2008
DOI: 10.1001/archpsyc.65.11.1303
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Amygdala and Ventrolateral Prefrontal Cortex Function During Anticipated Peer Evaluation in Pediatric Social Anxiety

Abstract: Context Amygdala and ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (vlPFC) dysfunction manifests in adolescents with anxiety disorders when they view negatively valenced stimuli in threatening contexts. Such fear-circuitry dysfunction may also manifest when anticipated social evaluation leads socially anxious adolescents to misperceive peers as threatening. Objective To determine whether photographs of negatively evaluated smiling peers viewed during anticipated social evaluation engage the amygdala and vlPFC differential… Show more

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Cited by 326 publications
(328 citation statements)
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“…Indeed, the VLPFC, often accompanied by the amygdala and insula, was recently shown to be activated in relation to the intensity of IAPS pictures, anticipation of negative pictures, negative facial expressions, affect naming, emotional distraction, reappraisal and regulation, and experienced or self-induced sadness and happiness Pelletier et al, 2003;Habel et al, 2005;Dolcos and McCarthy, 2006;Drabant et al, 2006;Grimm et al, 2006;Lieberman et al, 2007;Mataix-Cols et al, 2008;Onoda et al, 2008;Wager et al, 2008). Abnormal activity in the same regions during emotional processing has been reported in a variety of psychiatric conditions involving emotional dysfunction such as mania, depression, negative psychotic symptoms, stress, anxiety, and obsessive compulsive disorders (Fahim et al, 2005;Monk et al, 2006;Taylor et al, 2006;Johnstone et al, 2007;Lawrence et al, 2007;Pavuluri et al, 2007;Foland et al, 2008;Guyer et al, 2008).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Indeed, the VLPFC, often accompanied by the amygdala and insula, was recently shown to be activated in relation to the intensity of IAPS pictures, anticipation of negative pictures, negative facial expressions, affect naming, emotional distraction, reappraisal and regulation, and experienced or self-induced sadness and happiness Pelletier et al, 2003;Habel et al, 2005;Dolcos and McCarthy, 2006;Drabant et al, 2006;Grimm et al, 2006;Lieberman et al, 2007;Mataix-Cols et al, 2008;Onoda et al, 2008;Wager et al, 2008). Abnormal activity in the same regions during emotional processing has been reported in a variety of psychiatric conditions involving emotional dysfunction such as mania, depression, negative psychotic symptoms, stress, anxiety, and obsessive compulsive disorders (Fahim et al, 2005;Monk et al, 2006;Taylor et al, 2006;Johnstone et al, 2007;Lawrence et al, 2007;Pavuluri et al, 2007;Foland et al, 2008;Guyer et al, 2008).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…These two structures were examined given their central role in the pathophysiology of anxiety. In this regard, most fMRI studies of youth with anxiety disorders suggest increased activation of the VLPFC (Monk et al 2006;McClure et al 2007;Guyer et al 2008;Monk et al 2008;Beesdo et al 2009;Strawn et al 2012a) and also suggest structural deficits in this region in children and adolescents with anxiety disorders . The VLPFC subserves a number of regulatory functions, including modulation of amygdala activity (Monk et al 2008) and is responsible for conscious regulation of affect (Phillips et al 2008).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In particular, a set of dysfunctional mental processes has been linked to pediatric anxiety and associated traits, such as the early-childhood temperament of behavioral inhibition. These dysfunctional processes can be classified into five groups of information-processing functions: 1) threatattention interaction (a tendency for anxious children to automatically orient their attention towards or away from threats) 72 ; 2) threat appraisal (a tendency for anxious children to classify and respond to neutral or harmless stimuli as if they are dangerous) 73 ; 3) memory and learning processes (a tendency for anxious individuals to learn different associations among safe and dangerous stimuli, as presented in fear conditioning and extinction experiments) [73][74][75] ; 4) social evaluative processes (a tendency for anxious children to become concerned about peer evaluation) 76 ; 5) increased sensitivity to rewards (a tendency for anxiety children to more strongly alter their behavior when trying to achieve rewards). 77,78 This set of findings suggests that anxiety disorders involve dysfunctional processes in various emotional and cognitive processes, each of which is in turn regulated by several brain regions that may support anxiety disorder pathophysiology.…”
Section: Pathophysiological Processes and Neural Substratementioning
confidence: 99%