Neural substrates of rumination tendency in non-depressed individuals
•Correlation between tendency to ruminate and brain activity.•Healthy subjects show activity in entorhinal cortex both at rest and during cognitive task.•Depends on level of cognitive load.•Lower tendency to ruminate correlate with activity in visual areas. The tendency to ruminate, experienced by b...
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Published in | Biological psychology Vol. 103; pp. 195 - 202 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article Web Resource |
Language | English |
Published |
Amsterdam
Elsevier B.V
01.12.2014
Elsevier |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
ISSN | 0301-0511 1873-6246 1873-6246 |
DOI | 10.1016/j.biopsycho.2014.09.005 |
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Abstract | •Correlation between tendency to ruminate and brain activity.•Healthy subjects show activity in entorhinal cortex both at rest and during cognitive task.•Depends on level of cognitive load.•Lower tendency to ruminate correlate with activity in visual areas.
The tendency to ruminate, experienced by both healthy individuals and depressed patients, can be quantified by the Ruminative Response Scale (RRS). We hypothesized that brain activity associated with rumination tendency might not only occur at rest but also persist to some degree during a cognitive task. We correlated RRS with whole-brain fMRI data of 20 healthy subjects during rest and during a face categorization task with different levels of cognitive demands (easy or difficult conditions). Our results reveal that the more subjects tend to ruminate, the more they activate the left entorhinal region, both at rest and during the easy task condition, under low attentional demands. Conversely, lower tendency to ruminate correlates with greater activation of visual cortex during rest and activation of insula during the easy task condition. These results indicate a particular neural marker of the tendency to ruminate, corresponding to increased spontaneous activity in memory-related areas, presumably reflecting more internally driven trains of thoughts even during a concomitant task. Conversely, people who are not prone to ruminate show more externally driven activity. |
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AbstractList | The tendency to ruminate, experienced by both healthy individuals and depressed patients, can be quantified by the Ruminative Response Scale (RRS). We hypothesized that brain activity associated with rumination tendency might not only occur at rest but also persist to some degree during a cognitive task. We correlated RRS with whole-brain fMRI data of 20 healthy subjects during rest and during a face categorization task with different levels of cognitive demands (easy or difficult conditions). Our results reveal that the more subjects tend to ruminate, the more they activate the left entorhinal region, both at rest and during the easy task condition, under low attentional demands. Conversely, lower tendency to ruminate correlates with greater activation of visual cortex during rest and activation of insula during the easy task condition. These results indicate a particular neural marker of the tendency to ruminate, corresponding to increased spontaneous activity in memory-related areas, presumably reflecting more internally driven trains of thoughts even during a concomitant task. Conversely, people who are not prone to ruminate show more externally driven activity. The tendency to ruminate, experienced by both healthy individuals and depressed patients, can be quantified by the Ruminative Response Scale (RRS). We hypothesized that brain activity associated with rumination tendency might not only occur at rest but also persist to some degree during a cognitive task. We correlated RRS with whole-brain fMRI data of 20 healthy subjects during rest and during a face categorization task with different levels of cognitive demands (easy or difficult conditions). Our results reveal that the more subjects tend to ruminate, the more they activate the left entorhinal region, both at rest and during the easy task condition, under low attentional demands. Conversely, lower tendency to ruminate correlates with greater activation of visual cortex during rest and activation of insula during the easy task condition. These results indicate a particular neural marker of the tendency to ruminate, corresponding to increased spontaneous activity in memory-related areas, presumably reflecting more internally driven trains of thoughts even during a concomitant task. Conversely, people who are not prone to ruminate show more externally driven activity.The tendency to ruminate, experienced by both healthy individuals and depressed patients, can be quantified by the Ruminative Response Scale (RRS). We hypothesized that brain activity associated with rumination tendency might not only occur at rest but also persist to some degree during a cognitive task. We correlated RRS with whole-brain fMRI data of 20 healthy subjects during rest and during a face categorization task with different levels of cognitive demands (easy or difficult conditions). Our results reveal that the more subjects tend to ruminate, the more they activate the left entorhinal region, both at rest and during the easy task condition, under low attentional demands. Conversely, lower tendency to ruminate correlates with greater activation of visual cortex during rest and activation of insula during the easy task condition. These results indicate a particular neural marker of the tendency to ruminate, corresponding to increased spontaneous activity in memory-related areas, presumably reflecting more internally driven trains of thoughts even during a concomitant task. Conversely, people who are not prone to ruminate show more externally driven activity. •Correlation between tendency to ruminate and brain activity.•Healthy subjects show activity in entorhinal cortex both at rest and during cognitive task.•Depends on level of cognitive load.•Lower tendency to ruminate correlate with activity in visual areas. The tendency to ruminate, experienced by both healthy individuals and depressed patients, can be quantified by the Ruminative Response Scale (RRS). We hypothesized that brain activity associated with rumination tendency might not only occur at rest but also persist to some degree during a cognitive task. We correlated RRS with whole-brain fMRI data of 20 healthy subjects during rest and during a face categorization task with different levels of cognitive demands (easy or difficult conditions). Our results reveal that the more subjects tend to ruminate, the more they activate the left entorhinal region, both at rest and during the easy task condition, under low attentional demands. Conversely, lower tendency to ruminate correlates with greater activation of visual cortex during rest and activation of insula during the easy task condition. These results indicate a particular neural marker of the tendency to ruminate, corresponding to increased spontaneous activity in memory-related areas, presumably reflecting more internally driven trains of thoughts even during a concomitant task. Conversely, people who are not prone to ruminate show more externally driven activity. |
Author | Desseilles, Martin Vuilleumier, Patrik Bertschy, Gilles Piguet, Camille Sterpenich, Virginie Cojan, Yann |
Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Camille surname: Piguet fullname: Piguet, Camille email: camille.piguet@unige.ch organization: Department of Neuroscience, Faculty of Medicine, University of Geneva, Switzerland – sequence: 2 givenname: Martin surname: Desseilles fullname: Desseilles, Martin organization: Department of Neuroscience, Faculty of Medicine, University of Geneva, Switzerland – sequence: 3 givenname: Virginie surname: Sterpenich fullname: Sterpenich, Virginie organization: Department of Neuroscience, Faculty of Medicine, University of Geneva, Switzerland – sequence: 4 givenname: Yann surname: Cojan fullname: Cojan, Yann organization: Department of Neuroscience, Faculty of Medicine, University of Geneva, Switzerland – sequence: 5 givenname: Gilles surname: Bertschy fullname: Bertschy, Gilles organization: Department of Psychiatry and Mental Health, Strasbourg University Hospital, University of Strasbourg, INSERMu1114, France – sequence: 6 givenname: Patrik surname: Vuilleumier fullname: Vuilleumier, Patrik organization: Department of Neuroscience, Faculty of Medicine, University of Geneva, Switzerland |
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Keywords | fMRI Depression RRS Resting state Rumination Mood disorder Rest Central nervous system Functional magnetic resonance imaging Nuclear magnetic resonance imaging Encephalon Functional imaging |
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Snippet | •Correlation between tendency to ruminate and brain activity.•Healthy subjects show activity in entorhinal cortex both at rest and during cognitive... The tendency to ruminate, experienced by both healthy individuals and depressed patients, can be quantified by the Ruminative Response Scale (RRS). We... |
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SubjectTerms | Adolescent Adult Adult and adolescent clinical studies Attention - physiology Behavioral psychophysiology Biological and medical sciences Brain - physiology Brain Mapping Cognition - physiology Depression Entorhinal Cortex - physiology Female fMRI Functional Neuroimaging Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology Human health sciences Humans Magnetic Resonance Imaging Male Medical sciences Miscellaneous Mood disorders Obsessive Behavior - physiopathology Psychiatrie Psychiatry Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry Psychology. Psychophysiology Psychopathology. Psychiatry Resting state RRS Rumination Sciences de la santé humaine Thinking Visual Cortex - physiology Young Adult |
Title | Neural substrates of rumination tendency in non-depressed individuals |
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