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  3. Violence Exposure Is Associated With Atypical Appraisal of Threat Among Women: An EEG Study.
 

Violence Exposure Is Associated With Atypical Appraisal of Threat Among Women: An EEG Study.

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/152047
Publisher DOI
10.3389/fpsyg.2020.576852
PubMed ID
33510667
Description
Introduction

The present study investigates the association of lifetime interpersonal violence (IPV) exposure, related posttraumatic stress disorder (IPV-PTSD), and appraisal of the degree of threat posed by facial avatars.

Methods

We recorded self-rated responses and high-density electroencephalography (HD-EEG) among women, 16 of whom with lifetime IPV-PTSD and 14 with no PTSD, during a face-evaluation task that displayed male face avatars varying in their degree of threat as rated along dimensions of dominance and trustworthiness.

Results

The study found a significant association between lifetime IPV exposure, under-estimation of dominance, and over-estimation of trustworthiness. Characterization of EEG microstates supported that lifetime IPV-PTSD modulates emotional appraisal, specifically in encoding and decoding processing associated with N170 and LPP evoked potentials. EEG source localization demonstrated an overactivation of the limbic system, in particular the parahippocampal gyrus, in response to non-threatening avatars. Additionally, dysfunctional involvement of attention-related processing anterior prefrontal cortex (aPFC) was found in response to relatively trustworthy avatars in IPV-PTSD individuals compared with non-PTSD controls.

Discussion

This study showed that IPV exposure and related PTSD modulate individuals' evaluation of facial characteristics suggesting threat. Atypical processing of these avatar characteristics was marked by group differences in brain regions linked to facial processing, emotion regulation, and memory.
Date of Publication
2021
Publication Type
Article
Keyword(s)
EEG neuroimaging IPV-PTSD face evaluation microstates source localization
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Perizzolo Pointet, Virginie Chloé
Moser, Dominikorcid-logo
Institut für Psychologie, Weitere Forschungsgruppen
Vital, Marylène
Rusconi Serpa, Sandra
Todorov, Alexander
Schechter, Daniel Scott
Additional Credits
Institut für Psychologie, Weitere Forschungsgruppen
Series
Frontiers in psychology
Publisher
Frontiers Research Foundation
ISSN
1664-1078
Access(Rights)
open.access
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