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Bidirectional modulation of human emotional conflict resolution using intracranial stimulation

Authors :
Belok G
Alik S. Widge
Britni Crocker
Emad N. Eskandar
Garth Rees Cosgrove
Angelique C. Paulk
Vallejo-Lopez D
Arle Je
Sydney S. Cash
Daniel S. Weisholtz
Chang Bs
Ali Yousefi
Afzal A
Kristen K. Ellard
Samuel Zorowitz
Ishita Basu
Darin D. Dougherty
Noam Peled
Uri T. Eden
Kara Farnes
Anna L. Gilmour
Zev Williams
Rina Zelmann
Thilo Deckersbach
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2019.

Abstract

The ability to regulate emotions in the service of meeting ongoing goals and task demands is a key aspect of adaptive human behavior in our volatile social world. Consequently, difficulties in processing and responding to emotional stimuli underlie many psychiatric diseases ranging from depression to anxiety, the common thread being effects on behavior. Behavior, which is made up of shifting, difficult to measure hidden states such as attention and emotion reactivity, is a product of integrating external input and latent mental processes. Directly measuring, and differentiating, separable hidden cognitive, emotional, and attentional states contributing to emotion conflict resolution, however, is challenging, particularly when only using task-relevant behavioral measures such as reaction time. State-space representations are a powerful method for investigating hidden states underlying complex systems. Using state-space modeling of behavior, we identified relevant hidden cognitive states and predicted behavior in a standardized emotion regulation task. After identifying and validating models which best fit the behavior and narrowing our focus to one model, we used targeted intracranial stimulation of the emotion regulation-relevant neurocircuitry, including prefrontal structures and the amygdala, to causally modulate separable states. Finally, we focused on this one validated state-space model to perform real-time, bidirectional closed-loop adaptive stimulation in a subset of participants. These approaches enable an improved understanding of how to sample and understand emotional processing in a way which could be leveraged in neuromodulatory therapy for disorders of emotional regulation.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bb74c3407390c8544549e91d707ea9bf