4.7 Article

Depression alters top-down visual attention: A dynamic causal modeling comparison between depressed and healthy subjects

Journal

NEUROIMAGE
Volume 54, Issue 2, Pages 1662-1668

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2010.08.061

Keywords

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Funding

  1. FRS-FNRS [3.4516.05]
  2. University of Liege (Belgium)
  3. Fondation Medicate Reine Elisabeth (FMRE)
  4. Interuniversity Attraction Poles Programme - Belgian State - Belgian Science Policy
  5. Horlait-Dapsens Foundation
  6. Belgian American Educational Fundation
  7. Wallonie-Bruxelles International
  8. Jean and Madeleine Vachoux Foundation
  9. Swiss National Science Foundation

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Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), we recently demonstrated that nonmedicated patients with a first episode of unipolar major depression (MDD) compared to matched controls exhibited an abnormal neural filtering of irrelevant visual information (Desseilles et al., 2009). During scanning, subjects performed a visual attention task imposing two different levels of attentional load at fixation (low or high), while task-irrelevant colored stimuli were presented in the periphery. In the present study, we focused on the visuo-attentional system and used Dynamic Causal Modeling (DCM) on the same dataset to assess how attention influences a network of three dynamically-interconnected brain regions (visual areas V1 and V4, and intraparietal sulcus (P), differentially in MDD patients and healthy controls. Bayesian model selection (BMS) and model space partitioning (MSP) were used to determine the best model in each population. The best model for the controls revealed that the increase of parietal activity by high attention load was selectively associated with a negative modulation of P on V4, consistent with high attention reducing the processing of irrelevant colored peripheral stimuli. The best model accounting for the data from the MDD patients showed that both low and high attention levels exerted modulatory effects on P. The present results document abnormal effective connectivity across visuo-attentional networks in MDD, which likely contributes to deficient attentional filtering of information. (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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