Farb and his team showed 16 formerly depressed patients sad movie clips and tracked their brain activity using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Sixteen months later, nine of the 16 patients had relapsed into depression. The researchers compared the brain activity of relapsing patients against those who remained healthy and against another group of people who had never been depressed.
Faced with sadness, the relapsing patients showed more activity in a frontal region of the brain, known as the medial prefrontal gyrus. These responses were also linked to higher rumination: the tendency to think obsessively about negative events and occurrences. The patients who did not relapse showed more activity in the rear part of the brain, which is responsible for processing visual information and is linked to greater feelings of acceptance and non-judgement of experience.
“Despite achieving an apparent recovery from the symptoms of depression, this study suggests that there are important differences in how formerly depressed people respond to emotional challenges that predict future well-being,” says Farb. “For a person with a history of depression, using the frontal brain’s ability to analyze and interpret sadness may actually be an unhealthy reaction that can perpetuate the chronic cycle of depression. These at-risk individuals might be better served by trying to accept and notice their feelings rather than explain and analyze them.”
The research was published in Biological Psychiatry. Farb was under the supervision of professor Adam Anderson in the Department of Psychology.
More information, read the article: Mood-Linked Responses in Medial Prefrontal Cortex Predict Relapse in Patients with Recurrent Unipolar Depression.
Media Contacts:
- Norman Farb, PhD
Postdoctoral Fellow
Rotman Research Institute
647-235-6281
[email protected] - Jessica Lewis
Communications
Faculty of Arts & Science
University of Toronto
416-978-8887
[email protected]
“These at-risk individuals might be better served by trying to accept and notice their feelings rather than explain and analyze them.”
Hmmm… Seems to fit in with Catholic’s confess-and-forget routine.