1. Hooked on a thought: Associations between rumination and neural responses to social rejection in adolescent girls
- Author
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Yoon, Leehyun, Keenan, Kate E, Hipwell, Alison E, Forbes, Erika E, and Guyer, Amanda E
- Subjects
Biological Psychology ,Psychology ,Mental Health ,Mind and Body ,Neurosciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric ,Neurological ,Mental health ,Female ,Humans ,Adolescent ,Social Status ,Emotions ,Cerebral Cortex ,Gyrus Cinguli ,Parietal Lobe ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Brain Mapping ,Rumination ,Adolescence ,Social rejection ,fMRI ,sgACC ,Default mode network ,Clinical Sciences ,Cognitive Sciences ,Biological psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
Rumination is a significant risk factor for psychopathology in adolescent girls and is associated with heightened and prolonged physiological arousal following social rejection. However, no study has examined how rumination relates to neural responses to social rejection in adolescent girls; thus, the current study aimed to address this gap. Adolescent girls (N = 116; ages 16.95-19.09) self-reported on their rumination tendency and completed a social evaluation fMRI task where they received fictitious feedback (acceptance, rejection) from peers they liked or disliked. Rejection-related neural activity and subgenual anterior cingulate cortex (sgACC) connectivity were regressed on rumination, controlling for rejection sensitivity and depressive symptoms. Rumination was associated with distinctive neural responses following rejection from liked peers including increased neural activity in the precuneus, inferior parietal gyrus, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, and supplementary motor area (SMA) and reduced sgACC connectivity with multiple regions including medial prefrontal cortex, precuneus and ventrolateral prefrontal cortex. Greater precuneus and SMA activity mediated the effect of rumination on slower response time to report emotional state after receiving rejection from liked peers. These findings provide clues for distinctive cognitive processes (e.g., mentalizing, conflict processing, memory encoding) following the receipt of rejection in girls with high levels of rumination.
- Published
- 2023