Age differences in functional brain networks associated with loneliness and empathy.

Netw Neurosci

Montreal Neurological Institute, Department of Neurology and Neurosurgery, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada.

Published: June 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Loneliness affects brain connectivity differently across age groups, particularly in early- and middle-aged adults versus late adulthood.
  • The study found an inverse relationship between loneliness and empathy in both younger and older adults, suggesting different social experiences correlate with brain function.
  • Age group differences revealed that young adults show a connection between loneliness and visual network integration, while older adults show positive associations of loneliness with within- and between-network integration of association networks.

Article Abstract

Loneliness is associated with differences in resting-state functional connectivity (RSFC) within and between large-scale networks in early- and middle-aged adult cohorts. However, age-related changes in associations between sociality and brain function into late adulthood are not well understood. Here, we examined age differences in the association between two dimensions of sociality-loneliness and empathic responding-and RSFC of the cerebral cortex. Self-report measures of loneliness and empathy were inversely related across the entire sample of younger (mean age = 22.6y, = 128) and older (mean age = 69.0y, = 92) adults. Using multivariate analyses of multi-echo fMRI RSFC, we identified distinct functional connectivity patterns for individual and age group differences associated with loneliness and empathic responding. Loneliness in young and empathy in both age groups was related to greater visual network integration with association networks (e.g., default, fronto-parietal control). In contrast, loneliness was positively related to within- and between-network integration of association networks for older adults. These results extend our previous findings in early- and middle-aged cohorts, demonstrating that brain systems associated with loneliness, as well as empathy, differ in older age. Further, the findings suggest that these two aspects of social experience engage different neurocognitive processes across human life-span development.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10312262PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/netn_a_00293DOI Listing

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