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Psychologists have long known that memories of disturbing emotional
events — such as an act of violence or the unexpected death of a loved one —
are more vivid and deeply imprinted in the brain than mundane recollections
of everyday matters.
Probing deeper into how such memories form, researchers at the University
of Wisconsin-Madison have found that the mere anticipation of a fearful
situation can fire up two memory-forming regions of the brain — even before
the event has occurred.
That means the simple act of anticipation may play a surprisingly
important role in how fresh the memory of a tough experience remains.
The findings of the brain-imaging study, which appear in the current
issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, have important
implications for the treatment of psychological conditions such as
post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and social anxiety, which are often
characterized by flashbacks and intrusive memories of upsetting events.
"The main motivation for this study was a clinical one, in terms of
understanding and applying knowledge about memory so that we can better
inform the treatment of disorders that have a large memory component, like
PTSD," says lead author Kristen Mackiewicz, a graduate student at the
University of Colorado who worked on the anticipation study while a student
at UW-Madison.
The project also builds on a relatively new body of work on the role of
anticipation in emotion and clinical disorders, says senior author
Jack Nitschke, a UW-Madison assistant professor of psychiatry and
psychology.
"Our study illustrates how the power of expectancy can extend to memory
formation as well," says Nitschke, also an associate of UW–Madison’s
Waisman Laboratory for Brain
Imaging and Behavior. "Just the expectation of seeing something bad can
enhance the memory of it after it happens."
A teacher who struggles with stage fright, for example, might feel
anxious before every class she has to teach. The UW–Madison work suggests
that the longer she spends dreading her next lecture, the stronger her
memory of the uncomfortable experience is likely to be when it is over.
Unfortunately, that sets a vicious cycle in motion, because the stronger her
memory of discomfort, the worse her performance anxiety is likely to get.
The UW-Madison scientists found that two key regions of the brain — the
amygdala and the hippocampus — become activated when a person is
anticipating a difficult situation. Scientists think the amygdala is
associated with the formation of emotional memories, while the hippocampus
helps the brain form long-term recollections, Nitschke says.
The researchers studied the brain activity of 36 healthy volunteers using
a technique known as functional magnetic resonance imaging, which produces
high-contrast images of human tissue. They began by showing the volunteers
two kinds of signals. One was neutral, but the other indicated that some
type of gruesome picture was soon to follow, such as explicit photos of
bloody, mutilated bodies.
Thirty minutes after the researchers had shown dozens of violent images,
they quizzed study participants on how well they remembered the pictures
they had just seen.
"We found that the more activated the amygdala and hippocampus had been
during the anticipation [of the pictures], the more likely it was that a
person would remember more of them right away," says Nitschke.
Two weeks after the experiment, scientists met with the study subjects
again to measure how well they remembered the same disturbing images. This
time, they found that people who best remembered them had shown the greatest
amygdala and hippocampus activity during the picture-viewing exercise two
weeks before. That suggested that those subjects' brains had already started
converting short-term memories of the images into longer-lasting ones.
Mackiewicz says the anticipation of an uncomfortable situation probably
kick-starts a kind of "arousal or fear circuitry" in the brain, which in
turn helps to reinforce old memories.
"In the future, we could look for ways to dampen that arousal response in
patients so that they do not evoke negative memories so easily," she adds.
Scientists Issidoros Sarinopoulos and Krystal Cleven at the Waisman
Laboratory for Brain Imaging and Behavior also contributed to the study. |