Heightened adolescent emotional reactivity in the brain is associated with lower future distress tolerance and higher depressive symptoms

Amanda C. Del Giacco, Scott A. Jones, Kristina O. Hernandez, Samantha J. Barnes, Bonnie J. Nagel

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Distress tolerance, the ability to persist while experiencing negative psychological states, is essential for regulating emotions and is a transdiagnostic risk/resiliency trait for multiple psychopathologies. Studying distress tolerance during adolescence, a period when emotion regulation is still developing, may help identify early risk and/or protective factors. This study included 40 participants (mean scan age = 17.5 years) and using an emotional Go-NoGo functional magnetic resonance imaging task and voxel-wise regression analysis, examined the association between brain response during emotional face processing and future distress tolerance (two ± 0.5 years), controlling for sex assigned at birth, age, and time between visits. Post-hoc analyses tested the mediating role of distress tolerance on the emotional reactivity and depressive symptom relationship. Whole-brain analysis showed greater inferior occipital gyrus activation was associated with less distress tolerance at follow-up. The mediating role of distress tolerance demonstrated a trend-level indirect effect. Findings suggest that individuals who allocate greater visual resources to emotionally salient information tend to exhibit greater challenges in tolerating distress. Distress tolerance may help to link emotional reactivity neurobiology to future depressive symptoms. Building distress tolerance through emotion regulation strategies may be an appropriate strategy for decreasing depressive symptoms.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number111659
JournalPsychiatry Research - Neuroimaging
Volume333
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2023

Keywords

  • Adolescence
  • Affective distress
  • Depressive symptoms
  • Emotion regulation
  • Emotional reactivity
  • fMRI

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Neuroscience (miscellaneous)
  • Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging
  • Psychiatry and Mental health

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