Trauma heightens brain sensitivity to negative events

brain image
Anderson

Survivors of an August 2001 trans-Atlantic flight that lost all power nearly 100 miles from land vividly recalled the ordeal nearly a decade later and showed heightened memories of a separate trauma - the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

The findings, detailed in a study co-authored by Cornell neuroscientist Adam Anderson and published online in the journal Clinical Psychological Science, offer clues about how the brain processes near-death scares and other traumatic autobiographical memories.

Eight passengers on Air Transat Flight 236 (AT 236), which narrowly avoided an ocean crash, recalled the experience at the University of Toronto’s Rotman Research Institute while MRI scanners monitored their brains. They also recounted another emotionally charged event, the 9/11 attacks, and a neutral occurrence, such as a recent road trip.

Researchers saw a “traumatic memory enhancement effect” in AT 236 survivors, who remembered sights, sounds and other episodic details from the event to a great degree. Compared to other study participants who had not experienced trauma firsthand, passengers also demonstrated heightened recall of 9/11, which occurred weeks after their brush with death. Survivors’ recollections, scans revealed, triggered increased activation in brain regions linked to emotional memory, including the amygdala, medial temporal lobe, anterior and posterior midline and visual cortex.

The results, authors write, suggest that trauma leaves an imprint on the brain that alters how we process information and emotion, perhaps making us more attuned to subsequent negative occurrences.

“Unlike many previous studies of trauma and its neurological effects, this is one of the first to use real experiences from survivors of the same life-threatening event,” said Anderson, associate professor of human development in the College of Human Ecology. “It’s remarkable that such traumatic memories present quantifiable emotional enhancement, that this enhancement has a footprint in the brain, and that this footprint endures nearly a decade after the event.”

The research team also included lead author Daniela Palombo, currently a postdoctoral researcher at Boston University School of Medicine; Margaret McKinnon (McMaster University), who was a passenger on AT Flight 236; Randy McIntosh (Rotman Research Institute) and Rebecca Todd (University of British Columbia).

The study was funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and the National Institute of Mental Health.

Ted Boscia is director of communications and media for the College of Human Ecology.

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