Adolescent to young adult longitudinal development across 8 years for matching emotional stimuli during functional magnetic resonance imaging

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Abstract

We investigated development from adolescence to young adulthood of neural bottom-up and top-down processes using a functional magnetic resonance imaging task on emotional attention. We followed 249 participants from age 14-22 in up to four waves resulting in 687 total scans of a matching task in which participants decided whether two pictures were the same including distracting emotional or neutral scenes. We applied generalized additive mixed models and a reliability approach for longitudinal analysis. Reaction times and error rates decreased longitudinally. For top-down processing, we found a longitudinal increase for the bilateral inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) for negative stimuli and in the left IFG also for positive and neutral stimuli. For bottom-up activation in the bilateral amygdala, we found a relative stability for negative and neutral stimuli. For positive stimuli, there was an increase starting in the twenties. Results show ongoing behavioral and top-down prefrontal development relatively independent from emotional valence. Amygdala bottom-up activation remained stable except for positive stimuli. Current findings add to the sparse literature on longitudinal top-down and bottom-up development into young adulthood and emphasize the role of reliability. These findings might help to characterize healthy in contrast to dysfunctional development of emotional attention.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Article number101131
JournalDevelopmental cognitive neuroscience
Volume57
Early online date3 Jul 2022
Publication statusPublished - Oct 2022
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

PubMedCentral PMC9352466
ORCID /0000-0001-6482-1316/work/143782475
ORCID /0000-0003-1477-5395/work/143783490
Scopus 85134895018
ORCID /0000-0001-5398-5569/work/150329509
ORCID /0000-0002-8493-6396/work/150330242

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