Magnitude and chronometry of neural mechanisms of emotion regulation in subtypes of aggressive children
Publication year
2011Source
Brain and Cognition, 77, 2, (2011), pp. 159-169ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor
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Organization
SW OZ BSI OGG
SW OZ BSI ON
Journal title
Brain and Cognition
Volume
vol. 77
Issue
iss. 2
Languages used
English (eng)
Page start
p. 159
Page end
p. 169
Subject
Developmental Psychopathology; Social DevelopmentAbstract
Emotion regulation is a key social skill and children who fail to master it are at risk for clinical disorders. Specific styles of emotion regulation have been associated with particular patterns of prefrontal activation. We investigated whether anxious aggressive children would reveal a different pattern of cortical activation than non-anxious aggressive children and normally-developing children. We examined the magnitude and timing of source activation underlying the N2—an ERP associated with inhibitory control—during a go/nogo task with a negative emotion induction component (loss of earned points). We estimated cortical activation for two regions of interest—a ventral prefrontal and a dorsomedial prefrontal region—for three 100-ms windows over the range of the N2 (200–500 ms). Anxious aggressive children showed high ventral prefrontal activation in the early window; non-anxious aggressive children showed high ventral prefrontal activation in the late window, but only for the duration of the emotion induction; and normally-developing children showed low ventral prefrontal activation throughout. There were no group differences in dorsomedial prefrontal activation. These results suggest that anxious aggressive children recruit ventral prefrontal activation quickly and indiscriminately, possibly giving rise to their rigid, threat-oriented approach to conflict. The late ventral prefrontal activation seen for non-anxious aggressive children may underlie a more delayed, situation-specific, but ineffective response to frustration.
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- Academic publications [248380]
- Faculty of Social Sciences [30735]
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