UPV-EHU ADDI
  • Back
    • English
    • español
    • Basque
  • Login
  • English 
    • English
    • español
    • Basque
  • FAQ
View Item 
  •   ADDI
  • INVESTIGACIÓN
  • Grupos de Investigación, Institutos y Centros Colaboradores
  • BCBL
  • BCBL-Publications
  • View Item
  •   ADDI
  • INVESTIGACIÓN
  • Grupos de Investigación, Institutos y Centros Colaboradores
  • BCBL
  • BCBL-Publications
  • View Item
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

Enhanced top-down sensorimotor processing in somatic anxiety

Thumbnail
View/Open
Enhanced top-down sensorimotor2022.pdf (2.574Mb)
Date
2022
Author
Bouziane, Ismail
Das, Moumita
Friston, Karl J.
Caballero-Gaudes, Cesar
Ray, Dipanjan
Metadata
Show full item record
  Estadisticas en RECOLECTA
(LA Referencia)

Bouziane, I., Das, M., Friston, K.J. et al. Enhanced top-down sensorimotor processing in somatic anxiety. Transl Psychiatry 12, 295 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41398-022-02061-2
Translational Psychiatry
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10810/58126
Abstract
Functional neuroimaging research on anxiety has traditionally focused on brain networks associated with the psychological aspects of anxiety. Here, instead, we target the somatic aspects of anxiety. Motivated by the growing appreciation that top-down cortical processing plays a crucial role in perception and action, we used resting-state functional MRI data from the Human Connectome Project and Dynamic Causal Modeling (DCM) to characterize effective connectivity among hierarchically organized regions in the exteroceptive, interoceptive, and motor cortices. In people with high (fear-related) somatic arousal, top-down effective connectivity was enhanced in all three networks: an observation that corroborates well with the phenomenology of anxiety. The anxiety-associated changes in connectivity were sufficiently reliable to predict whether a new participant has mild or severe somatic anxiety. Interestingly, the increase in top-down connections to sensorimotor cortex were not associated with fear affect scores, thus establishing the (relative) dissociation between somatic and cognitive dimensions of anxiety. Overall, enhanced top-down effective connectivity in sensorimotor cortices emerges as a promising and quantifiable candidate marker of trait somatic anxiety.
Collections
  • BCBL-Publications

DSpace 6.4 software copyright © -2023  DuraSpace
OpenAIRE
EHU Bilbioteka
 

 

Browse

All of ADDICommunities & CollectionsBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesDepartamentos (cas.)Departamentos (eus.)SubjectsThis CollectionBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesDepartamentos (cas.)Departamentos (eus.)Subjects

My Account

Login

Statistics

View Usage Statistics

DSpace 6.4 software copyright © -2023  DuraSpace
OpenAIRE
EHU Bilbioteka