Publication | Closed Access
Neural correlates of speech anticipatory anxiety in generalized social phobia.
276
Citations
18
References
2004
Year
Affective NeuroscienceSocial SciencesAnticipation Minus RestPsychologySocial NeuroscienceEmotional ResponseEmotion RegulationSocial PhobicsCognitive NeuroscienceExperimental PsychopathologyCognitive SciencePsychiatryBehavioral NeuroscienceAdaptive EmotionBold-fmri Brain ActivitySocial CognitionSpeech CommunicationAnxiety DisordersNeurobiological FactorCompulsive BehaviorGeneralized Social PhobiaSpeech PerceptionMedicineEmotionPsychopathology
Patients with generalized social phobia fear embarrassment in most social situations. Little is known about its functional neuroanatomy. We studied BOLD-fMRI brain activity while generalized social phobics and healthy controls anticipated making public speeches. With anticipation minus rest, 8 phobics compared to 6 controls showed greater subcortical, limbic, and lateral paralimbic activity (pons, striatum, amygdala/uncus/anterior parahippocampus, insula, temporal pole)--regions important in automatic emotional processing--and less cortical activity (dorsal anterior cingulate/prefrontal cortex)--regions important in cognitive processing. Phobics may become so anxious, they cannot think clearly or vice versa.
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