The relationship between the size of a brain structure and the ability
to recover from traumatic experiences also may influence overall
personality type, according to a study from Massachusetts General
Hospital (MGH) researchers. In a followup to earlier findings that an
area of the brain called the medial orbitofrontal cortex (mOFC) appears
thicker in those who can better control their emotional response to
unpleasant memories, the investigators found that study participants
who exhibited better fear inhibition also score higher in measures of
extraversion – an energetic, outgoing personality. The report appears
in the Nov. 28 issue of NeuroReport.
"Some studies have demonstrated links between extraversion or the trait
of neuroticism and the overall activity of brain regions that include
the mOFC. But this is the first time anyone has looked at the potential
relation of both brain structure and fear extinction to personality
traits," says Mohammed Milad, PhD, of the MGH Department of Psychiatry,
a co-lead author of the study.
Most individuals initially respond with physical and emotional distress
to situations that bring back memories of traumatic events, but such
responses usually diminish over time, as the situations are repeated
without unpleasant occurrences. The ability to suppress those negative
responses is called "extinction memory," and its deficiency may lead to
anxiety disorders such as post-traumatic stress disorder. In their
previous study, the MGH team focused on the ventromedial prefrontal
cortex – an area on the lower surface of the brain that includes the
mOFC and is believed to inhibit the activity of the amygdala, a
structure known to be involved with fear. The current report combined
the data analyzed in that study – published in the July 26, 2005,
Proceedings of the National Academy of Science – with the results from
a standard personality test. Since earlier research has associated
levels of extraversion and neuroticism – oversensitivity and emotional
instability – with vulnerability to anxiety disorders, the current
experiment focused on those traits.
As described in the PNAS study, over two days 14 study participants
viewed a series of digital photos that featured lamps with either a red
or a blue light shining. On the first day, participants viewed the
photos several times with a mild electric shock – described as annoying
but not painful – delivered to their hands after one, but not the
other, colored light appeared. They then viewed the photos again with
no shocks administered. On the second day, participants' anxiety
levels, determined by perspiration on the palm of the hand, were
measured while they once again viewed the photos with both colors
displayed but no shocks given. Structural magnetic resonance (MR)
images of the volunteers' brains showed that those who responded with
less anxiety on the second day also had a thicker mOFC, and no other
areas of the brain appeared to be correlated with extinction retention.
Combining the results of the personality tests with the previously
reported data revealed that both improved extinction retention and a
thicker mOFC were associated with higher levels of extraversion and
lower neuroticism. Using a statistical tool that analyzes whether one
specific factor influences the relationship between the two other
factors, the researchers found that while the relation between mOFC
thickness and increased extraversion is mediated by extinction
retention, the association between mOFC thickness and extinction
retention does not seem to directly affect neuroticism.
"This study illustrates how measurement of a brain structure can be
linked to a complex character trait like extraversion through a simpler
behavioral measure like extinction retention," says Scott Rauch, MD,
director of the Psychiatric Neuroscience Research Division in MGH
Psychiatry and co-lead author of the paper. "Understanding how
personality is based in the brain is important both for insights into
personality disorders and for conditions in which personality may
confer vulnerability, such as anxiety disorders."
Rauch adds, "We are in the process of studying the link between
extinction retention and regional brain function and hope to
investigate how developmental factors may govern the structure and
function of the mOFC. The ability to modify mOFC activity may
eventually prove to be of therapeutic value." Rauch is an associate
professor of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School.
EurekAlert
28 November 2005
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