Frontal Brain Asymmetry and Depression: A Self-regulatory Perspective

Recent findings indicate that frontal brain asymmetry may be a marker of for depression. However, the psychological predispositions that account linkage between frontal brain asymmetry and depression are unclear. approach-withdrawal hypothesis is the primary framework that has been to account for the linkages between frontal brain asymmetry and or emotional disorders. We review evidence consistent with this and suggest several directions for its extension. One such direction is to constrain the approach-withdrawal hypothesis by linking frontal asymmetry to the known functions of the prefrontal cortex. On this we propose that frontal brain asymmetry may be preferentially linked processes that promote the temporal continuity and shifting of or emotional priorities and the suppression of interference by sources of motivation or emotion. We review evidence from and neurobiological studies of depression that is broadly consistent with these predictions. We emphasise the need for future studies testing our hypo...

[1]  F. Lhermitte,et al.  Human autonomy and the frontal lobes. Part II: Patient behavior in complex and social situations: The “environmental dependency syndrome” , 1986, Annals of neurology.

[2]  W. Heller Neuropsychological mechanisms of individual differences in emotion, personality, and arousal. , 1993 .

[3]  Shelley E. Taylor,et al.  Illusion and well-being: a social psychological perspective on mental health. , 1988, Psychological bulletin.

[4]  A. House,et al.  The relationship between intellectual impairment and mood disorder in the first year after stroke , 1990, Psychological Medicine.

[5]  M. Rutter,et al.  Resilience in the Face of Adversity , 1985, British Journal of Psychiatry.

[6]  G. Metalsky,et al.  Hopelessness depression: A theory-based subtype of depression. , 1989 .

[7]  M. Raichle,et al.  A functional anatomical study of unipolar depression , 1992, The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience.

[8]  P. Ekman,et al.  The Duchenne smile: emotional expression and brain physiology. II. , 1990, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[9]  D M Wegner,et al.  Depression and mental control: the resurgence of unwanted negative thoughts. , 1988, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[10]  A. Luria,et al.  TWO KINDS OF MOTOR PERSEVERATION IN MASSIVE INJURY OF THE FRONTAL LOBES. , 1965, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[11]  K. Merikangas,et al.  Inverse relationship between defensiveness and lifetime prevalence of psychiatric disorder. , 1990, The American journal of psychiatry.

[12]  John J. B. Allen,et al.  Regional electroencephalographic asymmetries in bipolar seasonal affective disorder before and after exposure to bright light , 1993, Biological Psychiatry.

[13]  P. Goldman-Rakic Topography of cognition: parallel distributed networks in primate association cortex. , 1988, Annual review of neuroscience.

[14]  P. Goldman-Rakic,et al.  D1 dopamine receptors in prefrontal cortex: involvement in working memory , 1991, Science.

[15]  R. Robinson,et al.  Mood disorders in stroke patients. Importance of location of lesion. , 1984, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[16]  G. Eifert,et al.  The effects of running, environment, and attentional focus on athletes' catecholamine and cortisol levels and mood. , 1995, Psychophysiology.

[17]  R. Davidson,et al.  Frontal brain activation in repressors and nonrepressors. , 1994, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[18]  J. Carlson,et al.  Side and region dependent changes in dopamine activation with various durations of restraint stress , 1991, Brain Research.

[19]  R. Davidson,et al.  Effects of lateralized presentations of faces on self-reports of emotion and EEG asymmetry in depressed and non-depressed subjects. , 1985, Psychophysiology.

[20]  F. Goodwin,et al.  Clinical and biochemical manifestations of depression. Relation to the neurobiology of stress (2) , 1988, The New England journal of medicine.

[21]  C. Carver,et al.  Origins and Functions of Positive and Negative Affect: A Control-Process View. , 1990 .

[22]  J. Greenberg,et al.  Self-regulatory perseveration and the depressive self-focusing style: a self-awareness theory of reactive depression. , 1987, Psychological bulletin.

[23]  M. Davidson,et al.  Styles of inhibiting emotional expression: distinguishing repressive coping from impression management. , 1994, Journal of personality.

[24]  P. Greenfield,et al.  Language, tools and brain: The ontogeny and phylogeny of hierarchically organized sequential behavior , 1991, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[25]  K. Davis,et al.  Overview: toward a dysregulation hypothesis of depression. , 1985, The American journal of psychiatry.

[26]  A. Tomarken A psychometric perspective on psychophysiological measures , 1995 .

[27]  I. Gotlib,et al.  Psychosocial functioning and depression: distinguishing among antecedents, concomitants, and consequences. , 1988, Psychological bulletin.

[28]  J. Mazziotta,et al.  Reduction of prefrontal cortex glucose metabolism common to three types of depression. , 1989, Archives of general psychiatry.

[29]  W. Mischel Toward a cognitive social learning reconceptualization of personality. , 1973, Psychological review.

[30]  Herbert Feistel,et al.  Single photon emission computerized tomography assessment of cerebral dopamine D2 receptor blockade in depression before and after sleep deprivation—preliminary results , 1994, Biological Psychiatry.

[31]  A. Beck,et al.  An inventory for measuring depression. , 1961, Archives of general psychiatry.

[32]  P. Fry Success, Failure, and Resistance to Temptation. , 1977 .

[33]  Karl J. Friston,et al.  The anatomy of melancholia – focal abnormalities of cerebral blood flow in major depression , 1992, Psychological Medicine.

[34]  P. E. Roland,et al.  Metabolic measurements of the working frontal cortex in man , 1984, Trends in Neurosciences.

[35]  M. Seligman,et al.  Self-serving biases in causal attributions as a function of altered activation asymmetry. , 1989, The International journal of neuroscience.

[36]  R. Davidson EEG measures of cerebral asymmetry: conceptual and methodological issues. , 1988, The International journal of neuroscience.

[37]  W. Mischel,et al.  Delay of gratification in children. , 1989, Science.

[38]  M. Mintun,et al.  Demonstration in vivo of reduced serotonin responsivity in the brain of untreated depressed patients. , 1996, The American journal of psychiatry.

[39]  P. Goldman-Rakic,et al.  Overlap of dopaminergic, adrenergic, and serotoninergic receptors and complementarity of their subtypes in primate prefrontal cortex , 1990, The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience.

[40]  A. Tesser,et al.  Motivational interpretations of hindsight bias: An individual difference analysis , 1983 .

[41]  N. Fox,et al.  Relative right frontal EEG activation in 3- to 6-month-old infants of "depressed" mothers. , 1995 .

[42]  R. Robinson,et al.  Affective Disorders and Cerebral Vascular Disease , 1989, British Journal of Psychiatry.

[43]  C. Hammen Depression runs in families: The social context of risk and resilience in children of depressed mothers. , 1991 .

[44]  M. Bradley,et al.  Emotion, attention, and the startle reflex. , 1990, Psychological review.

[45]  W. Fratta,et al.  Sleep deprivation increases dopamine D1 receptor antagonist [3H]SCH 23390 binding and dopamine-stimulated adenylate cyclase in the rat limbic system , 1990, Neuroscience Letters.

[46]  J. Persons,et al.  Dysfunctional attitudes are mood-state dependent. , 1988, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[47]  M. Farah,et al.  A unified account of cognitive impairments following frontal lobe damage: the role of working memory in complex, organized behavior. , 1993, Journal of experimental psychology. General.

[48]  R. E. Wheeler,et al.  Individual differences in anterior brain asymmetry and fundamental dimensions of emotion. , 1992, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[49]  C. Jack,et al.  Determination of 10-20 system electrode locations using magnetic resonance image scanning with markers. , 1993, Electroencephalography and clinical neurophysiology.

[50]  S. Glickman,et al.  A biological theory of reinforcement. , 1967, Psychological review.

[51]  Vulnerability to depressive mood reactions: toward a more powerful test of the diathesis-stress and causal mediation components of the reformulated theory of depression. , 1987 .

[52]  E. Fox,et al.  Allocation of visual attention and anxiety. , 1993, Cognition & emotion.

[53]  S. Foote,et al.  Extrathalamic modulation of cortical function. , 1987, Annual review of neuroscience.

[54]  Pierluigi Zoccolotti,et al.  Left/right and cortical/subcortical dichotomies in the neuropsychological study of human emotions , 1993 .

[55]  B Milner,et al.  Frontal lobes and memory for the temporal order of recent events. , 1990, Cold Spring Harbor symposia on quantitative biology.

[56]  R. Homan,et al.  Cerebral location of international 10-20 system electrode placement. , 1987, Electroencephalography and clinical neurophysiology.

[57]  R. Davidson,et al.  Frontal and parietal electroencephalogram asymmetry in depressed and nondepressed subjects. , 1983, Biological psychiatry.

[58]  R. Solomon,et al.  An opponent-process theory of motivation. I. Temporal dynamics of affect. , 1974, Psychological review.

[59]  J. Kuhl Volitional Mediators of Cognition-Behavior Consistency: Self-Regulatory Processes and Action Versus , 1985 .

[60]  R. E. Wheeler,et al.  Psychometric properties of resting anterior EEG asymmetry: temporal stability and internal consistency. , 1992, Psychophysiology.

[61]  D. Funder,et al.  The role of ego-control, ego-resiliency, and IQ in delay of gratification in adolescence. , 1989, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[62]  G. Dawson,et al.  Infants of mothers with depressive symptoms: Electroencephalographic and behavioral findings related to attachment status , 1992, Development and Psychopathology.

[63]  D. Kimura,et al.  Left-hemisphere control of oral and brachial movements and their relation to communication. , 1982, Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences.

[64]  M. Hutchinson,et al.  The behavioral high-risk paradigm and bipolar affective disorder, VIII: Serum free cortisol in nonpatient cyclothymic subjects selected by the General Behavior Inventory. , 1985, The American journal of psychiatry.

[65]  R. Davidson,et al.  Low-anxious, high-anxious, and repressive coping styles: psychometric patterns and behavioral and physiological responses to stress. , 1979, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[66]  J. Cohen,et al.  Context, cortex, and dopamine: a connectionist approach to behavior and biology in schizophrenia. , 1992, Psychological review.

[67]  J. Kagan,et al.  Biological bases of childhood shyness. , 1988, Science.

[68]  Richard W. Homan,et al.  Differential hemispheric lateralization of primary and social emotions: implications for developing a comprehensive neurology for emotions, repression, and the subconscious , 1994 .

[69]  T. Shallice Specific impairments of planning. , 1982, Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences.

[70]  R. Sapolsky,et al.  Hypercortisolism and its possible neural bases , 1990, Biological Psychiatry.

[71]  J. Garber,et al.  A test of the cognitive diathesis-stress model of depression in children: academic stressors, attributional style, perceived competence, and control. , 1995, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[72]  H H Stassen,et al.  Genetic aspects of the EEG: an investigation into the within-pair similarity of monozygotic and dizygotic twins with a new method of analysis. , 1987, Electroencephalography and clinical neurophysiology.

[73]  P. A. Williamson,et al.  Asymmetric neural control systems in human self-regulation. , 1984, Psychological review.

[74]  R. Depue,et al.  Dopamine and the structure of personality: relation of agonist-induced dopamine activity to positive emotionality. , 1994, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[75]  R. A. Drake,et al.  Lateral asymmetry of personal optimism , 1984 .

[76]  Michael Petrides,et al.  Frontal lobes and behaviour , 1994, Current Opinion in Neurobiology.

[77]  N. Fox,et al.  If it's not left, it's right. Electroencephalograph asymmetry and the development of emotion. , 1991, The American psychologist.

[78]  J. Stellar,et al.  Approach and withdrawal analysis of the effects of hypothalamic stimulation and lesions in rats. , 1979, Journal of comparative and physiological psychology.

[79]  R. Davidson Anterior cerebral asymmetry and the nature of emotion , 1992, Brain and Cognition.

[80]  J. Fuster The prefrontal cortex, mediator of cross-temporal contingencies. , 1985, Human neurobiology.

[81]  S. Pappatà,et al.  Left prefrontal glucose hypometabolism in the depressed state: a confirmation. , 1990, The American journal of psychiatry.