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Cognitive Control in the Face of Fear: Reduced Cognitive-Emotional Flexibility in Women with a History of Child Abuse
Authors:Jon G. Caldwell  Marie K. Krug  Cameron S. Carter  Michael J. Minzenberg
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychiatry, University of California, Davis, Davis, California, USAdrjoncaldwell@gmail.com;3. Department of Psychology, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, USA;4. Imaging Research Center, University of California, Davis, Sacramento, California, USA
Abstract:Child abuse can negatively affect neurobiological systems involved in regulating emotions. Adults who were maltreated as children show diminished capacity to flexibly integrate the prefrontal and limbic circuits underlying emotion regulation. Using a facial identification Stroop task with nonemotional and emotional stimuli, we found that women who reported more childhood abuse (N = 44) were no different from women reporting less childhood abuse (N = 45) on nonemotional conflict adaptation, but were significantly less able to adapt to emotional conflict. Women who reported more abuse were especially impaired in adapting to emotional conflict when incongruent stimuli involved a fearful face. These results help characterize the relation between cognitive control and emotion regulation and highlight the far-reaching effects of childhood abuse on cognitive-emotional flexibility.
Keywords:amygdala  anterior cingulate cortex  child abuse  childhood maltreatment  cognitive control  cognitive flexibility  conflict adaptation  emotion regulation
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