18 results on '"Harenski C"'
Search Results
2. Childhood Trauma Predicts Sadistic Traits and Violent Behavior in Incarcerated Youth
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Cazala, F., primary, Sajous-Turner, A., additional, Caldwell, M. F., additional, Van Rybroek, G. J., additional, Kiehl, K. A., additional, and Harenski, C. L., additional
- Published
- 2023
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3. Neural networks underlying implicit and explicit moral evaluations in psychopathy
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Yoder, K J, primary, Harenski, C, additional, Kiehl, K A, additional, and Decety, J, additional
- Published
- 2015
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4. Neuroticism and psychopathy predict brain activation during moral and nonmoral emotion regulation
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Harenski, C. L., primary, Kim, S. H., additional, and Hamann, S., additional
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- 2009
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5. Psychopathic Traits in Adult versus Adolescent Males: Measurement Invariance across the PCL-R and PCL:YV.
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Ngo DA, Neumann CS, Maurer JM, Harenski C, and Kiehl KA
- Abstract
Both the Psychopathy Checklist-Revised (PCL-R) and the Psychopathy Checklist: Youth Version (PCL:YV), respectively, are established instruments for assessment of psychopathy and development of psychopathic propensity. To reliably compare scores from both instruments, measurement invariance must be established. The current study involved a combined sample of 1091 male participants (adults = 813; adolescents = 278) from correctional facilities in New Mexico. An exploratory structural equation modeling (ESEM) framework was used to test for measurement invariance. The four-factor ESEM model demonstrated good fit for the combined and individual samples. Results from the multiple group ESEM provide evidence for generally strong invariance, with equivalent factor loadings and thresholds. Adolescents exhibited decreased latent interpersonal traits but increased latent features on other PCL factors (affective, lifestyle, and antisocial) compared to adults. Findings suggest that the four-factor model and the measurement of psychopathic traits remain consistent across age groups. Implications of the findings within research and clinical contexts are discussed.
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- 2024
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6. HTR1B genotype and psychopathy: Main effect and interaction with paternal maltreatment.
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Palumbo S, Mariotti V, Vellucci S, Antonelli K, Anderson N, Harenski C, Pietrini P, Kiehl KA, and Pellegrini S
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- Adolescent, Adult, Alleles, Genotype, Humans, Male, Parenting, Receptor, Serotonin, 5-HT1B genetics, Antisocial Personality Disorder genetics, Antisocial Personality Disorder psychology, Emotions
- Abstract
Psychopathy is a condition characterized by atypical emotions and socially maladaptive behavioral patterns. Among incarcerated people, psychopathy has been associated with higher rates of crimes, recidivism, and resistance to treatment. Many studies have indicated significant heritability of psychopathic traits, but little is known about the specific contribution of genes and their interaction with adverse experiences in life. Considering the primary role that serotonin plays in cognition and emotion, we investigated TPH2-rs4570625, 5-HTTLPR, MAOA-uVNTR, HTR1B-rs13212041 and HTR2A-rs6314 as risk factors for psychopathy in the largest sample of institutionalized individuals studied so far, consisting of 793 US White male incarcerated adults, and in a replication sample of 168 US White male incarcerated adolescents. In a subgroup of the adult sample, the interaction between genetics and parenting style, assessed by the Measure of Parental Style (MOPS) questionnaire, was also evaluated. The HTR1B-rs13212041-T/T genotype, as compared to HTR1B-rs13212041-C allele, predicted higher psychopathy scores in both the adult and the adolescent samples. The interaction between HTR1B-rs13212041-T/T genotype and paternal MOPS scores, investigated in a subgroup of the adult sample, was an even stronger predictor of higher levels of psychopathy than either the genetics or the environment taken individually. Overall, these data, obtained in two independent samples, shed new light on neurobiological correlates of psychopathy with promising implications both at a clinical and forensic level., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests None., (Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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7. ANKK1 and TH gene variants in combination with paternal maltreatment increase susceptibility to both cognitive and attentive impulsivity.
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Palumbo S, Mariotti V, Vellucci S, Antonelli K, Anderson N, Harenski C, Pietrini P, Kiehl KA, and Pellegrini S
- Abstract
Recent scientific findings suggest that dopamine exerts a central role on impulsivity, as well as that aversive life experiences may promote the high levels of impulsivity that often underlie violent behavior. To deepen our understanding of the complex gene by environment interplay on impulsive behavior, we genotyped six dopaminergic allelic variants ( ANKK1 -rs1800497, TH -rs6356, DRD4 -rs1800955, DRD4 -exonIII-VNTR, SLC6A3 -VNTR and COMT -rs4680) in 655 US White male inmates convicted for violent crimes, whose impulsivity was assessed by BIS-11 (Barratt Impulsiveness Scale). Furthermore, in a subsample of 216 inmates from the whole group, we also explored the potential interplay between the genotyped dopaminergic variants and parental maltreatment measured by MOPS (Measure of Parental Style) in promoting impulsivity. We found a significant interaction among paternal MOPS scores, ANKK1 -rs1800497-T allele and TH -rs6356-A allele, which increased the variance of BIS-11 cognitive/attentive scores explained by paternal maltreatment from 1.8 up to 20.5%. No direct association between any of the individual genetic variants and impulsivity was observed. Our data suggest that paternal maltreatment increases the risk of attentive/cognitive impulsivity and that this risk is higher in carriers of specific dopaminergic alleles that potentiate the dopaminergic neurotransmission. These findings add further evidence to the mutual role that genetics and early environmental factors exert in modulating human behavior and highlight the importance of childhood care interventions., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Palumbo, Mariotti, Vellucci, Antonelli, Anderson, Harenski, Pietrini, Kiehl and Pellegrini.)
- Published
- 2022
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8. The prevalence, characteristics, and psychiatric correlates of traumatic brain injury in incarcerated individuals: an examination in two independent samples.
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Schneider BS, Arciniegas DB, Harenski C, Clarke GJB, Kiehl KA, and Koenigs M
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Prevalence, Brain Concussion, Brain Injuries, Traumatic psychology, Depressive Disorder, Major, Prisoners, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic diagnosis, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic epidemiology, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic etiology
- Abstract
Primary Objective: Identify the prevalence, characteristics, and psychological correlates of traumatic brain injury (TBI) among incarcerated individuals., Research Design: Three aims: (1) Determine the prevalence and characteristics of TBI in 1469 adults incarcerated in Wisconsin state prisons (1064 men, 405 women); (2) Characterize the relationship between mild TBI and mental illness in a sub-sample of men and women; (3) Reproduce the findings from Aim 1 and Aim 2 in an independent sample of 1015 adults incarcerated in New Mexico state prisons (600 men, 415 women)., Methods and Procedures: Standardized TBI assessment with structured clinical interviews and self-report questionnaires., Main Outcomes and Results: Rates of TBI were approximately five times greater than the general population, with a substantially higher rate of TBI caused by assault. In the Wisconsin sample, mild TBI was associated with greater levels of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) among women (but not among men). In the New Mexico sample, TBI of any severity was associated with greater levels of major depressive disorder (MDD) among women (but not among men)., Conclusions: This study thus provides novel data on TBI and its correlates among individuals incarcerated in state prisons, and highlights a specific treatment need within the prison population.
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- 2021
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9. Neural responses to morally laden interactions in female inmates with psychopathy.
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Yoder KJ, Harenski C, Kiehl KA, and Decety J
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- Antisocial Personality Disorder diagnostic imaging, Brain diagnostic imaging, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Brain Mapping, Criminals
- Abstract
Much of social cognition requires making inferences about the mental and emotional states of others. Moreover, understanding the emotions of others is an important foundation for moral decision-making. Psychopathy is associated with both aberrant emotional understanding and atypical hemodynamic responses when viewing and evaluating morally laden social interactions. In the present functional MRI study, female inmates (N = 107) were asked to evaluate the likely emotional state of either the recipient or the initiator of harmful or helpful interactions. Psychopathy was assessed with the Psychopathy Checklist-Revised (PCL-R). PCL-R scores were not associated with differences in confidence or accuracy ratings. However, psychopathy scores were significantly related to increased hemodynamic response in right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex when viewing harmful interactions and decreased functional connectivity from right amygdala to inferior parietal cortex and insula, and from temporal parietal junction to dorsomedial prefrontal cortex. Overall, this work indicates that in females, psychopathy is associated with normal behavioral accuracy and confidence but alterations in neural network activity during moral decision-making., (Copyright © 2021. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
- Published
- 2021
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10. Psychopathy is associated with fear-specific reductions in neural activity during affective perspective-taking.
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Deming P, Dargis M, Haas BW, Brook M, Decety J, Harenski C, Kiehl KA, Koenigs M, and Kosson DS
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- Adult, Brain Mapping, Criminals, Emotions physiology, Facial Expression, Facial Recognition physiology, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Antisocial Personality Disorder physiopathology, Antisocial Personality Disorder psychology, Brain physiopathology, Fear physiology, Fear psychology
- Abstract
Psychopathic individuals are notorious for their callous disregard for others' emotions. Prior research has linked psychopathy to deficits in affective mechanisms underlying empathy (e.g., affective sharing), yet research relating psychopathy to cognitive mechanisms underlying empathy (e.g., affective perspective-taking and Theory of Mind) requires further clarification. To elucidate the neurobiology of cognitive mechanisms of empathy in psychopathy, we administered an fMRI task and tested for global as well as emotion-specific deficits in affective perspective-taking. Adult male incarcerated offenders (N = 94) viewed images of two people interacting, with one individual's face obscured by a shape. Participants were cued to either identify the emotion of the obscured individual or identify the shape from one of two emotion or shape choices presented on each trial. Target emotions included anger, fear, happiness, sadness, and neutral. Contrary to predictions, psychopathy was unrelated to neural activity in the Affective Perspective-taking > Shape contrast. In line with predictions, psychopathy was negatively related to task accuracy during affective perspective-taking for fear, happiness, and sadness. Psychopathy was related to reduced hemodynamic activity exclusively during fear perspective-taking in several areas: left anterior insula extending into posterior orbitofrontal cortex, right precuneus, left superior parietal lobule, and left superior occipital cortex. Although much prior research has emphasized psychopathy-related abnormalities in affective mechanisms mediating empathy, current results add to growing evidence of psychopathy-related abnormalities in a cognitive mechanism related to empathy. These findings highlight brain regions that are hypoactive in psychopathy when explicitly processing another's fear., (Copyright © 2020. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
- Published
- 2020
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11. Aberrant brain gray matter in murderers.
- Author
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Sajous-Turner A, Anderson NE, Widdows M, Nyalakanti P, Harenski K, Harenski C, Koenigs M, Decety J, and Kiehl KA
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- Adult, Humans, Male, Criminals psychology, Gray Matter pathology, Homicide psychology
- Abstract
Homicide is a significant societal problem with economic costs in the billions of dollars annually and incalculable emotional impact on victims and society. Despite this high burden, we know very little about the neuroscience of individuals who commit homicide. Here we examine brain gray matter differences in incarcerated adult males who have committed homicide (n = 203) compared to other non-homicide offenders (n = 605; total n = 808). Homicide offenders' show reduced gray matter in brain areas critical for behavioral control and social cognition compared with subsets of other violent and non-violent offenders. This demonstrates, for the first time, that unique brain abnormalities may distinguish offenders who kill from other serious violent offenders and non-violent antisocial individuals.
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- 2020
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12. The relationship between psychopathic traits and risky sexual behavior in incarcerated adult male offenders.
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Reynolds BL, Maurer JM, Cook AM, Harenski C, and Kiehl KA
- Abstract
Individuals scoring high on psychopathic traits engage in various forms of risky behavior. However, the relationship between psychopathic traits and risky sexual behavior (RSB) is less understood, especially with participants recruited from incarcerated settings. Here, we investigated the relationship between RSB and psychopathic traits with n = 179 incarcerated adult male offenders who completed a self-report RSB questionnaire asking participants about their lifetime number of sexual partners and frequency of using a condom during sex. Psychopathic traits were assessed using the Hare Psychopathy Checklist - Revised (PCL-R). In independent-samples t -tests, participants scoring high on psychopathic traits (i.e., PCL-R total score ≥ 30) reported greater total number of sexual partners throughout their lifetime and were less likely to use a condom during sex compared to low-scorers (i.e., PCL-R total score ≤ 15). In multiple regression analyses, PCL-R total scores emerged as a significant predictor of reduced condom usage during sex, but covariate measures assessing general externalizing psychopathology, did not. Our results suggest that several public health concerns, including sexually transmitted infection transmittal and unwanted pregnancies, may arise due to individuals scoring higher on psychopathy engaging in risky sexual behavior to a greater extent compared to those scoring lower on psychopathy.
- Published
- 2020
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13. Development of an expert-rater assessment of trauma history in a high-risk youth forensic sample.
- Author
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Dargis M, Sitney M, Caldwell B, Caldwell M, Edwards BG, Harenski C, Anderson NE, Van Rybroek G, Koenigs M, and Kiehl KA
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- Adolescent, Adult, Humans, Male, Prisoners, Reproducibility of Results, Young Adult, Adverse Childhood Experiences, Child Abuse, Criminals, Exposure to Violence, Interview, Psychological standards, Juvenile Delinquency, Psychological Trauma diagnosis, Self Report standards
- Abstract
Objective: Exposure to childhood trauma is particularly prevalent among incarcerated juveniles. Although there is a growing understanding of the detrimental impact trauma exposure can have on child and adolescent development, childhood maltreatment can be very difficult to accurately measure. Integration of self-report trauma histories as well as supplemental file reports of trauma exposure may provide the most accurate estimate of experienced trauma among youth in correctional settings., Method: The current study developed an expert-rated assessment of trauma that synthesizes self-report, as well as objective file information, using a sample of 114 incarcerated male juveniles., Results: In addition to establishing scale factor structure, reliability, and validity, the current study provides additional evidence of the prevalence of trauma among incarcerated juveniles and reports on external correlates of the scale that are particularly relevant in correctional settings (e.g., psychopathic traits)., Conclusion: These results suggest that the integration of both self-report and file material can be meaningfully used to assess traumatic symptomology. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2019
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14. Psychopathy is associated with shifts in the organization of neural networks in a large incarcerated male sample.
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Tillem S, Harenski K, Harenski C, Decety J, Kosson D, Kiehl KA, and Baskin-Sommers A
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- Adolescent, Adult, Antisocial Personality Disorder physiopathology, Antisocial Personality Disorder psychology, Brain physiopathology, Factor Analysis, Statistical, Functional Neuroimaging, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neural Pathways, Young Adult, Antisocial Personality Disorder diagnostic imaging, Attention, Brain diagnostic imaging, Criminals psychology, Prisoners psychology
- Abstract
Psychopathy is a personality disorder defined by antisocial behavior paired with callousness, low empathy, and low interpersonal emotions. Psychopathic individuals reliably display complex atypicalities in emotion and attention processing that are evident when examining task performance, activation within specific neural regions, and connections between regions. Recent advances in neuroimaging methods, namely graph analysis, attempt to unpack this type of processing complexity by evaluating the overall organization of neural networks. Graph analysis has been used to better understand neural functioning in several clinical disorders but has not yet been used in the study of psychopathy. The present study applies a minimum spanning tree graph analysis to resting-state fMRI data collected from male inmates assessed for psychopathy with the Hare Psychopathy Checklist-Revised (n = 847). Minimum spanning tree analysis provides several metrics of neural organization optimality (i.e., the effectiveness, efficiency, and robustness of neural network organization). Results show that inmates higher in psychopathy exhibit a more efficiently organized dorsal attention network (β = =0.101, p
corrected = =0.018). Additionally, subcortical structures (e.g., amygdala, caudate, and hippocampus) act as less of a central hub in the global flow of information in inmates higher in psychopathy (β = =-0.104, pcorrected = =0.048). There were no significant effects of psychopathy on neural network organization in the default or salience networks. Together, these shifts in neural organization suggest that the brains of inmates higher in psychopathy are organized in a fundamentally different way than other individuals., (Copyright © 2019 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2019
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15. Age of gray matters: Neuroprediction of recidivism.
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Kiehl KA, Anderson NE, Aharoni E, Maurer JM, Harenski KA, Rao V, Claus ED, Harenski C, Koenigs M, Decety J, Kosson D, Wager TD, Calhoun VD, and Steele VR
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- Adolescent, Adult, Age Factors, Aged, Antisocial Personality Disorder psychology, Child, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Prisoners psychology, Risk Factors, Young Adult, Antisocial Personality Disorder diagnostic imaging, Brain diagnostic imaging, Criminals psychology, Gray Matter diagnostic imaging, Recidivism
- Abstract
Age is one of the best predictors of antisocial behavior. Risk models of recidivism often combine chronological age with demographic, social and psychological features to aid in judicial decision-making. Here we use independent component analyses (ICA) and machine learning techniques to demonstrate the utility of using brain-based measures of cerebral aging to predict recidivism. First, we developed a brain-age model that predicts chronological age based on structural MRI data from incarcerated males ( n = 1332). We then test the model's ability to predict recidivism in a new sample of offenders with longitudinal outcome data ( n = 93). Consistent with hypotheses, inclusion of brain-age measures of the inferior frontal cortex and anterior-medial temporal lobes (i.e., amygdala) improved prediction models when compared with models using chronological age; and models that combined psychological, behavioral, and neuroimaging measures provided the most robust prediction of recidivism. These results verify the utility of brain measures in predicting future behavior, and suggest that brain-based data may more precisely account for important variation when compared with traditional proxy measures such as chronological age. This work also identifies new brain systems that contribute to recidivism which has clinical implications for treatment development.
- Published
- 2018
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16. A large scale (N=102) functional neuroimaging study of error processing in a Go/NoGo task.
- Author
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Steele VR, Claus ED, Aharoni E, Harenski C, Calhoun VD, Pearlson G, and Kiehl KA
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- Adult, Brain Mapping, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Neural Pathways physiology, Neuropsychological Tests, Task Performance and Analysis, Young Adult, Brain physiology, Executive Function physiology, Inhibition, Psychological, Psychomotor Performance physiology
- Abstract
We report a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study of 102 healthy participants who completed a demanding Go/NoGo task. The primary purpose of this study was to delineate the neural systems underlying responses to errors in a large sample. We identified a number of regions engaged during error processing including the anterior cingulate, left lateral prefrontal areas and bilateral inferior frontal gyrus, and the subthalamic nucleus. The power afforded by the large cohort enabled identification of regions not consistently measured during Go/NoGo tasks thus helping to incrementally refine our understanding of the neural correlates of error processing. With the present fMRI results, in combination with our previous exploration of response inhibition (Steele et al.), we outline a comprehensive set of regions associated with both response inhibition and error processing., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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17. An fMRI study of affective perspective taking in individuals with psychopathy: imagining another in pain does not evoke empathy.
- Author
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Decety J, Chen C, Harenski C, and Kiehl KA
- Abstract
While it is well established that individuals with psychopathy have a marked deficit in affective arousal, emotional empathy, and caring for the well-being of others, the extent to which perspective taking can elicit an emotional response has not yet been studied despite its potential application in rehabilitation. In healthy individuals, affective perspective taking has proven to be an effective means to elicit empathy and concern for others. To examine neural responses in individuals who vary in psychopathy during affective perspective taking, 121 incarcerated males, classified as high (n = 37; Hare psychopathy checklist-revised, PCL-R ≥ 30), intermediate (n = 44; PCL-R between 21 and 29), and low (n = 40; PCL-R ≤ 20) psychopaths, were scanned while viewing stimuli depicting bodily injuries and adopting an imagine-self and an imagine-other perspective. During the imagine-self perspective, participants with high psychopathy showed a typical response within the network involved in empathy for pain, including the anterior insula (aINS), anterior midcingulate cortex (aMCC), supplementary motor area (SMA), inferior frontal gyrus (IFG), somatosensory cortex, and right amygdala. Conversely, during the imagine-other perspective, psychopaths exhibited an atypical pattern of brain activation and effective connectivity seeded in the anterior insula and amygdala with the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) and ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC). The response in the amygdala and insula was inversely correlated with PCL-R Factor 1 (interpersonal/affective) during the imagine-other perspective. In high psychopaths, scores on PCL-R Factor 1 predicted the neural response in ventral striatum when imagining others in pain. These patterns of brain activation and effective connectivity associated with differential perspective-taking provide a better understanding of empathy dysfunction in psychopathy, and have the potential to inform intervention programs for this complex clinical problem.
- Published
- 2013
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18. Glucose administration enhances fMRI brain activation and connectivity related to episodic memory encoding for neutral and emotional stimuli.
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Parent MB, Krebs-Kraft DL, Ryan JP, Wilson JS, Harenski C, and Hamann S
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- Adult, Blood Glucose drug effects, Emotions drug effects, Female, Functional Laterality, Humans, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Male, Mental Recall physiology, Neural Pathways blood supply, Neural Pathways drug effects, Neuropsychological Tests, Oxygen blood, Photic Stimulation methods, Young Adult, Brain blood supply, Brain drug effects, Brain Mapping, Emotions physiology, Glucose administration & dosage, Mental Recall drug effects
- Abstract
Glucose enhances memory in a variety of species. In humans, glucose administration enhances episodic memory encoding, although little is known regarding the neural mechanisms underlying these effects. Here we examined whether elevating blood glucose would enhance functional MRI (fMRI) activation and connectivity in brain regions associated with episodic memory encoding and whether these effects would differ depending on the emotional valence of the material. We used a double-blind, within-participants, crossover design in which either glucose (50g) or a saccharin placebo were administered before scanning, on days approximately 1 week apart. We scanned healthy young male participants with fMRI as they viewed emotionally arousing negative pictures and emotionally neutral pictures, intermixed with baseline fixation. Free recall was tested at 5 min after scanning and again after 1 day. Glucose administration increased activation in brain regions associated with successful episodic memory encoding. Glucose also enhanced activation in regions whose activity was correlated with subsequent successful recall, including the hippocampus, prefrontal cortex, and other regions, and these effects differed for negative vs. neutral stimuli. Finally, glucose substantially increased functional connectivity between the hippocampus and amygdala and a network of regions previously implicated in successful episodic memory encoding. These findings fit with evidence from nonhuman animals indicating glucose modulates memory by selectively enhancing neural activity in brain regions engaged during memory tasks. Our results highlight the modulatory effects of glucose and the importance of examining both regional changes in activity and functional connectivity to fully characterize the effects of glucose on brain function and memory., (Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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