Convergent individual differences in visual cortices, but not the amygdala across standard amygdalar fMRI probe tasks

Victoria Villalta-Gil, Kendra E. Hinton, Bennett A. Landman, Benjamin C. Yvernault, Scott F. Perkins, Allison S. Katsantonis, Courtney L. Sellani, Benjamin B. Lahey, David H. Zald

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

The amygdala (AMG) has been repeatedly implicated in the processing of threatening and negatively valenced stimuli and multiple fMRI paradigms have reported personality, genetic, and psychopathological associations with individual differences in AMG activation in these paradigms. Yet the interchangeability of activations in these probes has not been established, thus it remains unclear if we can interpret AMG responses on specific tasks as general markers of its reactivity. In this study we aimed to assess if different tasks that have been widely used within the Affective Neuroscience literature consistently recruit the AMG. Method Thirty-two young healthy subjects completed four fMRI tasks that have all been previously shown to probe the AMG during processing of threatening stimuli: the Threat Face Matching (TFM), the Cued Aversive Picture (CAP), the Aversive and Erotica Pictures (AEP) and the Screaming Lady paradigm (SLp) tasks. Contrasts testing response to aversive stimuli relative to baseline or neutral stimuli were generated and correlations between activations in the AMG were calculated across tasks were performed for ROIs of the AMG. Results The TFM, CAP and AEP, but not the SLp, successfully recruit the AMG, among other brain regions, especially when contrasts were against baseline or nonsocial stimuli. Conjunction analysis across contrasts showed that visual cortices (VisCtx) were also consistently recruited. Correlation analysis between the extracted data for right and left AMG did not yield significant associations across tasks. By contrast, the extracted signal in VisCtx showed significant associations across tasks (range r=0.511-r=0.630). Conclusions Three of the four paradigms revealed significant AMG reactivity, but individual differences in the magnitudes of AMG reactivity were not correlated across paradigms. By contrast, VisCtx activation appears to be a better candidate than the AMG as a measure of individual differences with convergent validity across negative emotion processing paradigms.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)312-319
Number of pages8
JournalNeuroImage
Volume146
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 1 2017
Externally publishedYes

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Neurology
  • Cognitive Neuroscience

Keywords

  • Affective neuroscience
  • Amygdala
  • Convergent validity
  • Threat processing
  • Visual cortex

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Convergent individual differences in visual cortices, but not the amygdala across standard amygdalar fMRI probe tasks'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this