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Brain Scans Show Depression’s Link
to Guilt
By Rick Nauert, Ph.D.
Scientists report new findings that
will improve the understanding of why some people may be more prone
to depression than others.
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Dr Roland
Zahn, a clinical neuroscientist in The University of
Manchester’s School of Psychological Sciences, and his
colleagues have identified how the brain links knowledge
about social behavior with moral sentiments, such as pride
and guilt.
The study, carried out at
the National Institutes of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
in the US with Dr Jordan Grafman, chief of the Cognitive
Neuroscience Section, and Dr Jorge Moll, now at the LABS-D’Or
Center for Neuroscience in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, used
functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to scan the
brains of 29 healthy individuals while they considered
certain social behaviors.
The findings – published in
the journal Cerebral |
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Cortex – for the first
time chart the regions of the brain that interact to
link knowledge about socially appropriate behavior with
different moral feelings, depending on the context in
which the social behavior occurs. |
“During everyday life we constantly
evaluate social behavior and this largely affects how we feel about
ourselves and other people,” said Dr Zahn.
“But the way we store and use
information about our own and other people’s social behavior are not
well understood.
“This latest study used functional
brain imaging to identify the circuits in the brain that underpin
our ability to differentiate social behavior that conforms to our
values from behavior that does not.”
The team observed that social
behavior not conforming to an individual’s values evoked feelings of
anger when carried out by another person or feelings of guilt when
the behavior stemmed from the individuals themselves.
The fMRI scans of each volunteer
could then be analyzed to see which parts of the brain were
activated for the different types of feeling being expressed. Of
particular interest to Dr Zahn were the brain scans relating to
feelings of guilt, as these have particular relevance to his current
work on depression.
“The most distinctive feature of
depressive disorders is an exaggerated negative attitude to oneself,
which is typically accompanied by feelings of guilt,” he said.
“Now that we understand how the
brains of healthy individuals respond to feelings of guilt, we hope
to be able to better understand why and where there are differences
in brain activity in people suffering from, or prone to, depression.
“The brain region we have
identified to be associated with proneness to guilt has been shown
to be abnormally active in patients with severe depression in
several previous studies, but until now its involvement in guilt had
been unknown.”
“By translating these basic
cognitive neuroscience insights into clinical research we now have
the potential to discover new key functional anatomical
characteristics of the brain that may lie behind depressive
disorders.
“The results will hopefully make an
important contribution to our understanding of the causes of
depression that will ultimately allow new approaches to find better
treatments and prevention.” -- Courtesy
of Psychcentral.com
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