4.6 Article

Impaired neural habituation to neutral faces in families genetically enriched for social anxiety disorder

Journal

DEPRESSION AND ANXIETY
Volume 36, Issue 12, Pages 1143-1153

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/da.22962

Keywords

amygdala; endophenotypes; family research; FSL (RRID; SCR_002823); functional neuroimaging; hippocampus; phobia; social

Funding

  1. Leiden University Research Profile 'Health, Prevention and the Human Life Cycle'
  2. Leiden University, Institute of Psychology

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Background Social anxiety disorder (SAD) is an incapacitating disorder running in families. Previous work associated social fearfulness with a failure to habituate, but the habituation response to neutral faces has, as of yet, not been investigated in patients with SAD and their family members concurrently. Here, we examined whether impaired habituation to neutral faces is a putative neurobiological endophenotype of SAD by using data from the multiplex and multigenerational Leiden Family Lab study on SAD. Methods Participants (n = 110; age, 9.2 - 61.5 years) performed a habituation paradigm involving neutral faces, as these are strong social stimuli with an ambiguous meaning. We used functional magnetic resonance imaging data to investigate whether brain activation related to habituation was associated with the level of social anxiety within the families. Furthermore, the heritability of the neural habituation response was estimated. Results Our data revealed a relationship between impaired habituation to neutral faces and social anxiety in the right hippocampus and right amygdala. In addition, our data indicated that this habituation response displayed moderate - to-moderately high heritability in the right hippocampus. Conclusion The present results provide support for altered habituation as a candidate SAD endophenotype; impaired neural habitation cosegregrated with the disorder within families and was heritable. These findings shed light on the genetic susceptibility to SAD.

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