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  3. Violence-related PTSD and neural activation when seeing emotionally charged male-female interactions.
 

Violence-related PTSD and neural activation when seeing emotionally charged male-female interactions.

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BORIS DOI
10.7892/boris.71215
Date of Publication
May 2015
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Institut für Psycholo...

Contributor
Moser, Dominik A
Aue, Tatjana
Institut für Psychologie; Allgemeine Psychologie und Neuropsychologie
Suardi, Francesca
Kutlikova, Hana
Cordero, Maria I
Rossignol, Ana Sancho
Favez, Nicolas
Rusconi Serpa, Sandra
Schechter, Daniel S
Subject(s)

100 - Philosophy::150...

600 - Technology::610...

500 - Science::570 - ...

Series
Social cognitive and affective neuroscience
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1749-5024
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1093/scan/nsu099
PubMed ID
25062841
Uncontrolled Keywords

Parental PTSD

emotion regulation

fMRI

human interaction

interpersonal violenc...

Description
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a disorder that involves impaired regulation of the fear response to traumatic reminders. This study tested how women with male-perpetrated interpersonal violence-related PTSD (IPV-PTSD) differed in their brain activation from healthy controls (HC) when exposed to scenes of male-female interaction of differing emotional content. Sixteen women with symptoms of IPV-PTSD and 19 HC participated in this study. During magnetic resonance imaging, participants watched a stimulus protocol of 23 different 20 s silent epochs of male-female interactions taken from feature films, which were neutral, menacing or prosocial. IPV-PTSD participants compared with HC showed (i) greater dorsomedial prefrontal cortex (dmPFC) and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) activation in response to menacing vs prosocial scenes and (ii) greater anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), right hippocampus activation and lower ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) activty in response to emotional vs neutral scenes. The fact that IPV-PTSD participants compared with HC showed lower activity of the ventral ACC during emotionally charged scenes regardless of the valence of the scenes suggests that impaired social perception among IPV-PTSD patients transcends menacing contexts and generalizes to a wider variety of emotionally charged male-female interactions.
Official URL
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4420740/pdf/nsu099.pdf
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/134744
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FileFile TypeFormatSizeLicensePublisher/Copright statementContent
645.full.pdftextAdobe PDF372.41 KBpublisherpublishedOpen
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