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Mood and neural responses to social rejection are not altered in resilient adolescents with a history of adversity
- Jessica Fritz
- Jason Stretton
- Adrian Dahl Askelund
- Susanne Schweizer
- Nicholas Walsh
- Bernet M. Elzinga
- Ian M. Goodyer
- Paul O. Wilkinson
- Anne-Laura Van Harmelen
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Description: THIS IS PRE-PRINTED SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIAL. THE AUTHENTICATED SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIAL IS NOW PUBLISHED IN “DEVELOPMENT AND PSYCHOPATHOLOGY (1–13)”. THE FINAL AUTHENTICATED VERSION IS AVAILABLE ONLINE AT: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0954579419000178 Childhood adversity (CA) increases the risk of subsequent mental health problems. Adolescent social support (from family and/or friends) reduces the risk of mental health problems after CA. However, the mechanisms of this effect remain unclear and we speculate that they are manifested on neurodevelopmental levels. Therefore, we investigated whether family and/or friendship support at age 14 and 17 function as intermediate variables for the relationship between CA before age 11 and affective or neural responses to social rejection feedback at age 18. We studied 55 adolescents (26 with CA) with normative mental health at age 18 (‘resilient’), from a longitudinal cohort. Participants underwent a Social Feedback Task in the MRI scanner. Social rejection feedback activated the dorsal Anterior Cingulate Cortex (dACC) and the left anterior Insula (AI). CA did not predict affective or neural responses to social rejection at age 18. Yet, CA predicted better friendships at age 14 and age 18, when adolescents with and without CA had comparable mood levels. Thus, adolescents with CA and normative mood levels have more adolescent friendship support and seem to have normal mood and neural responses to social rejection.