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Dopamine boosts memory for angry faces in Parkinson's disease

✍ Scribed by Leena Subramanian; John Vincent Hindle; Margaret Cecilia Jackson; David E. J. Linden


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2010
Tongue
English
Weight
390 KB
Volume
25
Category
Article
ISSN
0885-3185

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

The influence of emotional context on cognitive operations is of fundamental importance for the evolution of higher cognitive functions and their disturbance in neuropsychiatric disorders. The dopamine pathways projecting to prefrontal cortex and the basal ganglia are assumed to play a major role in such emotion‐cognition interactions. Here we provide evidence for such a role by studying working memory for emotional faces in patients with Parkinson's Disease. We studied 25 patients with Parkinson's disease during their on and off medication states. Faces with emotional expressions (happy, angry, sad, neutral or fearful) were shown and the participants had to remember and later recall the identity of the faces ignoring the expressions. We found that dopaminergic medication enhances working memory for angry faces and suppresses it for sad faces. The results elucidate neurochemical mechanisms for the saliency of threatening information and support cognitive explanations of the antidepressant effects of dopamine. They also suggest a role for dopamine in changing emotional‐cognitive biases rather than as a generic cognitive enhancer. © 2010 Movement Disorder Society.


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Consistent with the hypothesis that dopamine is implicated in the processing of salient stimuli relevant to the modification of various behavioral responses, Parkinson's disease is associated with emotional blunting. To address the hypothesis that emotional attention and memory are modulated by dopa