Teens Impulsively React Rather Than Retreat from Threat
Michael Dreyfuss
Kristina Caudle
Andrew T. Drysdale
Natalie E. Johnston
Alexandra O. Cohen
SummaryOriginal

Summary

Teen risk-taking and crime linked to heightened negative emotions and reduced self-control. Adolescent brains activate emotional regions when threatened, but demonstrate improved decision-making with controlled responses.

2014

Teens Impulsively React Rather Than Retreat from Threat

Keywords Adolescents; Fear; Impulsivity; Control; Threat; Brain scans; Adolescence; Limbic circuitry; Orbitofrontal cortex; Medial prefrontal cortex

Abstract

There is a significant inflection in risk taking and criminal behavior during adolescence, but the basis for this increase remains largely unknown. An increased sensitivity to rewards has been suggested to explain these behaviors, yet juvenile offences often occur in emotionally charged situations of negative valence. How behavior is altered by changes in negative emotional processes during adolescence has received less attention than changes in positive emotional processes. The current study uses a measure of impulsivity in combination with cues that signal threat or safety to assess developmental changes in emotional responses to threat cues. We show that adolescents, especially males, impulsively react to threat cues relative to neutral ones more than adults or children, even when instructed not to respond. This adolescent-specific behavioral pattern is paralleled by enhanced activity in limbic cortical regions implicated in the detection and assignment of emotional value to inputs and in the subsequent regulation of responses to them when successfully suppressing impulsive responses to threat cues. In contrast, prefrontal control regions implicated in detecting and resolving competing responses show an adolescent-emergent pattern (i.e. greater activity in adolescents and adults relative to children) during successful suppression of a response regardless of emotion. Our findings suggest that adolescence is a period of heightened sensitivity to social and emotional cues that results in diminished regulation of behavior in their presence.

Introduction

Adolescents commit more crimes per capita than children or adults in the USA [1] and in nearly all industrialized cultures [2]. Their proclivity toward incentives [3,4] and risk taking [5,6,7,8] has been suggested to underlie the inflection in criminal activity observed during this time. Yet heightened sensitivity to incentives and risk taking are only part of the equation, as criminal behaviors often occur in emotionally charged situations of negative valence. Does negative emotional information impact self-control differently across development? Previous work has shown that positive emotional cues lead to poorer self-control in adolescents relative to children and adults [3], but do negative emotional cues also lead to poor impulse control? The current study tests whether adolescents are more impulsive relative to adults or children when there is a signal of potential threat, using a measure of impulsivity in combination with cues that signal threat (e.g. a frightened face) relative to neutral ones (calm face) and examines potential mechanisms for developmental differences in behavior. The fight-or-flight response is a physiological reaction to perceived threat [9]. Fearful faces are a reliable indicator of threat in the immediate environment [10], evoking a well-defined neural response [11,12]. Negatively valenced stimuli such as fearful faces generally inhibit behavior, slowing response times and inhibiting motor responses in various tasks [13,14,15]. Adolescents, however, show difficulty suppressing attention and actions toward emotional stimuli even when irrelevant to the task at hand [16,17]. This relative lack of cognitive control in the presence of emotional and motivational cues may underlie the behavioral risks that are characteristic of adolescence [18].

Prior work suggests that diminished self-control during adolescence may result from competition between limbic and control circuitry [17,18,19,20]. A combination of evidence from human imaging [3,21,22,23,24,25], postmortem [26] and animal [27,28] studies of regional brain changes over the course of development indicate that limbic and prefrontal circuitry interact differentially across development [29]. Specifically, limbic circuitry is thought to develop earlier than control circuitry as a result of evolutionary pressure and changes in gonad hormone levels that impact limbic structures. This developmental imbalance is suggested to result in a greater influence of limbic than prefrontal regions on behavior during adolescence. This pattern is in contrast to that observed in adulthood when these circuits have matured or in childhood when they are still developing. The current study uses a A go/no-go paradigm to measure impulsivity in combination with cues that signal threat or safety (fearful or calm facial expressions) to assess developmental changes in emotional responses to such cues, their influence on behavior and their neurobiological correlates. In previous work using the same task and overlapping sample, we have shown a heightened sensitivity to emotional cues during adolescence. In the first study [30] we showed longer response latencies to negative (fear faces) relative to positive (happy faces) emotional cues across ages but adolescent-specific increases in amygdala activity when having to respond (go) to fear faces. In a second study [3], we focused on the ability to withhold a response to positive cues, focusing solely on happy no-go trials and showed that adolescents made more false alarms to happy cues than to neutral cues compared to children and adults. This pattern was paralleled by greater ventral striatal activity in adolescents relative to children and adults. Finally, recent reports by other laboratories have noted decrements in behavioral performance on cognitive control tasks in the presence of negatively valenced stimuli versus neutral stimuli in adolescents relative to children or adults [15,16].

In the current study, expanding on these previous adolescent-specific findings toward emotionally valenced stimuli, we test for developmental differences in brain and behavior when required to suppress responses to cues of potential threat. Second, we explore individual differences in brain activity associated with overall behavioral performance. Finally, we explore possible sex differences in behavior and brain responses to cues of potential threat.

Methods

Subjects

A total of 80 participants between the ages of 6 and 27 years were scanned using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Data from 23 participants were excluded due to poor overall accuracy (mean no-go accuracy <70%, n = 9), too much head motion (>2 mm translational or 2° rotational motion within a run, n = 12) or technical problems (n = 2), resulting in data from 57 usable subjects (27 females) in all reported analyses. Participants were grouped into child (aged 6-12 years, n = 18, 10 male), adolescent (aged 13-17 years, n = 19, 10 male) and adult (18 years or older, n = 20, 10 male) age groups. Data from this sample have been published previously on a different subset of the data [3,30]. All participants provided informed written consent (parental consent and subject assent for children and adolescents) approved by the Institutional Review Board of Weill Cornell Medical College.

Behavioral Paradigm

Participants completed six runs of a go/no-go task [3,30] using fearful, happy and calm facial expressions as target (go) and nontarget (no-go) stimuli (fig. 1a). Within each run, two types of facial emotions were presented, one serving as the target (go) stimulus, to which they were instructed to press a button, and the other serving as a nontarget (no-go) stimulus, for which they were instructed to withhold a button press. Facial expressions were pseudorandomized across the run to control for presentation order, and all combinations of expression were used as both targets and nontargets, resulting in a 2 (response: go, no-go) ×3 (emotion: fear, calm, happy) factorial design. Prior to each run, participants were instructed as to which expression served as the target (go) stimulus and that they should respond with a button press only to that expression. Participants were also instructed to respond as fast as possible but to try to avoid making errors. The present report focuses specifically on the analysis of fear no-go trials relative to calm no-go trials. Previously published work on this task focused on no-go trials to happy facial expressions [3] and go trials to fearful facial expressions [30].

Fig. 1

Stimuli and Apparatus

The stimuli consisted of fearful, happy and calm faces from the NimStim set of facial expressions [31]. We used calm faces (mildly pleasant neutral faces) because we [32] and others [33,34] have shown that developmental populations may perceive neutral faces as negative. The task was programmed using E-Prime software and presented to subjects on an overhead liquid crystal display panel integrated with the IFIS-SA system (fMRI Devices Corporation, Waukesha, Wisc., USA). Button responses and reaction times were logged using E-Prime software integrated with the IFIS system.

Task Parameters

The data were acquired in six functional imaging runs that combined each emotion (happy, calm and fear) and response (go and no-go; fig. 1) using a rapid event-related design. On each trial, a face appeared for 500 ms followed by a jittered intertrial interval of between 2 and 14.5 s (mean 5.2 s) during which participants were presented with a fixation crosshair. A total of 48 trials were presented per run in pseudorandomized order (36 go and 12 no-go). A total of 24 no-go trials and 72 go trials were acquired for each expression type.

Image Acquisition

Participants were scanned with a General Electric Signa 3.0-T fMRI scanner (General Electric Medical Systems, Milwaukee, Wisc., USA) and quadrature head coil. A high-resolution, T1-weighted anatomical scan (256 × 256 in-plane resolution, 240-mm field of view, 124 1.5-mm slices) was acquired for each subject for transformation and localization of data to Talairach grid space. A spiral in and out sequence [35] was used to acquire functional imaging data (repetition time = 2,500 ms, echo time = 30 ms, field of view = 200 mm, flip angle = 90, skip 0, 64 × 64 matrix). In all, 34 4-mm-thick coronal slices (3.125 × 3.125 mm resolution) covering the entire brain except for the posterior portion of the occipital lobe were acquired per repetition time.

Behavioral Analysis

Behavioral data from the emotional go/no-go task were analyzed for false alarms (incorrect presses to a ‘no-go' stimulus) to fear and calm cues. Errors were calculated as a difference score between errors to fear nontargets relative to calm nontargets to isolate the effects of negative valence from the overall error rate. Error rates were compared between age groups (children, adolescents and adults). A positive value represents a greater proportion of errors to nontarget fear faces than calm faces, while a negative value represents the inverse. Mean reaction times and hit rates have been reported elsewhere [30]. A two-way ANOVA was performed with age group and sex as the between-subject variables and a difference score between errors to fear nontargets and errors to calm nontargets as the dependent variable of interest.

Imaging Analysis

Imaging data processing and analyses were performed using AFNI (analysis of functional neuroimages) software [36]. Functional imaging data were slice-time corrected, realigned within and across runs to correct for head movement, coregistered with each participant's high-resolution anatomical scan, scaled to percent signal change units, and smoothed with a 6-mm FWHM gaussian kernel. A general linear model (GLM) analysis was performed on each subject to characterize task effects with task regressors (calm/go, calm/no-go, happy/go, happy/no-go, fear/go, fear/no-go, errors), convolved with a gamma-variate hemodynamic response function. Separate regressors were created for correct go and no-go trials, broken down by emotion (errors were grouped and modeled separately with insufficient numbers to analyze separately). Only correct fear and calm trials were considered of interest and included in the second-level analysis. We modeled the effects of response (go vs. no-go), age group (child, adolescent or adult) and emotion (fear or calm) on brain activity using a linear mixed-effects model [37]. Parameter estimate (β) maps representing task effects were then transformed into the standard coordinate space of Talairach and Tournoux [38] (1988) by applying the warping parameters obtained from the transformation of each subject's high-resolution anatomical scan. Talairach-transformed parameter estimate maps were resampled to a resolution of 3 × 3 × 3 mm. A group linear mixed-effects model was performed to identify functional regions of interest (ROIs) implicated in the interaction of response, age group and emotion. Imaging findings considered statistically significant exceeded whole-brain correction for multiple comparisons to preserve an alpha <0.05 by using a p value/cluster size combination stipulated by Monte Carlo simulations run in the AlphaSim program within AFNI. Off-line analyses were conducted in SPSS Statistics 17.0 software (SPSS, Chicago, Ill., USA). Beta values were extracted from whole-brain-corrected ROIs (drawing a 5-mm sphere around the peak voxel in each region) and submitted to offline post hoc analyses with SPSS.

Control Analyses

All imaging analyses were based on correct no-go trials. As task performance was significantly different between age groups, a second analysis was conducted to verify that the observed developmental effects were not due to less power in one age group relative to another. First-level GLMs were estimated in which number of correct trials were equated for all participants across conditions (fear/go, fear/no-go, calm/go, calm/no-go), using the lowest mean number of correct trials of all age groups (calm no-go trials in children; mean = 17 out of 24 possible, or 70% mean accuracy). New regressors were generated by randomly selecting 17 (of 24) trials per condition for inclusion. All other trials were modeled as separate regressors that were not further examined. Beta values were extracted from the 17-trial regressors using the previously defined ROIs, tested for replication, and reported in Results.

Results

Behavioral Results

The 2-way ANOVA showed a main effect of age group on false alarm rates to fear relative to calm nontargets (F2, 59 = 8.58, p < 0.001), but no main effect of sex (F1, 51 = 0.05, p > 0.85 ) or interaction with sex (F2, 51 = 0.27, p > 0.77). Post hoc t tests showed that adolescents made more false alarms to fear nontargets in comparison to calm nontargets than either children (t35 = 2.79, p < 0.009) or adults (t37 = 2.30, p < 0.03; fig. 1b).

Imaging Results

The whole-brain age group (3) × response (go/no-go) × emotion (fear, calm) linear mixed-effects model revealed 7 ROIs (see table 1). Given the behavioral results we performed post hoc tests on beta values extracted from each whole-brain-corrected ROI to determine if teens differed from adults and from children in these regions. When we tested each region to determine whether significant variance could be attributed to adolescent-specific differences in response to fear relative to calm nontargets, two patterns emerged (see fig. 2): (1) adolescent-specific effects were of greater activity in adolescents compared to children or adults on correct threat no-go trials relative to calm no-go trials and (2) adolescent-emergent effects of adolescents and adults activated this region more than children on correct threat no-go trials. The left orbitofrontal cortex (LOFC) and medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) showed adolescent-specific effects. Although the striatum showed a similar developmental pattern post hoc tests did not reach significance between age groups (adolescents vs. children: p = 0.09 and adolescents vs. adults: p = 0.11). The right inferior frontal gyrus (RIFG), right anterior cingulate cortex (RACC) and left premotor cortex showed adolescent-emergent effects. Our control analysis, equating power across age groups and conditions, revealed similar patterns of activity, but to a lesser degree given less overall power of the analysis. However, the LOFC maintained a robust pattern of activity across analyses (adolescents vs. children: t35 = 2.74, p < 0.01 and adolescents vs. adults: t37 = 2.27, p < 0.03).

Table 1

Fig. 2

Sex Differences

We performed exploratory analyses to test for sex differences within the three adolescent-specific findings (i.e. false alarm rates and OFC and mPFC activity to threat nontargets relative to calm nontargets). These exploratory analyses revealed that males rather than females appeared to be driving the inflection in false alarms to threat nontargets during adolescence (fig. 3a). Independent t tests revealed that in males, adolescents made more false alarms than children (t18 = 2.28, p < 0.04) or adults (t18 = 2.96, p < 0.009) and showed a similar pattern in the activation of the OFC, a region implicated in the regulation of approach-related behavior (adolescents vs. children: t18 = 2.31, p < 0.04; adolescents vs. adults: t18 = 2.39, p < 0.03; fig. 3b).

Fig. 3

Discussion

Prior research has focused almost exclusively on how incentives and positive social cues lead to impulsive decisions during adolescence to help explain inflections in risk taking and criminal behavior during this period [3,8,25,39]. The current study examined the effect of threat cues on impulse control and the underlying neural circuitry in adolescents. We found that just as positive cues can lead to more impulsive responses by adolescents relative to children and adults [3], so too can threat cues. This adolescent-specific inflection in false alarms to threat cues was paralleled by marked increases in limbic prefrontal (orbitofrontal and medial prefrontal) regions, implicated in regulating emotional and behavioral responses, particularly in the case of threat-related stimuli.

In contrast to the adolescent-specific effects in limbic prefrontal regions, prefrontal control circuitry implicated in detecting and resolving conflict between two competing responses showed an adolescent-emergent pattern [40,41,42]. Specifically, activity in RIFG and RACC increased from childhood to adolescence and then plateaued. These findings are consistent with developmental studies showing that the ability to ignore irrelevant information on cognitive tests like the flanker and go/no-go tasks reaches maturity levels roughly by adolescence [16,41,43,44,45].

The difficulty of adolescents in suppressing attention and actions specifically toward negatively valenced information in the current study is a pattern that is emerging in the developmental literature [15,16]. This diminished performance in adolescents is not observed in tasks demanding suppression of attention or actions toward neutral information [3,16]. One explanation for the results reported here may be a failure of adolescents to withhold responses to any emotional stimuli [41]. However, recent work suggests that the actions of adolescents may be disrupted more easily by negative than positive emotional information [15] and differential patterns of activity have been shown for positive and negative emotional stimuli [3,30]. Together these findings suggest that changes in behavior and limbic circuitry during adolescence coincide with a heightened sensitivity to emotional cues that may cause them to impulsively react rather than retreat from cues of potential threat.

Theoretical and empirical accounts for this diminished performance during adolescence fall along two lines of evidence. The first is evidence of regional brain development with lateral PFC continuing to reach structural and functional maturity throughout the adolescent years [3,23] and the connections between subcortical and cortical structures continuing to strengthen [46,47]. Given the role of the lateral PFC in the regulation of behavior, immature connections between it and limbic structures might reduce the capacity to exert cognitive control, particularly in emotionally salient contexts [15,16]. The second line of evidence comes from neuroendocrinology studies, showing an influx of hormones during puberty thought to sensitize functional properties of certain brain circuits [19,48,49], potentially resulting in adolescent-specific enhanced signaling in limbic regions that are especially sensitive to hormonal changes. Thus the heightened recruitment of regulatory prefrontal circuitry when successfully suppressing attention to emotional cues may suggest an adolescent-specific hyper-responsiveness to emotional cues that requires greater recruitment of regulatory regions. Together, these observations suggest that diminished regulation of sensitized limbic circuits may heighten the detection of, and response to, salient social cues during adolescence, even when irrelevant for goal-directed behavior.

An elevated sensitivity or reaction to threat cues during adolescence may have important implications for understanding risky or criminal-related behaviors under a heightened sense of threat. These behaviors have been reported to be higher in males than females [50,51,52]. So how might the adolescent-specific behavioral and imaging findings relate to sex differences observed in real world behavior? Although there was no main effect of, or interaction with, sex in the 2-factor ANOVA, exploratory independent t tests revealed that males rather than females appeared to be driving the inflection in false alarms to threat cues during adolescence. Specifically, male adolescents made more false alarms than either male children or adults and showed a parallel increased activation pattern in the OFC when successfully inhibiting a response, a region implicated in the regulation of approach-related behavior. In contrast, female adolescents did not significantly differ from female children or adults in their performance or in activity in this region. Rather, they showed greater activity in the mPFC, a region implicated in regulation of avoidance-related behavior. Adolescent males did not significantly differ from children or adults in this region. These exploratory results suggest a possible double dissociation between adolescent males and females in cortical limbic activity related to impulsively reacting and retreating from cues of potential threat, respectively, that warrants further investigation in a larger sample. In addition, a number of other factors, not specifically measured in this study, may have contributed to the observed age and sex differences such as discrepancies between the sexes in pubertal onset, pubertal stage and quality and/or lack of sleep.

The present study demonstrates that impulsive behavior during adolescence is as likely to occur in the presence of threat as reward cues. We show that rather than retreating or withholding a response to threat cues, adolescents are more likely than children or adults to impulsively react to them, even when instructed not to respond. This developmental pattern is mirrored by adolescent-specific changes in limbic cortical circuitry implicated in the detection and assignment of emotional value to inputs and in the subsequent regulation of responses to them [53,54,55,56]. Clearly more research will be required to specify the impact of threat cues on adolescent behavior. Nonetheless, these findings may have significant implications for conditions in which adolescents impulsively react and put themselves and others in harm's way.

Link to Article

Abstract

There is a significant inflection in risk taking and criminal behavior during adolescence, but the basis for this increase remains largely unknown. An increased sensitivity to rewards has been suggested to explain these behaviors, yet juvenile offences often occur in emotionally charged situations of negative valence. How behavior is altered by changes in negative emotional processes during adolescence has received less attention than changes in positive emotional processes. The current study uses a measure of impulsivity in combination with cues that signal threat or safety to assess developmental changes in emotional responses to threat cues. We show that adolescents, especially males, impulsively react to threat cues relative to neutral ones more than adults or children, even when instructed not to respond. This adolescent-specific behavioral pattern is paralleled by enhanced activity in limbic cortical regions implicated in the detection and assignment of emotional value to inputs and in the subsequent regulation of responses to them when successfully suppressing impulsive responses to threat cues. In contrast, prefrontal control regions implicated in detecting and resolving competing responses show an adolescent-emergent pattern (i.e. greater activity in adolescents and adults relative to children) during successful suppression of a response regardless of emotion. Our findings suggest that adolescence is a period of heightened sensitivity to social and emotional cues that results in diminished regulation of behavior in their presence.

Summary

This study explores the impact of threat cues on impulsivity and the underlying neural circuitry in adolescents, relative to children and adults. It investigates whether adolescents are more impulsive when presented with a signal of potential threat, using a measure of impulsivity in combination with cues that signal threat (e.g., a frightened face) compared to neutral ones (calm face). The study also examines potential mechanisms for developmental differences in behavior.

Methods

Subjects

The study involved 57 participants (27 females) aged 6 to 27 years, divided into three groups: children (6-12 years, n=18), adolescents (13-17 years, n=19), and adults (18+ years, n=20). All participants provided informed consent, approved by the Institutional Review Board of Weill Cornell Medical College.

Behavioral Paradigm

Participants completed a go/no-go task using fearful, happy, and calm facial expressions as target (go) and nontarget (no-go) stimuli. The task involved responding with a button press to the target stimulus and withholding a response to the nontarget stimulus.

Stimuli and Apparatus

The stimuli consisted of fearful, happy, and calm faces from the NimStim set of facial expressions. The task was programmed using E-Prime software and presented on a liquid crystal display panel integrated with the IFIS-SA system. Button responses and reaction times were logged using E-Prime software integrated with the IFIS system.

Task Parameters

The data were acquired in six functional imaging runs using a rapid event-related design. On each trial, a face appeared for 500 ms followed by a jittered intertrial interval of between 2 and 14.5 s. A total of 48 trials were presented per run in pseudorandomized order.

Image Acquisition

Participants were scanned with a General Electric Signa 3.0-T fMRI scanner. A high-resolution, T1-weighted anatomical scan was acquired for each subject. A spiral in and out sequence was used to acquire functional imaging data.

Behavioral Analysis

Behavioral data were analyzed for false alarms (incorrect presses to a ‘no-go' stimulus) to fear and calm cues. Errors were calculated as a difference score between errors to fear nontargets relative to calm nontargets. Error rates were compared between age groups using a two-way ANOVA with age group and sex as the between-subject variables.

Imaging Analysis

Imaging data were processed and analyzed using AFNI software. A general linear model (GLM) analysis was performed on each subject to characterize task effects. A group linear mixed-effects model was performed to identify functional regions of interest (ROIs) implicated in the interaction of response, age group, and emotion. Imaging findings were considered statistically significant exceeding whole-brain correction for multiple comparisons.

Control Analyses

Control analyses were conducted to verify that the observed developmental effects were not due to less power in one age group relative to another. First-level GLMs were estimated in which number of correct trials were equated for all participants across conditions.

Results

Behavioral Results

The two-way ANOVA showed a main effect of age group on false alarm rates to fear relative to calm nontargets, but no main effect of sex or interaction with sex. Post hoc t tests showed that adolescents made more false alarms to fear nontargets in comparison to calm nontargets than either children or adults.

Imaging Results

The whole-brain age group × response × emotion linear mixed-effects model revealed 7 ROIs. Post hoc tests were performed on beta values extracted from each whole-brain-corrected ROI to determine if teens differed from adults and from children. The left orbitofrontal cortex (LOFC) and medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) showed adolescent-specific effects. The right inferior frontal gyrus (RIFG), right anterior cingulate cortex (RACC), and left premotor cortex showed adolescent-emergent effects.

Sex Differences

Exploratory analyses revealed that males rather than females appeared to be driving the inflection in false alarms to threat cues during adolescence. Independent t tests revealed that in males, adolescents made more false alarms than children or adults and showed a similar pattern in the activation of the OFC. Female adolescents did not significantly differ from female children or adults in their performance or in activity in this region. They showed greater activity in the mPFC.

Discussion

The study found that adolescents, compared to children and adults, exhibit increased impulsivity in response to threat cues. This pattern was accompanied by marked increases in limbic prefrontal (orbitofrontal and medial prefrontal) regions. Prefrontal control circuitry, implicated in detecting and resolving conflict between competing responses, showed an adolescent-emergent pattern, with activity increasing from childhood to adolescence and then plateauing.

These findings suggest that adolescents may be more susceptible to impulsively reacting to threat cues due to a heightened sensitivity to emotional cues and a developmental imbalance between limbic and prefrontal circuitry. This heightened sensitivity may have implications for understanding risky or criminal-related behaviors, particularly in males.

Further research is needed to fully understand the impact of threat cues on adolescent behavior and to address potential sex differences in responses to threat cues.

Link to Article

Abstract

There is a significant inflection in risk taking and criminal behavior during adolescence, but the basis for this increase remains largely unknown. An increased sensitivity to rewards has been suggested to explain these behaviors, yet juvenile offences often occur in emotionally charged situations of negative valence. How behavior is altered by changes in negative emotional processes during adolescence has received less attention than changes in positive emotional processes. The current study uses a measure of impulsivity in combination with cues that signal threat or safety to assess developmental changes in emotional responses to threat cues. We show that adolescents, especially males, impulsively react to threat cues relative to neutral ones more than adults or children, even when instructed not to respond. This adolescent-specific behavioral pattern is paralleled by enhanced activity in limbic cortical regions implicated in the detection and assignment of emotional value to inputs and in the subsequent regulation of responses to them when successfully suppressing impulsive responses to threat cues. In contrast, prefrontal control regions implicated in detecting and resolving competing responses show an adolescent-emergent pattern (i.e. greater activity in adolescents and adults relative to children) during successful suppression of a response regardless of emotion. Our findings suggest that adolescence is a period of heightened sensitivity to social and emotional cues that results in diminished regulation of behavior in their presence.

Summary

This study investigates how negative emotional information affects self-control during adolescence, a period characterized by heightened sensitivity to incentives and risk-taking. The researchers hypothesize that adolescents may exhibit increased impulsivity compared to children and adults in response to cues signaling potential threat. This study used a go/no-go paradigm with fearful and calm facial expressions as stimuli to measure impulsivity and examine brain activity using fMRI.

Methods

Subjects

The study included 57 participants (27 females) between the ages of 6 and 27 years, divided into three groups: child (6-12 years), adolescent (13-17 years), and adult (18 years or older).

Behavioral Paradigm

Participants completed a go/no-go task, responding with a button press to a designated facial expression (go) and withholding a response to another expression (no-go). The study focused on the analysis of fear no-go trials relative to calm no-go trials.

Stimuli and Apparatus

Fearful, happy, and calm facial expressions from the NimStim set were used as stimuli. The task was presented on a liquid crystal display panel integrated with the fMRI system, and button responses and reaction times were logged.

Task Parameters

Data were acquired in six functional imaging runs, combining facial expressions and response types. Each trial involved a 500 ms presentation of a face followed by a jittered intertrial interval.

Image Acquisition

Participants were scanned with a 3.0-T fMRI scanner. Anatomical and functional imaging data were acquired for each subject.

Behavioral Analysis

Behavioral data were analyzed for false alarms (incorrect presses to a ‘no-go' stimulus) to fear and calm cues. A difference score between errors to fear nontargets relative to calm nontargets was used to isolate the effects of negative valence.

Imaging Analysis

Imaging data were preprocessed and analyzed using AFNI software. A general linear model (GLM) analysis was performed to characterize task effects. A group linear mixed-effects model was used to identify functional regions of interest (ROIs) associated with the interaction of response, age group, and emotion.

Control Analyses

Control analyses were conducted to verify that developmental effects were not due to differences in task performance.

Results

Behavioral Results

Adolescents exhibited significantly more false alarms to fear nontargets compared to calm nontargets than either children or adults.

Imaging Results

The study revealed seven regions of interest (ROIs) associated with the interaction of response, age group, and emotion. Two patterns emerged: (1) adolescent-specific effects, with greater activity in adolescents compared to children or adults on correct threat no-go trials relative to calm no-go trials; and (2) adolescent-emergent effects, with adolescents and adults showing higher activity than children on correct threat no-go trials.

Sex Differences

Exploratory analyses revealed that males, rather than females, appeared to be driving the inflection in false alarms to threat cues during adolescence. Male adolescents also showed increased activation in the OFC when successfully inhibiting a response, a region implicated in the regulation of approach-related behavior.

Discussion

The findings suggest that adolescents, similar to their response to positive cues, are more likely to impulsively react to threat cues than children or adults. This pattern is mirrored by adolescent-specific changes in limbic cortical circuitry involved in emotional processing and response regulation.

The study highlights the importance of understanding the impact of threat cues on adolescent behavior, particularly in relation to risky or criminal-related behaviors. The observed sex differences warrant further investigation.

The study's findings contribute to a growing body of research on adolescent brain development and behavior, offering valuable insights into the unique challenges and vulnerabilities of this developmental stage.

Link to Article

Abstract

There is a significant inflection in risk taking and criminal behavior during adolescence, but the basis for this increase remains largely unknown. An increased sensitivity to rewards has been suggested to explain these behaviors, yet juvenile offences often occur in emotionally charged situations of negative valence. How behavior is altered by changes in negative emotional processes during adolescence has received less attention than changes in positive emotional processes. The current study uses a measure of impulsivity in combination with cues that signal threat or safety to assess developmental changes in emotional responses to threat cues. We show that adolescents, especially males, impulsively react to threat cues relative to neutral ones more than adults or children, even when instructed not to respond. This adolescent-specific behavioral pattern is paralleled by enhanced activity in limbic cortical regions implicated in the detection and assignment of emotional value to inputs and in the subsequent regulation of responses to them when successfully suppressing impulsive responses to threat cues. In contrast, prefrontal control regions implicated in detecting and resolving competing responses show an adolescent-emergent pattern (i.e. greater activity in adolescents and adults relative to children) during successful suppression of a response regardless of emotion. Our findings suggest that adolescence is a period of heightened sensitivity to social and emotional cues that results in diminished regulation of behavior in their presence.

Summary

This study investigated how adolescents respond to cues that signal potential threat, compared to children and adults. Researchers used a go/no-go task, where participants were shown faces with different expressions (fearful, happy, and calm) and asked to press a button only to certain faces. They measured how often participants made mistakes (false alarms) and looked at brain activity using fMRI. The study found that adolescents were more likely than children or adults to make false alarms to fearful faces, indicating a difficulty in suppressing their response to potential threat. This pattern was associated with increased activity in brain regions related to processing emotions and regulating behavior, particularly the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) and medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC). These findings suggest that adolescents' heightened sensitivity to threat cues, coupled with developing brain regions, might contribute to impulsive reactions in situations of potential danger.

Methods

Subjects

The study included 57 participants (27 females) divided into three age groups: children (6-12 years), adolescents (13-17 years), and adults (18 years or older).

Behavioral Paradigm

Participants performed a go/no-go task, where they had to respond to certain facial expressions (go trials) and withhold a response to others (no-go trials). The task used fearful, happy, and calm faces, and each participant completed six runs, with two different emotions presented in each run.

Stimuli and Apparatus

The study used a set of facial expressions called NimStim, which included fearful, happy, and calm faces. The task was presented on a screen, and participants pressed a button to indicate their response.

Task Parameters

Each trial involved presenting a face for 500 milliseconds followed by a pause of 2-14.5 seconds. Participants completed 48 trials per run, with a total of 24 no-go trials and 72 go trials for each expression type.

Image Acquisition

Brain activity was measured using fMRI, a technique that detects changes in blood flow in the brain.

Behavioral Analysis

The researchers analyzed the number of false alarms (incorrectly pressing the button to no-go stimuli) for each participant. They compared the false alarm rates for fearful faces versus calm faces across age groups.

Imaging Analysis

The fMRI data was processed and analyzed using software called AFNI. They identified brain regions that showed significant activity differences between age groups and response conditions.

Control Analyses

To ensure that the findings were not due to differences in task performance, the researchers ran a control analysis that accounted for the number of correct trials across age groups.

Results

Behavioral Results

The study found that adolescents made significantly more false alarms to fearful faces than calm faces, compared to both children and adults. This suggests that adolescents have a greater difficulty in inhibiting their response to threat cues.

Imaging Results

The analysis revealed that adolescents showed increased activity in the OFC and mPFC compared to children and adults during no-go trials with fearful faces. These regions are involved in regulating emotional responses and decision-making.

Sex Differences

Exploratory analyses indicated that male adolescents were driving the increased false alarm rate and OFC activity, while female adolescents showed greater activity in the mPFC. These findings suggest potential differences in how males and females respond to threat cues during adolescence.

Discussion

The study's findings highlight the importance of considering threat cues when understanding impulsive behaviors in adolescents. These findings contribute to a growing body of research suggesting that adolescents' sensitivity to emotional cues, particularly negative ones, can lead to heightened reactivity and potentially risky behavior. The study emphasizes the need for further research to understand the implications of these findings for interventions and strategies to support adolescents in managing their responses to threat cues.

Link to Article

Abstract

There is a significant inflection in risk taking and criminal behavior during adolescence, but the basis for this increase remains largely unknown. An increased sensitivity to rewards has been suggested to explain these behaviors, yet juvenile offences often occur in emotionally charged situations of negative valence. How behavior is altered by changes in negative emotional processes during adolescence has received less attention than changes in positive emotional processes. The current study uses a measure of impulsivity in combination with cues that signal threat or safety to assess developmental changes in emotional responses to threat cues. We show that adolescents, especially males, impulsively react to threat cues relative to neutral ones more than adults or children, even when instructed not to respond. This adolescent-specific behavioral pattern is paralleled by enhanced activity in limbic cortical regions implicated in the detection and assignment of emotional value to inputs and in the subsequent regulation of responses to them when successfully suppressing impulsive responses to threat cues. In contrast, prefrontal control regions implicated in detecting and resolving competing responses show an adolescent-emergent pattern (i.e. greater activity in adolescents and adults relative to children) during successful suppression of a response regardless of emotion. Our findings suggest that adolescence is a period of heightened sensitivity to social and emotional cues that results in diminished regulation of behavior in their presence.

Summary

This study investigates how teenagers react to threatening situations compared to adults and children. The researchers used a special task called a "go/no-go" task, where participants had to press a button when they saw a certain image, but not press when they saw another image. The images were of different facial expressions, some showing fear and some showing calm.

Methods

The study included 57 participants, divided into three age groups: children, teenagers, and adults. Each participant completed the go/no-go task while their brain activity was measured using an fMRI scanner. The researchers analyzed the data to see how well each group performed the task and how their brains reacted to the different facial expressions.

Results

The study found that teenagers made more mistakes when they had to hold back from pressing a button after seeing a fearful face compared to a calm face. This was true even when they were told not to press the button. The researchers also found that teenagers' brains showed more activity in certain areas involved in processing emotions and controlling behavior, especially when they saw a fearful face. These areas were less active in both children and adults.

Discussion

The study's results suggest that teenagers may have difficulty controlling their impulses when faced with threatening situations, and their brains are more sensitive to these situations. This finding could be helpful in understanding why teenagers might engage in risky behaviors or make impulsive decisions, especially when feeling threatened.

Link to Article

Footnotes and Citation

Cite

Dreyfuss, M. et al. (2014). Teens impulsively react rather than retreat from threat. Developmental Neuroscience, 36(3-4), 220-227. https://doi.org/10.1159/000357755

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