Optimism, Pessimism and the Cingulate

Here is a fascinating piece from the NIMH website about optimism, pessimism and the lower portion of the anterior cingulate gyrus.   This is the same area of the brain we found dramatic decreases in our suicidal patients.

Humans tend to be overly optimistic about the future, sometimes underestimating risks and making unrealistic plans, notes NIMH grantee Elizabeth Phelps, Ph.D., New York University. Yet “a moderate optimistic illusion” appears to be essential for maintaining motivation and good mental health.

Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), Phelps and her colleagues have now shown that such “optimism bias” may be rooted in the same brain circuitry as depression, which is marked by a tendency to be overly pessimistic.

The same circuitry was also in play when this normal bias toward positive thinking was temporarily turned off by depriving the brain of the mood-regulating chemical messenger serotonin, in another recent fMRI study by NIMH intramural research psychiatrist Wayne Drevets, M.D., and colleagues.

Through this circuit, the anterior cingulate, just behind the front of the brain, regulates the amygdala, an emotion hub deep in the brain.

Phelps and colleagues reported their findings in the October 24, 2007 issue of Nature.They set out to discover why, for example, people tend to expect to live longer than average, underestimate their chances of getting a divorce and overestimate their likelihood of successful careers.

Fifteen healthy volunteers were scanned while they were remembering or imagining future events ““ like “winning an award” and “the end of a romantic relationship” ““ to see how their brain activity related to their ratings of these experiences and their scores on standard scales of optimism.

True to form, the participants rated future positive events as more vivid and expected them sooner than negative ones.

The cingulate/amygdala circuit showed more activity and connectivity with optimistic than with negative imaginings. The higher an individual scored on rating scales of optimism, the more an area at the cingulate activated. This rostral anterior cingulate appears to be the seat of these judgments, where emotional, motivational and autobiographical information is weighed ““ with an eye for the positive.

But the same circuit has a flip side. Citing an earlier study by Drevets and colleagues, Phelps’s team pointed out that this cingulate/amygdala circuit may also underlie the pessimism and impaired imagining seen in depression.

In the recent study by Drs. Drevets, Jonathan Roiser, and colleagues, healthy volunteers who had never been depressed lost their optimism bias and showed brain activity changes in similar regions to Phelps and colleagues when they lacked tryptophan, the precursor chemical that the body uses to make the chemical messenger serotonin.

This first fMRI study to document neural and behavioral responses to emotionally-charged words when the healthy brain is starved of serotonin was published online September 19, 2007 in Neuropsychopharmacology.

Researchers had previously shown that people with a history of depression experience mood symptoms following such serotonin depletion, along with alterations in emotion-regulating brain circuits.

In the current study, 20 healthy participants initially made significantly more inappropriate responses to positive words while performing a task that required them to respond only to negative words, indicating that their attention was grabbed by the positive words ““ the optimism bias. However, after they took capsules containing essential amino acids, minus tryptophan, depriving their brains of serotonin, this normal bias toward positive words disappeared.fMRI scans revealed that this loss of focus on the positive was accompanied by decreased cingulate activity in response to positive stimuli, particularly in a region toward the back of the cingulate cortex that was also implicated in the Phelps study. Drevets and colleagues have proposed that by taking the breaks off the amygdala, such decreased cingulate activity may play a role in depression.

By helping to accentuate the positive, serotonin, which is enhanced by antidepressants, may provide resilience in the face of life’s hard knocks, suggest the researchers.

See the full post at http://www.nimh.nih.gov/science-news/2007/depressions-flip-side-shares-its-circuitry.shtml

A healthy brain is associated with a healthy, successful life.   Strive to keep your brain healthy.   Until next time, please know that success starts with a healthy brain.   Failure is often the result of a brain gone wrong.   The good news is that no matter how bad you have been to your brain it is never too late to change your brain and change your life. To your brain health,

Daniel Amen, MD

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5 Comments

1.
Steven Corsaro
Posted December 27, 2007 at 11:00 am | Permalink

Dr. Amen,

I am responding to your latest newsletter about N-Acetyl Cysteine (NAC) in the treatment of addiction. What a wonderful and promising future may be in store for brain health! The numbers in the second study (83.3%) over the placebo are incredible. We accept 40% when the placebo number is 28% for many psychotropic drugs to go to the public, in many double blind studies.

I am an adult with ADHD and the thought of glutamate replacement is so basic, yet could work out to be life saving if I could use NAC in place of stimulants. I would like to learn more about this supplement and where I could get it.

Not to worry, I will not stop my medication without consulting my doctor first!

Again, I always love the information you bring to the world of addiction and brain health!

Steven

2.
Loretta Caughran
Posted March 17, 2008 at 10:27 pm | Permalink

if i eat more carbs, like pasta, or break, to help my cingulate put me in a better mood, won’t my triglyceride levels increase…

3.
mary m.
Posted June 5, 2008 at 5:41 pm | Permalink

i saw your show on PBS change your briain chang your life. i’m definitely have a cingulate brain. i’m in my mid 40’s and have suffered from (depression) since my teens. i see a MD at Wholehealth Chgo and i have done spit tests that show my low seritonin levels again and again despite being on 40mg of Celexa. i’m doing pretty well now but i’ve had a terrible time sleeping. is there a relationship of inability to fall asleep and the cingulate brain? please respond. thankyou, mary

4.
Michelle
Posted September 11, 2008 at 11:21 am | Permalink

Dr. Amen, I saw your show the other night on PBS but missed bits and pieces due to kids and calls. I need help! I have been dating a guy for over a year and I love him very much but his behavior, mood swings, comments are just awful and wearing on me. 10 years ago he was hit by a car and catapulted into a light post. He broke his legs and was scalped so badly his hair died and had to be replaced. He obviously has a closed head injury and he was pronounced dead at one time. I am trying desperately to understand how this may have changed him but his family says they don’t see a personailty change just that he gets depressed because he used to be a tennis pro and that moment ruined his career. What are the personality traits of a closed head injury? How do deal with outburts? He is a good person. He is generally upbeat, positive and happy but he keeps telling me i am putting him down when I am not and then turns around and puts me down about everything under the sun!!! I need to know if I can help him or if I should just walk away but it is just sad. He also drinks quite a bit and I am certain that does not help. He talks about quitting or slowing down but it is short lived. PLEASE HELP!!!!! Michelle

5.
Posted October 30, 2009 at 4:05 pm | Permalink

Looking for the diet suggestions to assist singulate functioning.

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