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What Does Brain Response to Neutral Faces Tell Us about Major Depression? Evidence from Machine Learning and fMRI

Oliveira, L and Ladouceur, CD and Phillips, ML and Brammer, M and Mourao-Miranda, J (2013) What Does Brain Response to Neutral Faces Tell Us about Major Depression? Evidence from Machine Learning and fMRI. PLoS ONE, 8 (4).

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Abstract

Introduction: A considerable number of previous studies have shown abnormalities in the processing of emotional faces in major depression. Fewer studies, however, have focused specifically on abnormal processing of neutral faces despite evidence that depressed patients are slow and less accurate at recognizing neutral expressions in comparison with healthy controls. The current study aimed to investigate whether this misclassification described behaviourally for neutral faces also occurred when classifying patterns of brain activation to neutral faces for these patients. Methods: Two independent depressed samples: (1) Nineteen medication-free patients with depression and 19 healthy volunteers and (2) Eighteen depressed individuals and 18 age and gender-ratio-matched healthy volunteers viewed emotional faces (sad/neutral; happy/neutral) during an fMRI experiment. We used a new pattern recognition framework: first, we trained the classifier to discriminate between two brain states (e.g. viewing happy faces vs. viewing neutral faces) using data only from healthy controls (HC). Second, we tested the classifier using patterns of brain activation of a patient and a healthy control for the same stimuli. Finally, we tested if the classifier's predictions (predictive probabilities) for emotional and neutral face classification were different for healthy controls and depressed patients. Results: Predictive probabilities to patterns of brain activation to neutral faces in both groups of patients were significantly lower in comparison to the healthy controls. This difference was specific to neutral faces. There were no significant differences in predictive probabilities to patterns of brain activation to sad faces (sample 1) and happy faces (samples 2) between depressed patients and healthy controls. Conclusions: Our results suggest that the pattern of brain activation to neutral faces in depressed patients is not consistent with the pattern observed in healthy controls subject to the same stimuli. This difference in brain activation might underlie the behavioural misinterpretation of the neutral faces content by the depressed patients. © 2013 Oliveira et al.


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Details

Item Type: Article
Status: Published
Creators/Authors:
CreatorsEmailPitt UsernameORCID
Oliveira, L
Ladouceur, CDcdl9@pitt.eduCDL9
Phillips, ML
Brammer, M
Mourao-Miranda, J
Date: 1 April 2013
Date Type: Publication
Journal or Publication Title: PLoS ONE
Volume: 8
Number: 4
DOI or Unique Handle: 10.1371/journal.pone.0060121
Schools and Programs: School of Medicine > Psychiatry
Refereed: Yes
Other ID: NLM PMC3613341
PubMed Central ID: PMC3613341
PubMed ID: 23560073
Date Deposited: 22 Apr 2013 16:08
Last Modified: 02 Feb 2019 13:58
URI: http://d-scholarship.pitt.edu/id/eprint/18322

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