Neural correlates of inhibitory spillover in adolescence: Associations with internalizing symptoms

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Abstract

This study used an emotional go/no-go task to explore inhibitory spillover (how intentional cognitive inhibition 'spills over' to inhibit neural responses to affective stimuli) within 23 adolescents. Adolescents were shown emotional faces and asked to press a button depending on the gender of the face. When asked to inhibit with irrelevant affective stimuli present, adolescents recruited prefrontal cognitive control regions (rIFG, ACC) and ventral affective areas (insula, amygdala). In support of the inhibitory spillover hypothesis, increased activation of the rIFG and down-regulation of the amygdala occurred during negative, but not positive, inhibition trials compared with go trials. Functional connectivity analysis revealed coupling of the rIFG pars opercularis and ventral affective areas during negative no-go trials. Age was negatively associated with activation in frontal and temporal regions associated with inhibition and sensory integration. Internalizing symptoms were positively associated with increased bilateral IFG, ACC, putamen and pallidum. This is the first study to test the inhibitory spillover emotional go/no-go task within adolescents, who may have difficulties with inhibitory control, and to tie it to internalizing symptoms.

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APA

Stoycos, S. A., Piero, L. D., Margolin, G., Kaplan, J. T., & Saxbe, D. E. (2017). Neural correlates of inhibitory spillover in adolescence: Associations with internalizing symptoms. Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, 12(10), 1637–1646. https://doi.org/10.1093/scan/nsx098

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