Exaggerated sensitivity to threat and reduced medial prefrontal engagement during threat generalization in reactive aggressive adolescents

Yizhen Wang, Benjamin Becker, Jinxia Wang, Yuanyuan Wang, Liangyou Zhang, Ying Mei, Hong Li, Yi Lei*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Aggressive adolescents tend to exhibit abnormal fear acquisition and extinction, and reactive aggressive adolescents are often more anxious. However, the relationship between fear generalization and reactive aggression (RA) remains unknown. According to Reactive-Proactive Aggression Questionnaire (RPQ) scores, 61 adolescents were divided into two groups, namely, a high RA group (N = 30) and a low aggression (LA) group (N = 31). All participants underwent three consecutive phases of the Pavlovian conditioning paradigm (i.e., habituation, acquisition, and generalization), and neural activation of the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) was assessed by functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS). The stimuli were ten circles with varying sizes, including two conditioned stimuli (CSs) and eight generalization stimuli (GSs). A scream at 85 dB served as the auditory unconditioned stimulus (US). The US expectancy ratings of both CSs and GSs were higher in the RA group than in the LA group. The fNIRS results showed that CSs and GSs evoked lower mPFC activation in the RA group compared to the LA group during fear generalization. These findings suggest that abnormalities in fear acquisition and generalization are prototypical dysregulations in adolescents with RA. They provide neurocognitive evidence for dysregulated fear learning in the mechanisms underlying adolescents with RA, highlighting the need to develop emotional regulation interventions for these individuals.

Original languageEnglish
Article number120645
Number of pages9
JournalNeuroImage
Volume294
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jul 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024

Funding

This work was supported by grants from STI 2030-Major Projects 2022ZD0210900, the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC32271142, NSFC82271583 and NSFC 32250610208); Guangdong Key Project in "Development of new tools for diagnosis and treatment of Autism" (2018B030335001); Ministry of Education Key Projects of Philosophy and Social Sciences Research (grant number 21JZD063); Shenzhen Science and Technology Research Funding Program (JCYJ20200109144801736); National Key Research and Development Program of China (2018YFA0701400); China Brain Project (2022ZD0208500).

FundersFunder number
STI 2030-Major Projects2022ZD0210900
National Natural Science Foundation of ChinaNSFC32271142, NSFC82271583, NSFC 32250610208
Guangdong Key Project in "Development of new tools for diagnosis and treatment of Autism"2018B030335001
Ministry of Education Key Projects of Philosophy and Social Sciences Research21JZD063
Shenzhen Science and Technology Research Funding ProgramJCYJ20200109144801736
National Key Research and Development Program of China2018YFA0701400
China Brain Project2022ZD0208500

    Keywords

    • Adolescence
    • Fear generalization
    • fNIRS
    • mPFC
    • Reactive aggression

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