RT Journal A1 Elliott R, Lythe K, Lee R, et al T1 REduced medial prefrontal responses to social interaction images in remitted depression JF Archives of General Psychiatry JO Archives of General Psychiatry YR 2012 FD January 1 VO 69 IS 1 SP 37 OP 45 DO 10.1001/archgenpsychiatry.2011.139 UL http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/archgenpsychiatry.2011.139 AB Context  Major depressive disorder is associated with impairments in processing emotional stimuli, and residual impairments are observed during remission, possibly indicating trait vulnerability. Stimuli with social context represent a distinct class of emotional stimuli, which in healthy volunteers are associated with specific neural substrates but have not previously been studied relative to vulnerability to depression.Objective  To explore whether individuals with remitted major depressive disorder had altered neuronal processing of social emotional stimuli.Design  Cross-sectional design using functional magnetic resonance imaging, combined with a cognitive activation task.Setting  General community of greater Manchester, England.Participants  Twenty-five unmedicated participants fully remitted from major depressive disorder and 29 age-matched control subjects.Main Outcome Measures  Neuronal responses to positive and negative social interaction images vs valence-matched images with less overt social context.Results  Participants with remitted depression showed attenuated frontopolar response relative to controls for positive and negative images depicting social interactions. For negative social images, participants with remitted depression also showed reduced latero-orbitofrontal response relative to controls.Conclusions  In the absence of current symptoms, individuals with remitted major depressive disorder showed reduced frontopolar processing of stimuli showing social interactions, a reduction not seen for stimuli showing individual successes and failures and, therefore, not simply an effect of emotional valence. These results suggest a specific trait abnormality in social emotional processing associated with vulnerability to depression, which may have implications for understanding social cognition mechanisms and for developing effective psychological therapies.