Associations Between Daily Mood States and Brain Gray Matter Volume, Resting-State Functional Connectivity and Task-Based Activity in Healthy Adults

Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
Elmira IsmaylovaLinda Booij

Abstract

Numerous studies have shown differences in the functioning in the areas of the frontal-limbic circuitry between depressed patients and controls. However, current knowledge on frontal-limbic neural substrates of individual differences in mood states in everyday life in healthy individuals is scarce. The present study investigates anatomical, resting-state, and functional neural correlates of daily mood states in healthy individuals. We expected to observe associations between mood and the frontal-limbic circuitry and the default-mode network (DMN). A total of 42 healthy adults (19 men, 23 women; 34 ± 1.2 years) regularly followed for behavior and psychosocial functioning since age of 6, underwent a functional magnetic resonance imaging scan, and completed a daily diary of mood states and related cognitions for 5 consecutive days. Results showed that individuals with smaller left hippocampal gray matter volumes experienced more negative mood and rumination in their daily life. Greater resting-state functional connectivity (rsFC) within the DMN, namely between posterior cingulate cortex (PCC) and medial prefrontal cortex regions as well as between PCC and precuneus, was associated with both greater negative and positive mood state...Continue Reading

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Citations

Feb 19, 2019·Psychological Medicine·Benjamin Suarez-JimenezJohn C Markowitz
Mar 14, 2019·ELife·Shahrzad Kharabian MasoulehUNKNOWN Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative
Dec 6, 2019·Frontiers in Psychiatry·Jeong-Youn KimYoung-Chul Chung
Feb 14, 2021·NeuroImage·Jalmar TeeuwRachel M Brouwer
Oct 16, 2019·Journal of Affective Disorders·Jonathan P StangeTimothy J Trull
Aug 15, 2021·Psychiatry Research. Neuroimaging·Harriet Demnitz-KingNatalie L Marchant

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