1. Compromised Prefrontal Cognitive Control Over Emotional Interference in Adolescents with Internet Gaming Disorder
- Author
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Dai Jin Kim, Ji Won Chun, Young-Chul Jung, Junghan Lee, Seojung Lee, and Hyun Hee Cho
- Subjects
Male ,Adolescent ,Social Psychology ,Emotions ,Prefrontal Cortex ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Affect (psychology) ,Impulsivity ,Developmental psychology ,Cognition ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Applied Psychology ,Anterior cingulate cortex ,Brain Mapping ,Internet ,Neural correlates of consciousness ,business.industry ,Aggression ,Communication ,General Medicine ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Computer Science Applications ,Behavior, Addictive ,Human-Computer Interaction ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Impulsive Behavior ,The Internet ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,business ,human activities ,Stroop effect - Abstract
Increased reports of impulsivity and aggression in male adolescents with Internet gaming might reflect their dysfunction in emotion regulation, particularly in suppression of negative emotions, which should affect the various stages of Internet gaming disorder. This study tested the hypothesis that adolescents with Internet gaming disorder would be more disturbed by the emotional interference and demonstrate compromised dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC) activation during a Stroop Match-to-Sample task. In addition, functional connectivity analysis was conducted to examine the interplays between neural correlates involved in emotional processing and how they were altered in adolescents with Internet gaming disorder. The Internet gaming disorder group demonstrated weaker dACC activation and stronger insular activations to interfering angry facial stimuli compared with the healthy control group. Negative functional connectivity between stronger insular activation and weaker dorsolateral prefrontal activation correlated with higher cognitive impulsivity in adolescents with Internet gaming disorder. These findings provide evidence of the compromised prefrontal cognitive control over emotional interference in adolescents with Internet gaming disorder.
- Published
- 2015
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