4.7 Article

Losing Neutrality: The Neural Basis of Impaired Emotional Control without Sleep

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 35, Issue 38, Pages 13194-13205

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1314-15.2015

Keywords

amygdala; cognitive-emotional interactions; emotion; fMRI; sleep deprivation; ssVEP

Categories

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science, Technology, and Space Israel
  2. US Department of Defense [W81XWH-11-2-0008]
  3. Sagol Foundation for Human Neuroscience
  4. Israel Centers of Research Excellence Program of the Planning and Budgeting Committee
  5. Marie Curie Actions CIG Grant [34206]
  6. National Institute for Psychobiology in Israel Young Investigator Research Grant [145-14-15]
  7. Israel Science Foundation [51/11]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Sleep deprivation has been shown recently to alter emotional processing possibly associated with reduced frontal regulation. Such impairments can ultimately fail adaptive attempts to regulate emotional processing (also known as cognitive control of emotion), although this hypothesis has not been examined directly. Therefore, we explored the influence of sleep deprivation on the human brain using two different cognitive-emotional tasks, recorded using fMRI and EEG. Both tasks involved irrelevant emotional and neutral distractors presented during a competing cognitive challenge, thus creating a continuous demand for regulating emotional processing. Results reveal that, although participants showed enhanced limbic and electrophysiological reactions to emotional distractors regardless of their sleep state, they were specifically unable to ignore neutral distracting information after sleep deprivation. As a consequence, sleep deprivation resulted in similar processing of neutral and negative distractors, thus disabling accurate emotional discrimination. As expected, these findings were further associated with a decrease in prefrontal connectivity patterns in both EEG and fMRI signals, reflecting a profound decline in cognitive control of emotion. Notably, such a decline was associated with lower REM sleep amounts, supporting a role for REM sleep in overnight emotional processing. Altogether, our findings suggest that losing sleep alters emotional reactivity by lowering the threshold for emotional activation, leading to a maladaptive loss of emotional neutrality.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available