Right dorsolateral prefrontal cortical activity and behavioral inhibition

AJ Shackman, BW McMenamin…�- Psychological�…, 2009 - journals.sagepub.com
AJ Shackman, BW McMenamin, JS Maxwell, LL Greischar, RJ Davidson
Psychological science, 2009journals.sagepub.com
Individuals show marked variation in their responses to threat. Such individual differences in
behavioral inhibition play a profound role in mental and physical well-being. Behavioral
inhibition is thought to reflect variation in the sensitivity of a distributed neural system
responsible for generating anxiety and organizing defensive responses to threat and
punishment. Although progress has been made in identifying the key constituents of this
behavioral inhibition system in humans, the involvement of dorsolateral prefrontal cortex�…
Individuals show marked variation in their responses to threat. Such individual differences in behavioral inhibition play a profound role in mental and physical well-being. Behavioral inhibition is thought to reflect variation in the sensitivity of a distributed neural system responsible for generating anxiety and organizing defensive responses to threat and punishment. Although progress has been made in identifying the key constituents of this behavioral inhibition system in humans, the involvement of dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) remains unclear. Here, we acquired self-reported Behavioral Inhibition System Sensitivity scores and high-resolution electroencephalography from a large sample (n = 51). Using the enhanced spatial resolution afforded by source modeling techniques, we show that individuals with greater tonic (resting) activity in right-posterior DLPFC rate themselves as more behaviorally inhibited. This observation provides novel support for recent conceptualizations of behavioral inhibition and clues to the mechanisms that might underlie variation in threat-induced negative affect.
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