Task 6 Flashcards

1
Q

Graph in coursemanual –> relationship of amygdala & sleep deprivation

A

reduced sleep increases the brain’s amygdala activity –> because decreased connectivity between the mPFC & ventral ACC with amygdala (PFC cannot inhibit amygdala as well anymore)

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2
Q

What does an increased amygdala activity mean? Does it mean that bad sleep (reduced sleep quality, sleep deprivation, less sleeping time) makes us more emotional?

A

-makes us more emotional –> amygdala activity increased (dysbalance; negativity bias)

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3
Q

How does (bad) sleep influence our emotional experiences & responsiveness?

A
  • sleep loss: increase the experience of negative emotions, reduce the occurrence of positive emotions, & alter the ways in which individuals understand, express & modify these emotions
  • study selectively depriving participants of REM sleep found that behavioral & neural activity in response to threatening stimuli increased, but decreased in a group undergoing similar, but NREM sleep deprivation
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4
Q

“sleep to forget, sleep to remember” model

A

-REM sleep periods both strengthen the declarative component of emotional experiences via activation of the same emotion-related brain structures & attenuate their affective tone via inhibition of aminergic NTs , resulting in successful reactivation & neural integration of emotional events

  • contrasting to REM sleep emotional memory enhancement model
  • emotional charge will be reduced while consolidating content
  • -> forget = emotion, remember = content
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5
Q

What does sleep loss generally lead to regarding emotions?

A

general ‘affective imbalance’ across a full range of emotions

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6
Q

Where in the brain can alterations be found after extended wakefulness?

A

alterations in ACC & amygdala activity

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7
Q

Does inadequate sleep influences our daily emotionality by altering/influencing our emotion-regulation abilities?
–> neural evidence

A

effects of sleep deprivation include decreased connectivity between the mPFC & ventral ACC with amygdala
–> suggesting global problems with monitoring & regulatory control

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8
Q

How does inadequate sleep influence our daily emotionality by
altering/influencing our emotion-regulation abilities?
–> 1. Situation selection

A
  • insufficient sleep can directly undermine motivation to seek out & participate in rewarding social activities
  • in line with altered neural reward circuitry findings –> decreased motivation for & altered valuation of rewards
  • less sleep might also increase the likelihood of experiencing negative emotions via situational decisions –> overt or covert avoidance of negative outcomes, call in sick, cancel appointments & meetings& skip out on social activities due to feelings of fatigue & sleepiness

==> sleep loss significantly alters behavior in ways that decrease the likelihood of situating oneself in positive emotional contexts

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9
Q

How does inadequate sleep influence our daily emotionality by altering/influencing our emotion-regulation abilities?
–> 2. Situation modification

A
  • sleep deprivation: impaired decision making & poor impulse control
  • diminished ability to self-monitor, appropriately interact with others, pick up on others’ nonverbal cues & accurately identify others’ emotions when sleep is disrupted
  • difficulty delaying gratification & more deviant behaviours
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10
Q

How does inadequate sleep influence our daily emotionality by altering/influencing our emotion-regulation abilities?
–> 3. Attentional deployment

A
  • -> failure to use attentional strategies to effectively regulate one’s emotional responses
  • -> disrupted sleep impairs attention to emotional information & may increase the salience of negative, threatening information
  • -> sleep deprivation results in greater sustained attention & inability to direct attention away from negative information
  • vigilance for potential threats
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11
Q

How does inadequate sleep influence our daily emotionality by altering/influencing our emotion-regulation abilities?
–> 4. Cognitive change

A
  • lack of sleep might interfere with successful reappraisal

- -> cognitive reappraisal ability may be somewhat resistant to sleep loss effects

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12
Q

How does inadequate sleep influence our daily emotionality by altering/influencing our emotion-regulation abilities?
–> 5. Response modulation

A

after restricted sleep: used less positive emotion words, more negative emotion words & showed changes in the acoustic properties of their voice including increased sadness, low physiological activation & stress/anxiety
–> most: emot. expression reduced (mixed result)

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13
Q

What aspects of sleep (e.g. REM, SWS) are most important in this (ER?) ?

–> REM sleep

A
  • model: REM sleep rouses emotional reactivity, reinforcing the salience of emotional events
  • REM sleep: most commonly linked with consolidation of emotional memories & preservation of their affective tone
  • During NRM sleep the aminergic + cholinergic neurotransmitters and orexin are all inhibited through the VLPO-mediated release of GABA and galanin which decreases arousal
  • During REM sleep the release of aminergic neurotransmitters of the brainstem is inhibited whereas acetylcholine is released from neurons in the brainstem
  • -> orexin is also released & GABA & galanin are released from the brainstem & VLPO to inhibit the aminergic brainstem neurons

-REM sleep is involved in fear & extinction memory performance, showing that it benefited from REM-rich sleep, but not SWS-rich sleep; on the other hand, lack of REM sleep impaired extinction memory consolidation & promoted a return of fear after extinction

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14
Q

Which neural mechanisms underlie the influence of sleep on emotionality or our ER capacity?

A
  • after extended wakefulness–> alterations in ACC & amygdala activity
  • increased reactivity to positive emotional stimuli also is observed in select striatal brain regions–> putamen & VTA
  • effects of sleep deprivation include decreased connectivity between the mPFC & ventral ACC with amygdala –> suggesting global problems with monitoring & regulatory control
  • Executive functioning capacities involve structures in the DLPFC, AC, parietal cortices that are particularly sensitive to sleep loss
  • Sleep-deprived individuals showed a significant loss of functional connectivity between the amygdala & mPFC –> potentially negating top-down control & resulting in hyperactivity of the amygdala
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15
Q

‘REM sleep emotional memory enhancement model’

A
  • when you have REM sleep, emotional charge is consolidated with declarative content
  • > strengthens emotional content (together)
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16
Q

REM sleep recalibration model

A
  • neurobiological features of REM contributes to next day homeostasis (REM balances out emotional intensity)
  • reduces noradrenalin –> emotional intensity balanced again
  • supported by PTSD (still have high adrenaline in REM sleep; altered REM sleep; why they cannot forget emotions)
  • -> goes hand in hand with sleep to forget, sleep to remember theory
17
Q

Emotional processing

A
  • sleep: crucial to encode emotional memories
  • consolidation: requires many sleep cycles (mood dependent memory impaired)
  • emotional reactivity: imbalanced; sleep -> balance/homeostasis; no sleep –> more irritable
  • facial emotional cues: sleep –> good at detecting emotions in faces; no sleep –> overestimate threat; overestimate emotional intensity
18
Q

Empathy - no sleep

A

lower EI & less empathy

19
Q

Fear conditioning

A
  • REM –> promotes conditioning & extinction

- no sleep –> extinction impaired (anxiety, phobias)

20
Q

Threat generalization

A
  • good sleep –> extinction can be generalized

- no sleep –> you start generalizing threats

21
Q

Which neural mechanisms underlie the influence of sleep on emotionality or our ER capacity?

–> S&C model

A

-S: homeostatic process
–> daily influences get renewed every day/ your emotional balance
–> PFC & amygdala
–> less sleep: less connectivty of PFC & amygdala
–> emot. reactivity (more impulsive)
–> unsuccessful ER
–> adenosin: NT gets more throughout the day the longer you’re awake
==> duration of sleep

-Process C: circadian sleep process
–> internal states: how late it is (light, food)
–> sleep loss e.g. jet lag
–> important for mood regulation
–> negative mood regulation: circadian low
–> postive mood regulation: circadian high
==> timing of sleep