• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: Physiological and neural correlates of worry and rumination: Support for the contrast avoidance model of worry
  • Contributor: Steinfurth, Elisa C. K.; Alius, Manuela G.; Wendt, Julia; Hamm, Alfons O.
  • Published: Wiley, 2017
  • Published in: Psychophysiology, 54 (2017) 2, Seite 161-171
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.1111/psyp.12767
  • ISSN: 1469-8986; 0048-5772
  • Keywords: Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ; Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ; Biological Psychiatry ; Cognitive Neuroscience ; Developmental Neuroscience ; Endocrine and Autonomic Systems ; Neurology ; Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ; Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ; General Neuroscience
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  • Description: AbstractThe current experiments tested neural and physiological correlates of worry and rumination in comparison to thinking about neutral events. According to the avoidance model—stating that worry is a strategy to reduce intense emotions—physiological and neurobiological activity during worried thinking should not differ from activation during neutral thinking. According to the contrast avoidance model—stating that worry is a strategy to reduce abrupt shifts of emotions—activity should be increased. To test these competing models, we induced worry and neutral thinking in healthy participants using personal topics. A rumination condition was added to investigate the specificity of changes induced by the mental process. Two experiments were conducted assessing the effects on different response levels: (1) neural activation using fMRI, and (2) physiological response mobilization using startle and autonomic measures. During worry, participants showed a potentiated startle response and BOLD activity indicative of emotional network activation. These data partly support the contrast avoidance model of worry. Both mental processes showed elevated activity in a common network referred to as default network indicating self‐referential activity.