About this Research Topic
Recent advances in clinical neuroscience focused on the development of interventional techniques that could ameliorate the negative effects of affect and in turn, reduce its associated adverse symptomatology. However, these techniques are rather scarce, and little is known about the neural mechanisms associated with the beneficial effects of these interventions.
Available evidence emerging from neuroimaging studies links the negative affect with memory to both selective activation of the amygdala and a diminished engagement of prefrontal regions which in turn modulate the activity of medial temporal structures thought to be critical for these memory processes. Indeed, this activation pattern--observed in healthy volunteers performing tasks-- seems to be more pronounced in people suffering from stress-related and affective disorders. However, this pattern can also be reversed by means of cognitive interventions that result in reduced negative effects of affect on learning and memory. Similarly, recent studies utilizing neurostimulation techniques showing positive effects on memory and learning may also be promising intervention tools.
This Research Topic aims to showcase emerging evidence regarding the interconnected neural systems and networks involved in processes related to affect and memory, their dysfunctional alterations in clinical conditions, as well as potential modulations/interventions to alleviate these dysfunctional mechanisms.
We will focus on the following three main topics:
(1) Basic investigations using novel experimental paradigms and/or advanced analytic approaches to gain a deeper understanding of the neurobiological mechanisms associated with the underlying encoding, consolidation, and retrieval of memories for affective events;
(2) investigations identifying promising interventional approaches (e.g. cognitive, brain stimulation, pharmacological) to modulate the neural mechanisms associated with affect and memory for the future therapeutic development;
(3) investigations mapping the complex relationships between clusters of affective/memory-related symptoms, large-scale brain networks, and real-life/clinical outcomes in healthy, high-risk and clinical samples with one or more comorbidity.
We aim to initiate an exchange between cognitive neuroscientists, psychiatrists and clinicians bringing together recent empirical findings (spanning from behavioral and lesion to pharmacological, brain imaging and stimulation), meta-analysis, reviews, and commentaries of the literature to date, and opinion pieces.
Keywords: Memory, encoding, consolidation, network
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.