ebook img

Baseline and affective startle modulation by angry and neutral faces in 4-8-year-old anxious and non PDF

35 Pages·2017·0.28 MB·English
by  
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview Baseline and affective startle modulation by angry and neutral faces in 4-8-year-old anxious and non

Baseline and affective startle modulation by angry and neutral faces in 4-8-year-old anxious and non-anxious children Author Waters, Allison M, Neumann, David L, Henry, Julie, Craske, Michelle G, Ornitz, Edward M Published 2008 Journal Title Biological Psychology DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biopsycho.2007.12.005 Copyright Statement © 2008 Elsevier. This is the author-manuscript version of this paper. Reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher. Please refer to the journal's website for access to the definitive, published version. Downloaded from http://hdl.handle.net/10072/21264 Link to published version http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/03010511 Griffith Research Online https://research-repository.griffith.edu.au Startlemodulationinchildhoodanxietydisorders 1 Baseline andAffectiveStartleModulationbyAngryandNeutral Faces in4-8Year OldAnxiousandNon-Anxious Children Allison M. Waters1,David L.Neumann1,JulieHenry1, MichelleG.Craske2, & EdwardM. Ornitz3 1School ofPsychology, GriffithUniversity,Gold Coast,Australia 2Department ofPsychology,UniversityofCalifornia, Los Angeles, USA 3Department ofPsychiatryand Biobehavioral Sciences, UniversityofCalifornia, Los Angeles, USA Address forCorrespondence: Allison M. Waters Ph.D.,School ofPsychology, GriffithUniversity,Gold Coast Qld4222, Australia.Phone: +61-7-5552-8132,Email: [email protected] Startlemodulationinchildhoodanxietydisorders 2 Abstract Thepresent studyexaminedthemagnitudes ofstartleblinkreflexes andelectrodermal responses in4to8 yearold high anxious children (N=14)andnon-anxious controls (N=11).Responses were elicitedby16auditorystartletrials duringa baselinephasepriortoan affectivemodulation phaseinvolving12startletrials presentedduringangryandneutral faces. Results showed significant responsehabituationacross baselinetrials and equivalent responsemagnitudes between groups duringthebaselinephase.Themodulationofresponsemagnitudes duringangry andneutral faces didnot differsignificantlyineither group.However, highanxious children showedlargerresponses overall comparedwith non-anxious control childrenduringthe affectivemodulation phase. Moreover, greater anxietyseverityandlarger startlereflexes were associatedwithpooreraccuracyin ratingneutral faces as neutral inhighanxious children. Results mayreflect elevatedreactivitytothreat contexts in 4to 8 yearold high anxious versus non-anxious children. Startlemodulationinchildhoodanxietydisorders 3 Baseline andAffectiveStartleModulationbyAngryandNeutral Faces in4-8Year Old AnxiousandNon-Anxious Children Anxietydisorders arethe most commonlydiagnosed psychiatricdisorders andoneofthe most significant healthproblems interms ofglobal burdenofdisease,exceedingthevast majorityofphysical healthdiseases (Murray& Lopez,1996). Childhood-onset anxietyis a debilitatingconditionaffectingupto15-20%of youths and is asignificant risk factorforother emotional andbehavioural disorders includingadolescent andadult anxiety(McGee,Feehan, Williams, &Anderson, 1992),depression(Hayward,Killen,Kraemer, &Taylor,2000; Pine, Cohen,Gurley, Brook, & Ma1998),eatingdisorders (Patton,1998)andsubstancedisorders (Merikangas, Avenevoli, Dierker, &Grillon, 1999).Childhoodanxietydisorders arealso associatedwithdebilitatingacademicandvocational functioning(Kessler, Foster,Saunders, & Stang,1995),impairedsocial competence(Spence,Donovan, & Brechmann-Touissant,1999), andifleft topersist intoadulthood,arangeofsocio-economiccosts includingunemployment, days lost from work,hospitalisationandmedication(Waghorn,Chant,White,&Whiteford, 2004). Althoughresearchonchildhoodanxietydisorders lags behind researchon adult anxiety ingeneral, a combination ofbothgeneticand environmental influences are thought toplay contributoryroles tothe development andmaintenanceof childhoodanxietydisorders (see Craske& Waters, 2005,forareview).Theunderstandingof neurophysiological processes that underliechildhoodanxietydisorders is particularlylimitedandbasedprimarilyon studies of childrenin mid-to late-childhoodandadolescence(see Ornitz,1999,forreview).Thecurrent studyextends this literaturebyexaminingbaselineandaffectivemodulation ofthestartlereflex inhigh anxious andlowanxious control childrenbetween4 and8 years of age. Startlemodulationinchildhoodanxietydisorders 4 Themagnitudeofthehumanstartlereflex indexes defensiverespondingtoaversive stimuli andassociated contexts (seeDavis, 1998,and Grillon& Baas, 2003,forreviews). Rodent studies haveshownthat modulationofthestartlereflex byaversivecontexts (suchas longdurationbright lights)is mediatedbythebed nucleus ofthestriaterminalis, whereas fear- inducedmodulationofthestartlereflex byexplicit threat cues (such as acuepreviouslypaired withan electricshock)is mediatedbythecentral nucleus oftheamygdala (Davis, 1998; Walker, Toufexis, &Davis,2003). As tendencies to react withfear andavoidanceinarangeofsituations associatedwithanxiety-provokingstimuli arehallmarks ofemotional andbehavioural characteristics of anxiouschildren (AmericanPsychiatricAssociation,1994), thestudyofstartle reflex modulationbyexplicitlyaversivestimuli and associatedcontexts mayelucidatethe neurophysiological processes that underlieanxietydisorders inchildren.Moreover, as an involuntaryresponsepresent from birth,thestartlereflex is aneurophysiological measure especiallysuitedto thestudyofdefensiverespondingin youngchildren (seeOrnitz,1999,fora review). Numerous studies havedemonstratedincreasedstartlereflex magnitudein adults with anxietydisorders incontexts associatedwiththreat but not inresponseto explicit threat cues. Forexample,Grillonand colleagues demonstrated that adults withpanicdisorderandpost- traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) showed sustained elevations in “baseline” startlereflexes elicitedat thecommencement oftheexperimental sessionthat laterinvolvedthedeliveryof unpleasant electricshocks signalledbya cue. In contrast,participants with anxietydisorders did not differfrom controls in startlereflex magnitudewhenelicitedduringexplicit cues ofthreat (e.g., Grillon,Ameli,Goddard,Woods, &Davis, 1994; Grillon,Morgan, Davis &Southwick, 1998; Grillon&Ameli 1998; Grillon&Morgan, 1999). Baselinestartlereflexes werenot elevated whenparticipants withPTSDwereexplicitlyinformed that noaversivestimuli would bepresentedduringtheentireexperimental procedure(e.g., Grillon et al., 1998).Anotherstudy ofpoliceofficers (Pole, Neylan, Best,Orr, &Marmar, 2003)demonstratedthat severityof Startlemodulationinchildhoodanxietydisorders 5 PTSDsymptoms correlatedwith startlereflex magnitudeduringlowandmedium threat conditions, wheninformedthat noshockwouldbedelivered,but didnot correlate with startle reflex magnitudeduringhighthreat conditions that explicitlysignalledpotential shock.Thus, in all ofthesestudies, adults with anxietydisorders did not showlargerstartlereflexes compared withlowanxious adults inresponsetocues signallingexplicit threat ofelectricshock. Instead, theyshowedelevatedrespondingincontexts associatedwiththreat (seeGrillon,2002). Elevatedbaselinestartle reflexes inindividuals with anxietydisorders is thought to represent increasedanxietyabout thelaboratorycontext associatedwiththreat of anaversive stimulus (Grillonet al., 1998b). Indeed, Grillon,Baas, Lissek,Smith,and Milstein (2004) concluded that “sustained contextual anxiety, but not phasic explicit cue fear, differentiates anxiety-disorderedfrom non-anxiety-disordered individuals” (p.916).This conclusionreflects what has been called the “strong situation” effect (Lissek, Pine, &Grillon, 2006),inwhich anxious andnon-anxiousindividuals respond equallytointenselyaversive stimuli,whereas only anxious individuals also respond stronglyto lowintensityaversivestimuli relativetonon- anxious individuals. Asmall literatureexists onfear-potentiated startlemodulationin children with most studies basedonchildren at risk foranxietydisorders byvirtueofparental anxiety. For example, childandadolescent offspringofparents withanxietydisorders (agerange 7to18 years)have exhibitedelevatedstartle reflexes duringtheprecedingbaselinephase as well as during darkness-inducedfear-potentiationprotocols andduringthreat ofan airblast tothelarynx comparedwith low-risk offspring(Grillon,Dierker,&Merikangas, 1997; 1998; Merikangas et al.,1999). Similarly,whereas therewereno group differences in startle reflex magnitudes duringpictures offear-relevant visual (i.e.,snake picture)and auditory(i.e.,1000Hz,100dB tone)stimuli,offspringofanxious parents (age range7to12 years)displayedsignificantly higher electrodermal activityduringtherestingbaselineandduringtheinter-trial intervals (Turner, Beidel,&Roberson-Nay,2005). Startlemodulationinchildhoodanxietydisorders 6 Asignificant limitationin applyingfear-potentiationprotocols with youngchildrenis that threat ofelectricshock,airblasts tothelarynx, and periods oftimeincompletedarkness maybetooaversivefor youngchildrentotolerate. Oneavenueforovercomingthis limitation has beento employapictureviewingparadigm that assesses affectivemodulationofthestartle reflex (e.g., Bradley,Cuthbert,& Lang,1993; Cuthbert,Bradley, & Lang, 1996).Anextensive literaturewithadults has shownrepeatedlythat blinkreflexes arelargerwhileviewing unpleasant pictures incomparison toblinks elicitedduringneutral andpleasant pictures (Cuthbert et al.,1996).Affectivemodulationoftheblinkreflex is thought toreflect the activationofdefensivemotivational processes bythematchinaffectivevalencebetween unpleasant picturestimuli andtheaversiveauditorystartle-elicitingstimulus (Bradley,Cuthbert, & Lang,1999). Moreover,adult studies havedemonstratedarobust relationshipbetween enhancedaffectivestartle modulationandhighfearfulness (e.g.,Cook,Hawk,Davis, & Stevenson, 1991; Hawk, Stevenson, &Cook,1992). Studies ofaffectivemodulationin normallydevelopingchildrenhaveproduced results divergent from thosewithadults. McManis andcolleagues wereunabletodemonstratestartle facilitationduringunpleasant compared withneutral pictures in7to10 year oldchildren (e.g., McManis, Bradley,Cuthbert,and Lang,1995)andfoundthat girls but not boys showedthe expectedincreaseinstartlereflex magnitudeduringunpleasant thanpleasant pictures (McManis, Bradley, Berg,Cuthbert,and Lang(2001).Cook,Hawk,Hawk,andHummer(1995) also didnot findtheadult patternusingaffectivelyvalent script-induced imageryinschool-age children; almost identical startlemagnitudewas foundduringimageryofpleasure,joy,sadness, fear, andanger.Finally, Waters, Lipp,andSpence(2005)foundthat startlereflex magnitudedid not differsignificantlyduringunpleasant comparedwith neutral orpleasant pictures in8to12 yearoldchildren. Studies examininganxiety-related differences in affectivemodulation ofstartlein children have also producedconflictingresults.Cooket al.(1995)foundthat startleresponses of Startlemodulationinchildhoodanxietydisorders 7 childrenwhoscoredhigheronafearsurveyscheduleweresmallerduringunpleasant than pleasant imageryandweresmallerinhighfearcomparedwith lowfearchildren.Waters et al. (2005)foundthat anxious childrenshowedlarger blinkreflexes overall duringunpleasant, neutral andpleasant pictures comparedwithlow anxious children.As affectivestartle modulationis strongest forstartlereflexes elicitedduringhighlyarousingaffectivestimuli (Cuthbert et al., 1996),inconsistent results betweenchildrenandadults havebeen attributedto theless arousingpicture stimuli usedwithchildrencomparedwithadults andtheunreliabilityof imageryprocedures withchildren (seeMcManis et al.,2001; Waters et al., 2005). Emotional facestimuli inapictureviewingparadigm maybe anapproachthat overcomes theselimitations with very youngchildren. Other advantages includethe greater ecological validityoffacestimuli thanotheremotion-evokingstimuli (Mogg & Bradley,1998) andthat emotional faces, suchas angryones, receivepreferential processingoverothersalient stimuli duetotheirevolutionaryassociationwiththreat to thesafetyofhumans across the lifespan (seeÖhman & Mineka,2001,for areview). Recent functional neuroimagingand cognitivesciencestudies withchildrenandadolescents between8and18 years of ageshow perturbed amygdalaactivationand attentionallocationtoangryand fearful faces compared with neutral ones inanxious versus non-anxious youths (e.g., Hadwinet al.,2003; Stirling,Eley, & Clark,2006; Monk et al.,2006; Thomas et al.,2001; Waters & Lipp,in press; Waters, Mogg, Bradley,&Pine,inpress). Moreover, recent studies ofstartlemodulationbyemotional faces withnon-selected adults demonstratedlargerstartlereflex magnitudes whenparticipants viewed angryfaces versus othertypes ofexpressions (i.e., fearful,neutral, andhappy) (Springer,Rosa, McGetrick, & Bowers, 2007).Thesefindings suggest that emotional faces maypossess greater sensitivitythanbroad-basedaffectivepicturestimuli forassessingneurophysiological processes that underlieanxietyinchildren,suchas enhanceddefensiverespondingtothreat andassociated contexts. Thepresent study Startlemodulationinchildhoodanxietydisorders 8 This studyexamined baselineand affectivestartle modulation in young anxious andnon- anxious childrenbetween 4 and8 years ofage.This agerangewas selected toexpandon previous studies that havenot assessedchildren below7-8 years ofage. Thestudyassessed whetherhighanxious children wouldshowlarger startlereflexes compared with non-anxious control childrenduringa baselinephasepriorto an affectivemodulation phaseinwhichangry faces werepresented.Thestudyalso examinedwhetherhighanxious children wouldshow enhanced affectivestartle modulation relativeto non-anxious control children,as indexedby largerstartlereflexes duringangrycomparedwith neutral faces.Angryfaces wereselected becausetheyarestronger signals ofthepresenceofthreat than are fearful faces (Whalen et al., 2001)andhavebeenshowntoelicit largerstartlereflex magnitudes than fearful,happyor neutral expressions inadults (Springer et al.,2007).Moreover,in theabsenceofaffective modulationstudies inchildrenusingfacestimuli,wecomparedresponses duringangryfaces withthoseduringneutral faces basedonthe cognitivescienceliteraturewhichhas shown reliableanxiety-relatedattentional bias effects for angryfaces compared withneutral ones in children(e.g., Hadwinet al.,2003; Stirlinget al.,2006; Monk et al.,2006; Waters et al.,in press).Skinconductance responses were also recordedas an adjunct orcomplementarymeasure tothestartleblink reflex becauseit will reflect adefensiveresponsetothestartleeliciting stimulus. Similarresults across thetwomeasures were expected. Method Participants Participants were25 childrenaged 4 years, 4months to8 years, 6months (12 girls; 13 boys).Ofthese children, 14hadaclinically-significant diagnosis ofananxietydisorder(Mage =6.08,SD=1.44; 7 girls; 7boys)and11 werenon-anxious controls (Mage=6.00; SD=1.41; 5girls; 6boys).Writteninformedconsent was obtained from parents priorto children’s participationinanexperimental protocol that was approvedbythe Institutional Human Research Ethics Committee. Highanxious childrenwere referredbypaediatricians, local Startlemodulationinchildhoodanxietydisorders 9 communitymental health agencies, school guidancecounsellors andparents to theGriffith UniversityChildandAdolescent AnxietyDisorders ResearchProgram for assessment and treatment.Non-anxious control childrenwererecruitedfrom first yearundergraduate psychologystudents who hadchildren4to8 years old.Thesestudents receivedcourse credit in exchange for their child’s participation. All children werebornin AustraliaandspokeEnglish as theirfirst language. Twenty- onechildren (85%)lived with parents whoweremarried and four children(16%)hadparents whowereseparated/divorced.Childrentendedtocomefrom averageincomeAustralianfamilies accordingto theDaniel PrestigeScale(1983), ameasureofAustralianoccupational prestige. Therewereno significant differences between groups ondemographicvariables. Diagnosticstatus ofhigh anxious childrenwas determinedusingtheparent interview scheduleofthe AnxietyDisorders InterviewScheduleforDSM-IV (ADIS-C; Silverman & Albano,1996)inwhicha clinicianseverityrating(CSR)of4orgreater(scale0to8)for at least theirprincipal diagnosis was usedtodetermineclinical significance (Silverman&Albano, 1996).Thus, inclusion criteriaforanxious children was aprincipal diagnosis ofananxiety disorderwithanADIS-C CSR of4orgreater,intheabsenceof externalisingdisorders, developmental disorders, psychosis, organicbraindamageorvisionimpairments. Major depressivedisorder(MDD)was not a reason forexclusionas longas it was not theprincipal diagnosis.Nochildmet criteriaforMDD.Thus, of the14high anxious children,six had a principal diagnosis ofspecificphobia, threehad generalised anxietydisorder, threehad separationanxietydisorder,andtwohadsocial phobia.ThemeanADIS-C CSR of children’s principal anxietydiagnosis was 6.43(SD=1.91)and comorbiditybetween anxietydisorders was high with childrenhavinganaverageof3.64 anxietydiagnoses (SD = 2.13),predominantly specificphobias.Thesixchildrenwithaprincipal diagnosis ofspecificphobiaall hadcomorbid diagnoses ofeither generalisedanxietydisorder,social phobiaorseparationanxietydisorder, suggestingthat emotional faces wouldbeas pertinent tothesechildren as thosewithprincipal

Description:
augmented by additional channels of recording (electrocardiogram and horizontal EOG) that .. Lipp, & Cobham, 2000; Waters et al., 2005).
See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.