Abstract

Previous studies have suggested complex interactions of mood and cognition in the lateral prefrontal cortex (PFC). Although such interactions might be influenced by various factors such as personality and cultural background, their reproducibility and generalizability have hardly been explored. In the present study, we focused on a previously found correlation between negative mood states and PFC activity during a verbal working memory (WM) task, which had been demonstrated by using near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) in a Japanese sample. To confirm and extend the generalizability of this finding, we conducted a similar experiment in a German sample, i.e., participants with a different language background. Here, PFC activity during verbal and spatial WM tasks was measured by NIRS using a delayed match-to-sample paradigm after the participants' natural mood states had been evaluated by a mood questionnaire (Profiles of Mood States: POMS). We also included control tasks to consider the general effect of visual/auditory inputs and motor responses. For the verbal WM task, the POMS total mood disturbance (TMD) score was negatively correlated with baseline-corrected NIRS data mainly over the left dorsolateral PFC (i.e., higher TMD scores were associated with reduced activation), which is consistent with previous studies. Moreover, this relationship was also present when verbal WM activation was contrasted with the control task. These results suggest that the mood–cognition interaction within the PFC is reproducible in a sample with a different language background and represents a general phenomenon.

Highlights

  • While we feel that our mood can influence our everyday activities to some extent, researchers have revealed a wide range of cognitive functions to be modulated by mood (Mitchell and Phillips, 2007)

  • We aimed to replicate our previous findings on a mood–cognition interaction in the prefrontal cortex (PFC) for a verbal working memory (WM) task (Aoki et al, 2011) in a German sample, i.e., participants with a different language background while striving to improve previous methodical weaknesses: First, we find it necessary to confirm the reproducibility of the findings when the PFC activity is derived from a contrast with a suitable control condition in an improved task design

  • The present study aimed at replicating a previous finding on an interaction between mood states and PFC activity for a verbal WM task, which was found by a near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) study in a Japanese sample

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Summary

Introduction

While we feel that our mood can influence our everyday activities to some extent, researchers have revealed a wide range of cognitive functions to be modulated by mood (Mitchell and Phillips, 2007) An example of such a mood–cognition interaction has been suggested for working memory (WM), as behavioral studies have shown that WM performance is affected by some emotional states such as withdrawal-related negative states (Gray, 2001; Shackman et al, 2006). Another fMRI study revealed that an unpleasant emotional state (induced by video clips) resulted in enhanced DLPFC activity during a verbal (letter) WM task and reduced activity during a non-verbal (face) WM task, whereas a pleasant emotional state exhibited the completely opposite pattern (Gray et al, 2002) These contradictory findings suggest a complex mood–cognition interaction in the PFC; an integrated theory has not been established yet. Only few Frontiers in Human Neuroscience www.frontiersin.org

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