2012
DOI: 10.1080/13803395.2012.703641
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Affective modulation of the startle reflex following traumatic brain injury

Abstract: Diminished emotional recognition, expression, and responsivity are frequent legacies of traumatic brain injury (TBI) that can have an adverse impact on relationships and psychosocial recovery. However, assessment of emotion responsivity is often difficult because many patients lack insight into their altered personality. To overcome this obstacle, we used a physiological measure of emotion responsivity, the startle reflex, to examine how this can vary according to the affective valence of stimuli by comparing … Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(21 citation statements)
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References 76 publications
(111 reference statements)
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“…Indeed, there are a number of people with TBI who report reduced emotional experiences in general, such as in response to specific visual emotional stimuli (de Sousa, McDonald, & Rushby, 2012;de Sousa et al, 2010;Saunders, McDonald, & Richardson, 2006;Williams & Wood, 2012) or when assuming a posture associated with a given emotion (Dethier, Blairy, Rosenberg, & McDonald, 2013). Further, there is evidence that people with TBI show impaired physiological responses to facial expressions and other emotional visual material, evidenced by lowered mimicry (de Sousa et al, 2012;de Sousa et al, 2010;Dethier, Blairy, Rosenberg, & McDonald, 2012;Soussignan, Ehrle, Henry, Schaal, & Bakchine, 2005), a reduced automatic startle reflex (Neumann, Hammond, Norton, & Blumenthal, 2011;Sanchez-Navarro, Martınez-Selva, & Roma´n, 2005;Saunders et al, 2006;Williams & Wood, 2012), and diminished arousal (measured through skin conductance) to aversive materials (Angrilli, Palomba, Cantagallo, Maietti, & Stegagno, 1999;de Sousa et al, 2012;de Sousa et al, 2010de Sousa et al, , 2011Soussignan et al, 2005). This automatic process whereby one's emotions synchronize with those of others through emotional contagion, is likely to contribute to an individual's experience of affective empathy, and may thus be reduced following a TBI.…”
Section: Social Cognition After Tbimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, there are a number of people with TBI who report reduced emotional experiences in general, such as in response to specific visual emotional stimuli (de Sousa, McDonald, & Rushby, 2012;de Sousa et al, 2010;Saunders, McDonald, & Richardson, 2006;Williams & Wood, 2012) or when assuming a posture associated with a given emotion (Dethier, Blairy, Rosenberg, & McDonald, 2013). Further, there is evidence that people with TBI show impaired physiological responses to facial expressions and other emotional visual material, evidenced by lowered mimicry (de Sousa et al, 2012;de Sousa et al, 2010;Dethier, Blairy, Rosenberg, & McDonald, 2012;Soussignan, Ehrle, Henry, Schaal, & Bakchine, 2005), a reduced automatic startle reflex (Neumann, Hammond, Norton, & Blumenthal, 2011;Sanchez-Navarro, Martınez-Selva, & Roma´n, 2005;Saunders et al, 2006;Williams & Wood, 2012), and diminished arousal (measured through skin conductance) to aversive materials (Angrilli, Palomba, Cantagallo, Maietti, & Stegagno, 1999;de Sousa et al, 2012;de Sousa et al, 2010de Sousa et al, , 2011Soussignan et al, 2005). This automatic process whereby one's emotions synchronize with those of others through emotional contagion, is likely to contribute to an individual's experience of affective empathy, and may thus be reduced following a TBI.…”
Section: Social Cognition After Tbimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, people with traumatic brain injuries (TBIs), many of whom experience ventromedial frontal pathology, have abnormally low arousal (skin conductance level) at baseline (Fisher, Rushby, McDonald, Parks, & Piguet, 2015; McDonald, Rushby, et al, 2011) and habituate unusually rapidly to angry faces (McDonald, Rushby, et al, 2011). Their startle response is also abnormally unresponsive to negative images (Saunders, McDonald, & Richardson, 2006; Williams & Wood, 2012). A similar lack of startle response was reported in people with amygdala lesions (Angrilli et al, 1996; Buchanan, Tranel, & Adolphs, 2004; Funayama, Grillon, Davis, & Phelps, 2001) supporting the notion that the amygdalae, in concert with the ventromedial frontal lobes, mediate autonomic responses to emotional events with or without conscious awareness.…”
Section: Evidence For Autonomic Responses To Emotional Stimulimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…6,7 In humans, moderate-to-severe TBI suppressed ASR in one study, 8 but not in another. 9 The variable results may be owing to differences in injury parameters, such as severity, dynamics, location, and time after injury that are difficult to control in human studies. Further, changes in affective states of individuals with TBI were the focus of these studies, not whether or not ASR was altered after TBI.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%