Neuroscientists have discovered an important clue about how we push away negative thoughts
- Negative thoughts can be frustrating, but most healthy people can push them away.
- In people with psychiatric diseases like depression and PTSD, however, these thoughts can be intrusive and cyclical.
- In a recent study, scientists were able to isolate a mechanism in the brain that seems to help healthy people shut them down, and a neurotransmitter called GABA is key.
When an intrusive, unwanted thought comes to mind - something like, 'That interview went really poorly!' or 'I wish I hadn't said that!' - most of us are capable of simply pushing it away.
In people with psychiatric diseases like depression and PTSD, however, these thoughts can run wild, churning like a tornado in the mind.
Scientists now have a better grasp of how healthy people shut down a negative thought, and they think their findings could one day help people suffering from psychiatric diseases, too.
For a recent study published in the journal Nature Communications, a team of researchers from the UK, US, and Spain asked 24 people to learn to link a series of words with another unrelated word - such as keyboard/winter and west/beach.
The study results showed that people who were best at blocking the unwanted thoughts - in this case the the word pair - also had the highest concentrations of an important chemical messenger called GABA in their brain's hippocampus (that's the horseshoe-shaped region that's key in forming memories and managing emotions).
GABA, or gamma-aminobutyric acid, is often thought of as a sort of "downer" chemical because of its tendency to tamp down on hyperactive brain cells. The chemical may play a role in controlling our fear or anxiety response, and several studies have suggested a link between low GABA levels and various psychiatric illnesses including depression, schizophrenia, and anxiety.
"What's exciting about this is that now we're getting very specific," Michael Anderson, a senior scientist and program leader at the University of Cambridge's neuroscience department, told the BBC. "Before, we could only say 'this part of the brain acts on that part,' but now we can say which neurotransmitters are likely to be important."
Still, the study has some limitations in terms of its applications for people with psychiatric diseases. The researchers only studied cognitively healthy young adults, not people with mental illness, and only asked them to recall simple verbal items, as opposed to complex thoughts. It's also possible that the thoughts that could plague someone with depression are significantly different from those of a healthy person. (Where a healthy person might think, 'I shouldn't have skipped the gym today,' for example, a depressed person might take that to an extreme like, 'I'm worthless.')
For those and other reasons, the researchers acknowledge that their current findings aren't enough to say whether a negative thought from a depressed person relies on GABA the same way it does in a healthy person. Nevertheless, dozens of studies suggest the chemical is an important clue for future research.