کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
6008522 | 1184970 | 2014 | 10 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |
- We tested emotional pictures on subsequent attention processing in HIV+ & HIVâ women.
- Unlike healthy controls, HIV+ women do not show electrophysiological markers of intermodal affective priming.
- This study is the first to provide physiological evidence that attention to emotionally-charged visual stimuli is reduced in HIV-infected individuals.
ObjectiveAlthough HIV is associated with decreased emotional and cognitive functioning, the mechanisms through which affective changes can alter cognitive processes in HIV-infected individuals are unknown. We aimed to clarify this question through testing the extent to which emotionally negative stimuli prime attention to a subsequent infrequently occurring auditory tone in HIV+ compared to HIVâ females.MethodsAttention to emotional compared to non-emotional pictures was measured via the LPP ERP. Subsequent attention was indexed through the N1 and late processing negativity ERP. We also assessed mood and cognitive functioning in both groups.ResultsIn HIVâ females, emotionally negative pictures, compared to neutral pictures, resulted in an enhanced LPP to the pictures and an enhanced N1 to subsequent tones. The HIV+ group did not show a difference in the LPP measure between picture categories, and accordingly, did not show a priming effect to the subsequent infrequent tones.ConclusionsThe ERP findings, combined with neuropsychological deficits, suggest that HIV+ females show impairments in attention to emotionally-laden stimuli and that this impairment might be related to a loss of affective priming.SignificanceThis study is the first to provide physiological evidence that the LPP, a measure of attention to emotionally-charged visual stimuli, is reduced in HIV-infected individuals. These results set the stage for future work aimed at localizing brain activation to emotional stimuli in HIV+ individuals.
Journal: Clinical Neurophysiology - Volume 125, Issue 6, June 2014, Pages 1164-1173