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Amygdaloid theta-band power increases during conflict processing in humans

Authors :
Spencer Kellis
Yelim Lee
Kuang-Hsuan Chen
Charles Y. Liu
George Nune
Rinu Sebastian
Zachary D. Gilbert
Austin M. Tang
Roberto Martin Del Campo-Vera
Brian Lee
Angad S. Gogia
Source :
Journal of Clinical Neuroscience. 91:183-192
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

The amygdala is a medial temporal lobe structure known to be involved in processing emotional conflict. However, its role in processing non-emotional conflict is not well understood. Previous studies have utilized the Stroop Task to examine brain modulation of humans under the color-word conflict scenario, which is non-emotional conflict processing, and found hippocampal theta-band (4-7 Hz) modulation. This study aims to survey amygdaloid theta power changes during non-emotional conflict processing using intracranial depth electrodes in nine epileptic patients (3 female; age 20-62). All patients were asked to perform a modified Stroop task. During task performance, local field potential (LFP) data was recorded from macro contacts sampled at 2 K Hz and used for analysis. Mean theta power change from baseline was compared between the incongruent and congruent task condition groups using a paired sample t-test. Seven patients were available for analysis after artifact exclusion. In five out of seven patients, statistically significant increases in theta-band power from baseline were noted during the incongruent task condition (paired sample t-test p 0.001), including one patient exhibiting theta power increases in both task conditions. Average response time was 1.07 s (failure trials) and 1.04 s (success trials). No speed-accuracy tradeoff was noted in this analysis. These findings indicate that human amygdaloid theta-band modulation may play a role in processing non-emotional conflict. It builds directly upon work suggesting that the amygdala processes emotional conflict and provides a neurophysiological mechanism for non-emotional conflict processing as well.

Details

ISSN :
09675868
Volume :
91
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Neuroscience
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....22285de3d2a80377e59013b977b6bc33
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jocn.2021.07.001