WASHINGTON - Researchers have confirmed what common wisdom has long held -
that people can suppress emotionally troubling memories - and said on Thursday
they have sketched out how the brain accomplishes this.
A youth is covered in sand during the opening day of the
first of four city beaches in Mexico City, April 3, 2007. [Reuters]
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They said their findings might
lead to a way to help patients with post-traumatic stress disorder or anxiety to
gain control of debilitating memories.
"You're shutting down parts of the brain that are responsible for supporting
memories," said Brendan Depue, a neuroscience doctoral student at the University
of Colorado who worked on the study. He said his team discovered the brain's
emotional center is also shut down.
For their study, Depue and colleagues taught 18 adult volunteers to associate
pictures of human faces with pictures of car crashes or wounded soldiers. They
were then shown each face a dozen times and asked to either remember or forget
the troubling image associated with each one.
When they worked to block a particular negative image, then looked at the
face one last time, they could no longer name its troubling pair in about half
of the trials, Depue and his colleagues report in Friday's issue of the journal
Science.
The researchers used a brain imaging method called functional magnetic
resonance imaging, or fMRI, which shows the brain's activity in real time, to
track what was going on in the brain. They got usable data on 16 people.
In the test, parts of each volunteer's prefrontal cortex - the brain's
control center for complex thoughts and actions - were activated. This seemed to
direct a decrease of activity in the visual cortex, where images are usually
processed.
The hippocampus, where memories are formed and retrieved, and amygdala, the
emotion hub, were later also deactivated.
Suppression therapy?
The research is still far from being translated to the psychiatrist's office,
Depue and others acknowledged.
"In the first place, the stimuli may be unpleasant, but they are hardly
traumatic," said the University of California Berkeley's John Kihlstrom, who was
not involved in the study.
"My prediction is it won't be as easy to suppress something that's
long-standing and personally emotional," Depue said.
People with post-traumatic stress disorder are often troubled for decades by
recurring images of a harrowing experience.
Still, patients might practice blocking such memories out of their minds, or
at least reducing their emotional sting.
"It might be the case that people with memory disturbances have to gain some
control over the memory representation by remembering it (and) trying a
different emotional response to the memory before successful suppression," Depue
said.
A drug targeting specific brain regions might eventually boost the ability to
suppress, said John Gabrieli at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
For a mother haunted by the memory of her son's suicide, he said, "it is hard
to imagine that you'd ever get her to forget that the event occurred. (But) the
more you could weaken the memory in any dimension, the better it would
be."