Negative life events during early adolescence are associated with neural deactivation to emotional stimuli
Negative life events during early adolescence are associated with neural deactivation to emotional stimuli

Negative life events during early adolescence are associated with neural deactivation to emotional stimuli

Brain Cogn. 2025 Apr 25;187:106303. doi: 10.1016/j.bandc.2025.106303. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

Negative life events (NLEs) have been shown to perturb neurodevelopment and are correlated with poor mental health outcomes in adolescence, the most common period of psychopathology onset. Emotion regulation is a critical component of psychological response to NLEs and interacts, neurobiologically and behaviorally, with working memory. This study leveraged an emotional n-back task to examine how NLEs influence emotion- and working memory-related brain activation using data from 2150 youth in the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study. Greater incidence of NLEs was associated with less activation in the amygdala and more pronounced deactivation in other limbic and frontal brain regions previously implicated in emotion-related cognition; however, this association was present only during emotion processing conditions of the task. While NLEs were not significantly associated with task performance in the final sample, behavioural analyses including youth excluded for low task accuracy and poor neuroimaging data quality showed a significant negative association between NLEs and overall task performance. While behavioural findings across the entire sample support prior work, somewhat incongruent with prior literature, imaging results may suggest that during early adolescence the effects of negative experiences on patterns of neural activation are specific to contexts necessitating emotion processing.

PMID:40286517 | DOI:10.1016/j.bandc.2025.106303