AI Article Synopsis

  • The global neuronal workspace (GNW) theory suggests that conscious awareness depends on extensive brain connectivity for coding conscious thoughts, and patients with schizophrenia and bipolar disorder show disruptions in this connectivity and heightened thresholds for consciousness.
  • This study aimed to explore how structural connectivity correlates with consciousness thresholds in individuals with varying psychosis levels, using visual masking techniques and diffusion MRI to analyze connections in the brain.
  • Results indicated that psychosis patients had higher masking thresholds than healthy controls, with a negative correlation between these thresholds and the integrity of white matter tracts in the GNW, indicating that disrupted connectivity may contribute to conscious access issues and relate to psychotic symptoms.

Article Abstract

According to global neuronal workspace (GNW) theory, conscious access relies on long-distance cerebral connectivity to allow a global neuronal ignition coding for conscious content. In patients with schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, both alterations in cerebral connectivity and an increased threshold for conscious perception have been reported. The implications of abnormal structural connectivity for disrupted conscious access and the relationship between these two deficits and psychopathology remain unclear. The aim of this study was to determine the extent to which structural connectivity is correlated with consciousness threshold, particularly in psychosis. We used a visual masking paradigm to measure consciousness threshold, and diffusion MRI tractography to assess structural connectivity in 97 humans of either sex with varying degrees of psychosis: healthy control subjects ( = 46), schizophrenia patients ( = 25), and bipolar disorder patients with ( = 17) and without ( = 9) a history of psychosis. Patients with psychosis (schizophrenia and bipolar disorder with psychotic features) had an elevated masking threshold compared with control subjects and bipolar disorder patients without psychotic features. Masking threshold correlated negatively with the mean general fractional anisotropy of white matter tracts exclusively within the GNW network (inferior frontal-occipital fasciculus, cingulum, and corpus callosum). Mediation analysis demonstrated that alterations in long-distance connectivity were associated with an increased masking threshold, which in turn was linked to psychotic symptoms. Our findings support the hypothesis that long-distance structural connectivity within the GNW plays a crucial role in conscious access, and that conscious access may mediate the association between impaired structural connectivity and psychosis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7821858PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0945-20.2020DOI Listing

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