Unbalanced functional connectivity at rest affects the ERP correlates of affective prediction in high intolerance of uncertainty individuals: A high density EEG investigation.

Int J Psychophysiol

Department of General Psychology, University of Padua, Via Venezia 8, 35131 Padova, Italy; Padua Neuroscience Center (PNC), University of Padua, Via Giuseppe Orus 2, 35131 Padova, Italy.

Published: August 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study links Intolerance of Uncertainty (IU) to brain activity related to how we predict and respond to emotional stimuli in different stages: generation, implementation, and updating.
  • Researchers used resting state functional connectivity (RS-FC) data from EEG to see how brain organization affects emotional responses during a task, finding that IU levels impacted brain connectivity differently in the generation and updating stages.
  • Higher levels of IU were associated with disrupted brain connectivity, leading to less effective emotional predictions and a decreased ability to handle uncertainty in those with high IU.

Article Abstract

In a recent study we outlined the link between Intolerance of Uncertainty (IU) and the neural correlates of affective predictions, as constructed by the brain (generation stage) to prepare to relevant stimuli (implementation stage), and update predictive models according to incoming stimuli (updating stage). In this study we further explored whether the brain's functional organization at rest can modulate neural activity elicited within an emotional S1-S2 paradigm as a function of IU and uncertainty of S1-S2 contingencies. We computed resting state functional connectivity (RS-FC) from a 3-min resting period recorded with high density EEG, and we tested whether RS graph theory nodal measures (i.e., strength, clustering coefficient, betweenness centrality) predicted in-task ERP modulation as a function of IU. We found that RS-FC differently predicted in-task ERPs within the generation and updating stages. Higher IU levels were associated to altered RS-FC patterns within both domain-specific (i.e., right superior temporal sulcus) and domain-general regions (i.e., right orbitofrontal cortex), predictive of a reduced modulation of in-task ERPs in the generation and updating stages. This is presumably ascribable to an unbalancing between synchronization and integration within these regions, which may disrupt the exchange of information between top-down and bottom-up pathways. This altered RS-FC pattern may in turn result in the construction of less efficient affective predictions and a reduced ability to deal with contextual uncertainty in individuals high in IU.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpsycho.2022.06.006DOI Listing

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