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Hydrocortisone infusion exerts dose- and sex-dependent effects on attention to emotional stimuli
Authors:Alaina Breitberg  Wayne C. Drevets  Suzanne E. Wood  Linda Mah  Jay Schulkin  Barbara J. Sahakian  Kristine Erickson
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology, Hospital for Special Care, New Britain, CT, United States;2. Laureate Institute for Brain Research, The University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Tulsa, OK, United States;3. Temple University, Philadelphia, PA, United States;4. Department of Psychiatry, Division of Geriatric Psychiatry, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada;5. Department of Neuroscience, Georgetown University, Washington, DC, United States;6. Department of Psychiatry and MRC/Wellcome Trust Behavioural and Clinical Neurosciences Institute, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK;g Department of Psychology, American University, Washington, DC, United States
Abstract:Glucocorticoid administration has been shown to exert complex effects on cognitive and emotional processing. In the current study we investigated the effects of glucocorticoid administration on attention towards emotional words, using an Affective Go/No-go task on which healthy humans have shown an attentional bias towards positive as compared to negative words. Healthy volunteers received placebo and either low-dose (0.15 mg/kg) or high-dose (0.45 mg/kg) hydrocortisone intravenously during two separate visits in a double-blind, randomized design. Seventy-five minutes post-infusion, the subjects performed tests of attention (Rapid Visual Information Processing [RVIP]), spatial working memory (Spatial Span) and emotional processing (Affective Go/No-go task [AGNG]). On the attention task, performance was impaired under both hydrocortisone doses relative to placebo, though the effect on error rate was not significant after controlling for age; Spatial Span performance was unaffected by hydrocortisone administration. On the AGNG task, relative to the placebo condition the low-dose hydrocortisone infusion decreased response time to emotional words while high-dose hydrocortisone increased response time. In the females specifically, both high and low dose hydrocortisone administration attenuated the normal attentional bias toward positively valenced words. These data suggest that, in healthy women, the modulation of attention by the emotional salience of stimuli is influenced by glucocorticoid hormone concentrations.
Keywords:CANTAB, Cambridge Neuropsychological Test Automated Battery   AGNG, Affective Go/No-go   RVIP, Rapid Visual Information Processing
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