of motivationally salient stimuli. Emotional modulation affects several consecutive components associated with stages of affective-cognitive processing, beginning as early as 100ā€“200 ms after stimulus onset. In agreement with the notion that the right parietotemporal region is critically involved during the perception of arousing affective stimuli, some ERP studies have reported asymmetric emotional ERP effects. However, it is difļ¬cult to separate emotional from non-emotional effects because differences in stimulus content unrelated to affective salience or task demands may also be associated with lateralized function or promote cognitive processing. Other concerns pertain to the operational deļ¬nition and statistical independence of ERP component measures, their dependence on an EEG reference, and spatial smearing due to volume conduction, all of which impede the identiļ¬cation of distinct scalp activation patterns associated with affective processing. Building on prior research using a visual half-ļ¬eld paradigm with highly controlled emotional stimuli (pictures of cosmetic surgery patients showing disordered [negative] or healed [neutral] facial areas before or after treatment), 72channel ERPs recorded from 152 individuals (ages 13ā€“68 years; 81 female) were transformed into reference-free current source density (CSD) waveforms and submitted to temporal principal components analysis (PCA) to identify their underlying neuronal generator patterns. Using both nonparametric randomization tests and repeated measures ANOVA, robust effects of emotional content were found over parietooccipital regions for CSD factors corresponding to N2 sink (212 ms peak latency), P3 source (385 ms) and a late centroparietal source (630 ms), all indicative of greater positivity for negative than neutral stimuli. For the N2 sink, emotional effects were right-lateralized and modulated by hemiļ¬eld, with larger amplitude and asymmetry for left hemiļ¬eld (right hemisphere) presentations. For all three factors, more positive amplitudes at parietooccipital sites were associated with increased ratings of negative valence and greater arousal. Distributed inverse solutions of the CSDPCA-based emotional effects implicated a sequence of maximal activations in right occipitotemporal cortex, bilateral posterior cingulate cortex, and bilateral inferior temporal cortex. These ļ¬ndings are consistent with hierarchical activations of the ventral visual pathway reļ¬‚ecting subsequent processing stages in response to motivationally salient stimuli

    Motivated Attention And Family Risk For Depression: Neuronal Generator Patterns At Scalp Elicited By Lateralized Aversive Pictures Reveal Blunted Emotional Responsivity

    Get PDF
    Behavioral and electrophysiologic evidence suggests that major depression (MDD) involves right parietotemporal dysfunction, a region activated by arousing aļ¬€ective stimuli. Building on prior event-related potential (ERP) ļ¬ndings (Kayser et al. 2016 NeuroImage 142:337ā€“350), this study examined whether these abnormalities also characterize individuals at clinical high risk for MDD. We systematically explored the impact of family risk status and personal history of depression and anxiety on three distinct stages of emotional processing comprising the late positive potential (LPP). ERPs (72 channels) were recorded from 74 high and 53 low risk individuals (age 13ā€“59 years, 58 male) during a visual half-ļ¬eld paradigm using highly-controlled pictures of cosmetic surgery patients showing disordered (negative) or healed (neutral) facial areas before or after treatment. Reference-free current source density (CSD) transformations of ERP waveforms were quantiļ¬ed by temporal principal components analysis (tPCA). Component scores of prominent CSD-tPCA factors sensitive to emotional content were analyzed via permutation tests and repeated measures ANOVA for mixed factorial designs with unstructured covariance matrix, including gender, age and clinical covariates. Factor-based distributed inverse solutions provided descriptive estimates of emotional brain activations at group level corresponding to hierarchical activations along ventral visual processing stream. Risk status aļ¬€ected emotional responsivity (increased positivity to negative-than-neutral stimuli) overlapping early N2 sink (peak latency 212 ms), P3 source (385 ms), and a late centroparietal source (630 ms). High risk individuals had reduced right-greater-thanleft emotional lateralization involving occipitotemporal cortex (N2 sink) and bilaterally reduced emotional eļ¬€ects involving posterior cingulate (P3 source) and inferior temporal cortex (630 ms) when compared to those at low risk. While the early emotional eļ¬€ects were enhanced for left hemiļ¬eld (right hemisphere) presentations, hemiļ¬eld modulations did not diļ¬€er between risk groups, suggesting top-down rather than bottom-up eļ¬€ects of risk. Groups did not diļ¬€er in their stimulus valence or arousal ratings. Similar eļ¬€ects were seen for individuals with a lifetime history of depression or anxiety disorder in comparison to those without. However, there was no evidence that risk status and history of MDD or anxiety disorder interacted in their impact on emotional responsivity, suggesting largely independent attenuation of attentional resource allocation to enhance perceptual processing of motivationally salient stimuli. These ļ¬ndings further suggest that a deļ¬cit in motivated attention preceding conscious awareness may be a marker of risk for depression

    Demonstrating testā€retest reliability of electrophysiological measures for healthy adults in a multisite study of biomarkers of antidepressant treatment response

    Full text link
    Growing evidence suggests that loudness dependency of auditory evoked potentials (LDAEP) and resting EEG alpha and theta may be biological markers for predicting response to antidepressants. In spite of this promise, little is known about the joint reliability of these markers, and thus their clinical applicability. New standardized procedures were developed to improve the compatibility of data acquired with different EEG platforms, and used to examine testā€retest reliability for the three electrophysiological measures selected for a multisite projectā€”Establishing Moderators and Biosignatures of Antidepressant Response for Clinical Care (EMBARC). Thirtyā€nine healthy controls across four clinical research sites were tested in two sessions separated by about 1 week. Resting EEG (eyesā€open and eyesā€closed conditions) was recorded and LDAEP measured using binaural tones (1000 Hz, 40 ms) at five intensities (60ā€“100 dB SPL). Principal components analysis of current source density waveforms reduced volume conduction and provided referenceā€free measures of resting EEG alpha and N1 dipole activity to tones from auditory cortex. Lowā€resolution electromagnetic tomography (LORETA) extracted resting theta current density measures corresponding to rostral anterior cingulate (rACC), which has been implicated in treatment response. There were no significant differences in posterior alpha, N1 dipole, or rACC theta across sessions. Testā€retest reliability was .84 for alpha, .87 for N1 dipole, and .70 for theta rACC current density. The demonstration of goodā€toā€excellent reliability for these measures provides a template for future EEG/ERP studies from multiple testing sites, and an important step for evaluating them as biomarkers for predicting treatment response.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/135271/1/psyp12758_am.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/135271/2/psyp12758.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/135271/3/psyp12758-sup-0001-suppinfo1.pd

    Continuity in Secession: The Case of the Confederate Constitution

    Full text link

    Institutional Flip-Flops

    Full text link
    corecore