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Dive into the research topics where John D. Herrington is active.

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Featured researches published by John D. Herrington.


Cognitive, Affective, & Behavioral Neuroscience | 2003

Paying attention to emotion: An fMRI investigation of cognitive and emotional Stroop tasks

Rebecca J. Compton; Marie T. Banich; Aprajita Mohanty; Michael P. Milham; John D. Herrington; Gregory A. Miller; Paige E. Scalf; Andrew G. Webb; Wendy Heller

In this research, we investigated the degree to which brain systems involved in ignoring emotionally salient information differ from those involved in ignoring nonemotional information. The design allowed examination of regional brain activity, using fMRI during color-word and emotional Stroop tasks. Twelve participants indicated the color of words while ignoring word meaning in conditions in which neutral words were contrasted to emotionally negative, emotionally positive, and incongruent color words. Dorsolateral frontal lobe activity was increased by both negative and incongruent color words, indicating a common system for maintaining an attentional set in the presence of salient distractors. In posterior regions of the brain, activity depended on the nature of the information to be ignored. Ignoring color-incongruent words increased left parietal activity and decreased parahippocampal gyrus activity, whereas ignoring negative emotional words increased bilateral occipito-temporal activity and decreased amygdala activity. The results indicate that emotion and attention are intimately related via a network of regions that monitor for salient information, maintain attention on the task, suppress irrelevant information, and select appropriate responses.


Cognitive Therapy and Research | 2007

Cognitive deficits in depression and functional specificity of regional brain activity

Rebecca L. Levin; Wendy Heller; Aprajita Mohanty; John D. Herrington; Gregory A. Miller

The growing literature on cognitive deficits in depression is considered in light of regional brain activity as well as comorbid anxiety and life stressors. Cognitive impairments associated with depression are reviewed, with an emphasis on various aspects of executive function such as memory, attention, and problem-solving. These deficits are related to patterns of brain activity observed in prefrontal, anterior cingulate, and parietal cortices, as well as in subcortical regions. Evidence for the largely unexplored role of environmental stressors in depression and their impact on cognition and brain function is also examined, and promising avenues of additional research are noted. In addition to promoting interdisciplinary research, systematically assessing variables such as cognitive performance, comorbid anxiety, and relevant stressors may elucidate distinct patterns of brain function and cognition that could inform prevention and intervention.


Emotion | 2005

Emotion-Modulated Performance and Activity in Left Dorsolateral Prefrontal Cortex

John D. Herrington; Aprajita Mohanty; Nancy S. Koven; Joscelyn E. Fisher; Jennifer L. Stewart; Marie T. Banich; Andrew G. Webb; Gregory A. Miller; Wendy Heller

Functional MRI (fMRI) was used to examine the relationship between processing of pleasant and unpleasant stimuli and activity in prefrontal cortex. Twenty volunteers identified the colors in which pleasant, neutral, and unpleasant words were printed. Pleasant words prompted more activity bilaterally in dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) than did unpleasant words. In addition, pleasant words prompted more activity in left than in right DLPFC. Response speed to pleasant words was correlated with DLPFC activity. These data directly link positive affect, enhanced performance, and prefrontal activity, providing some of the first fMRI evidence supporting models of emotional valence and frontal brain asymmetry based on electroencephalography (EEG).


Journal of Abnormal Psychology | 2005

Neural mechanisms of affective interference in schizotypy

Aprajita Mohanty; John D. Herrington; Nancy S. Koven; Joscelyn E. Fisher; Elizabeth A. Wenzel; Andrew G. Webb; Wendy Heller; Marie T. Banich; Gregory A. Miller

Negatively valenced stimuli foster cognitive impairment in schizotypy and schizophrenia. To identify relevant brain mechanisms, the authors had 16 positive-schizotypy and 16 control participants perform an emotional Stroop task, judging the ink color of negative and neutral words during functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) of regional brain activity. Schizotypy individuals showed increased right and decreased left activity in dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, indicating a deficit in maintenance of attentional set in the presence of negative emotional distractors. They also showed abnormal activity in ventral limbic areas, including decreased activity in nucleus accumbens and increased activity in hippocampus and amygdala, a circuit involved in the integration of cognitive and affective processes. These results indicate that aspects of emotion-cognition processes and the brain mechanisms that implement them are similar in schizotypy and schizophrenia.


Schizophrenia Research | 2008

Specificity of emotion-related effects on attentional processing in schizotypy.

Aprajita Mohanty; Wendy Heller; Nancy S. Koven; Joscelyn E. Fisher; John D. Herrington; Gregory A. Miller

OBJECTIVES In the schizophrenia spectrum, cognitive functions such as perception, language, and attention have been shown to be adversely influenced by negative affect. The present study addressed three issues of specificity and one issue of mechanism regarding affect-related attentional disruption in schizotypy: (1) Is attentional disturbance from negative affective stimuli specific to positive (PS) but not negative schizotypy (NS)? (2) Do positive affective stimuli also foster attentional disturbance? (3) Are anxiety and depression differentially related to PS and NS? (4) Whatever the degree of specificity in these relationships, does anxiety mediate the relationship between schizotypy and attentional disturbance? METHODS Nonpatient participants (N=162) provided responses on scales of schizotypy, anxiety, and depression and performed an emotional Stroop task, judging the ink color of positive, neutral, and negative words. RESULTS PS but not NS was associated with poorer attentional performance. This attentional disturbance was specific to negative words. PS was associated with anxiety and depression, whereas NS was associated only with depression. Finally, anxiety and depression did not fully mediate the relationship between PS and attentional interference related to negative affective stimuli. CONCLUSIONS Findings of attentional disturbance in the presence of negative affective stimuli, particularly in positive schizotypy, have substantial theoretical implications. They provide a path by which the interplay of cognitive and affective phenomena could lead to the formation, maintenance, and exacerbation of positive symptoms, including delusions and hallucinations. Findings from this study also underscore the importance of examining the differential contribution of comorbid anxiety and depression to cognitive and affective function in the schizophrenia spectrum.


Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience | 2013

Emotion disrupts neural activity during selective attention in psychopathy

Naomi Sadeh; Jeffrey M. Spielberg; Wendy Heller; John D. Herrington; Anna S. Engels; Stacie L. Warren; Laura D. Crocker; Bradley P. Sutton; Gregory A. Miller

Dimensions of psychopathy are theorized to be associated with distinct cognitive and emotional abnormalities that may represent unique neurobiological risk factors for the disorder. This hypothesis was investigated by examining whether the psychopathic personality dimensions of fearless-dominance and impulsive-antisociality moderated neural activity and behavioral responses associated with selective attention and emotional processing during an emotion-word Stroop task in 49 adults. As predicted, the dimensions evidenced divergent selective-attention deficits and sensitivity to emotional distraction. Fearless-dominance was associated with disrupted attentional control to positive words, and activation in right superior frontal gyrus mediated the relationship between fearless-dominance and errors to positive words. In contrast, impulsive-antisociality evidenced increased behavioral interference to both positive and negative words and correlated positively with recruitment of regions associated with motivational salience (amygdala, orbitofrontal cortex, insula), emotion regulation (temporal cortex, superior frontal gyrus) and attentional control (dorsal anterior cingulate cortex). Individuals high on both dimensions had increased recruitment of regions related to attentional control (temporal cortex, rostral anterior cingulate cortex), response preparation (pre-/post-central gyri) and motivational value (orbitofrontal cortex) in response to negative words. These findings provide evidence that the psychopathy dimensions represent dual sets of risk factors characterized by divergent dysfunction in cognitive and affective processes.


Brain and Cognition | 2008

Specificity of regional brain activity in anxiety types during emotion processing

Wendy Heller; Anna S. Engels; Aprajita Mohanty; John D. Herrington; Marie T. Banich; Gregory A. Miller

The present study tested the hypothesis that anxious apprehension involves more left- than right-hemisphere activity and that anxious arousal is associated with the opposite pattern. Behavioral and fMRI responses to threat stimuli in an emotional Stroop task were examined in nonpatient groups reporting anxious apprehension, anxious arousal, or neither. Reaction times were longer for negative than for neutral words. As predicted, brain activation distinguished anxious groups in a left inferior frontal region associated with speech production and in a right-hemisphere inferior temporal area. Addressing a second hypothesis about left-frontal involvement in emotion, distinct left frontal regions were associated with anxious apprehension versus processing of positive information. Results support the proposed distinction between the two types of anxiety and resolve an inconsistency about the role of left-frontal activation in emotion and psychopathology.


Psychophysiology | 2007

Differential engagement of anterior cingulate cortex subdivisions for cognitive and emotional function

Aprajita Mohanty; Anna S. Engels; John D. Herrington; Wendy Heller; Moon Ho Ho; Marie T. Banich; Andrew G. Webb; Stacie L. Warren; Gregory A. Miller


Psychophysiology | 2007

Specificity of regional brain activity in anxiety types during emotion processing.

Anna S. Engels; Wendy Heller; Aprajita Mohanty; John D. Herrington; Marie T. Banich; Andrew G. Webb; Gregory A. Miller


Journal of Research in Personality | 2004

Neuropsychological evidence for dimensional schizotypy: Implications for creativity and psychopathology

Joscelyn E. Fisher; Aprajita Mohanty; John D. Herrington; Nancy S. Koven; Gregory A. Miller; Wendy Heller

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Marie T. Banich

University of Colorado Boulder

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Andrew G. Webb

Pennsylvania State University

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Joscelyn E. Fisher

Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences

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Jack B. Nitschke

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Naomi Sadeh

VA Boston Healthcare System

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