Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience (Jun 2018)

Reliability of neural activation and connectivity during implicit face emotion processing in youth

  • Simone P. Haller,
  • Katharina Kircanski,
  • Joel Stoddard,
  • Lauren K. White,
  • Gang Chen,
  • Banafsheh Sharif-Askary,
  • Susan Zhang,
  • Kenneth E. Towbin,
  • Daniel S. Pine,
  • Ellen Leibenluft,
  • Melissa A. Brotman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dcn.2018.03.010
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 31, no. C
pp. 67 – 73

Abstract

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Face emotion imaging paradigms are widely used in both healthy and psychiatric populations. Here, in children and adolescents, we evaluate the test-retest reliability of blood oxygenation-level dependent (BOLD) activation and task-based functional connectivity on a widely used implicit face emotion processing task (i.e., gender labeling). Twenty-five healthy youth (M age = 13.97 year s; 60% female) completed two functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scan sessions approximately two months apart. Participants identified the gender of faces displaying angry, fearful, happy, and neutral emotions. A Bayesian adaptation of the intraclass correlation (ICC) assessed reliability of evoked BOLD activation and amygdala seed-based functional connectivity on task events vs. baseline as well as contrasts between face emotions. For each face emotion vs. baseline, good reliability of activation was demonstrated across key emotion processing regions including middle, medial, and inferior frontal gyri. However, contrasts between face emotions yielded variable results. Contrasts of angry to neutral or happy faces exhibited good reliability of amygdala connectivity to prefrontal regions. Contrasts of fearful to happy faces exhibited good reliability of activation in the anterior cingulate. Findings inform the reproducibility literature and emphasize the need for continued evaluation of task reliability.

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