Author:
Quevedo Karina,Ng Rowena,Scott Hannah,Smyda Garry,Pfeifer Jennifer H.,Malone Sandra
Abstract
AbstractMaltreatment is associated with chronic depression, high negative
self-attributions, and lifetime psychopathology. Adolescence is a sensitive
period for the formation of self-concept. Identifying neurobiomarkers of
self-processing in depressed adolescents with and without maltreatment may parse
the effects of trauma and depression on self-development and chronic
psychopathology. Depressed adolescents (n = 86)
maltreated due to omission (DO, n = 13) or
commission (DCM, n = 28) or without maltreatment
(DC, n = 45), and HCs (HC, n
= 37) appraised positive and negative self-descriptors in the
scanner. DCM and DO showed hypoactivity in the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex
(dACC) while processing positive versus negative self-descriptors compared to DC
youth, who in turn showed reduced dACC recruitment versus HC. HC youth showed
the highest activation in the dACC and striatum during positive
self-descriptors; these regions showed a linear decline in activity across DC,
DO, and DCM. Low dACC activity to positive versus negative self-descriptors was
linked to inadequate coregulation of children's emotions by parents.
Negative self-cognitions prevalent in DCM and DO adolescents may be perpetuated
by activity in the dACC and striatum. Reduced activation of the dACC and
striatum for positive self-descriptors, coupled with enhanced activity for
negative self-descriptors, may heighten the risk for persistent depression.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Developmental and Educational Psychology
Cited by
17 articles.
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