Biological Psychiatry
Volume 67, Issue 10 , Pages 919-925, 15 May 2010

Lateral Prefrontal Cortex Mediates the Cognitive Modification of Attentional Bias

Department of Psychiatry, University of Oxford, Warneford Hospital, Oxford, United Kingdom

Received 5 August 2009; received in revised form 9 October 2009; accepted 28 October 2009. published online 25 December 2009.

Background

A tendency to orient attention toward threatening stimuli may be involved in the etiology of anxiety disorders. In keeping with this, both psychological and pharmacological treatments of anxiety reduce this negative attentional bias. It has been hypothesized, but not proved, that psychological interventions may alter the function of prefrontal regions supervising the allocation of attentional resources.

Methods

The current study examined the effects of a cognitive training regime on attention. Participants were randomly assigned to one of two training conditions: “attend-threat” training, which increases negative attentional bias, or “avoid-threat” training, which reduces it. The behavioral effects of training were assessed using a sample of 24 healthy participants. Functional magnetic resonance imaging data were collected in a further 29 healthy volunteers using a protocol that allowed the influence of both stimuli valence and attention to be discriminated.

Results

Cognitive training induced the expected attentional biases in healthy volunteers. Further, the training altered lateral frontal activation to emotional stimuli, with these areas responding specifically to violations of the behavioral rules learned during training. Connectivity analysis confirmed that the identified lateral frontal regions were influencing attention as indexed by activity in visual association cortex.

Conclusions

Our results indicate that frontal control over the processing of emotional stimuli may be tuned by psychological interventions in a manner predicted to regulate levels of anxiety. This directly supports the proposal that psychological interventions may influence attention via an effect on the prefrontal cortex.

Key Words: Anxiety, attention, cognitive bias, cognitive training, emotion, fMRI

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PII: S0006-3223(09)01319-5

doi:10.1016/j.biopsych.2009.10.031

Biological Psychiatry
Volume 67, Issue 10 , Pages 919-925, 15 May 2010