Climate change could be hurting our brains, too

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US scientists say our brains are taking a hit after we experience traumatic climate events, such as bushfires. The team say people who were exposed to these fires had more trouble than their peers in experiments that asked them to accurately report things they are seeing while being surrounded by distracting or conflicting stimuli. The team also found that the frontal cortices of these people's brains were working harder than the noggins of people who hadn't experienced the fires, and still would not perform as well as them. The team say these findings are similar to those they see in patients with PTSD.

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From: PLOS

Californian wildfire trauma associated with cognitive deficits and altered brain activity

Cognition remained affected 6-12 months post wildfire, and was accompanied by greater activity in the frontal cortex

New research led by the NEATLabs at the University of California, San Diego highlights the long-term negative impact of climate stress. Published January 18 in PLOS Climate, the study shows that exposure to traumatic climate like wildfires can have long lasting effects on cognition, particularly the ability to process information in the presence of visual interference.

Although post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) after combat or a violent attack has become a recognized and much-discussed phenomenon, the behavioral and physiological effects of severe climate stress is less well-known. With severe climate events such as wildfires and hurricanes expected to increase in the future, studying climate trauma is becoming more important. The new study used behavioral testing and EEG recordings to examine how exposure to the Californian Camp Fire of 2018 affected cognitive ability 6-12 months after the event (before the COVID-19 pandemic). Participants were tested on standard cognitive tests to assess selective attention, inhibitory control, interference processing, and working memory, and results were compared between those who had been exposed to the wildfire and those who had not.

The researchers found that wildfire exposure was associated with subsequently greater difficulty in sensory interference processing—quickly and accurately reporting information from a visual scene when it is surrounded by distracting or conflicting stimuli. Simultaneous EEG recordings showed that those who were exposed to the wildfire also showed greater activity in the frontal cortices of their brains, indicating that they were actually putting forth more cognitive effort, and still not performing as well. These findings are similar to what is seen in PTSD.

Communities and mental health experts could expect similar stress responses and cognitive difficulties after future wildfires and severe climate events, and should be ready with proven interventions that ameliorate interference processing.

The authors add: “Our study shows that climate trauma may affect cognitive and brain functions especially with regard to processing of distractions. This knowledge is useful because it will help guide our efforts to develop targeted intervention strategies.”

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PLOS Climate
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Organisation/s: University of California, San Diego, USA
Funder: This work was supported by a Tang Prize Foundation grant (JM) https://www.tang-prize.org/ The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
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