Young Christina B, Raz Gal, Everaerd Daphne, Beckmann Christian F, Tendolkar Indira, Hendler Talma, Fernández Guillén, Hermans Erno J
Department of Psychology, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois 60208,
Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour.
J Neurosci. 2017 Jan 11;37(2):281-290. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1759-16.2016.
The ability to temporarily prioritize rapid and vigilant reactions over slower higher-order cognitive functions is essential for adaptive responding to threat. This reprioritization is believed to reflect shifts in resource allocation between large-scale brain networks that support these cognitive functions, including the salience and executive control networks. However, how changes in communication within and between such networks dynamically unfold as a function of threat-related arousal remains unknown. To address this issue, we collected functional MRI data and continuously assessed the heart rate from 120 healthy human adults as they viewed emotionally arousing and ecologically valid cinematographic material. We then developed an analysis method that tracks dynamic changes in large-scale network cohesion by quantifying the level of within-network and between-network interaction. We found a monotonically increasing relationship between heart rate, a physiological index of arousal, and within-network cohesion in the salience network, indicating that coordination of activity within the salience network dynamically tracks arousal. Strikingly, salience-executive control between-network cohesion peaked at moderate arousal. These findings indicate that at moderate arousal, which has been associated with optimal noradrenergic signaling, the salience network is optimally able to engage the executive control network to coordinate cognitive activity, but is unable to do so at tonically elevated noradrenergic levels associated with acute stress. Our findings extend neurophysiological models of the effects of stress-related neuromodulatory signaling at the cellular level to large-scale neural systems, and thereby explain shifts in cognitive functioning during acute stress, which may play an important role in the development and maintenance of stress-related mental disorders.
How does brain functioning change in arousing or stressful situations? Extant literature suggests that through global projections, arousal-related neuromodulatory changes can rapidly alter coordination of neural activity across brain-wide neural systems or large-scale networks. Since it is unknown how such processes unfold, we developed a method to dynamically track levels of within-network and between-network interaction. We applied this technique to human neuroimaging data acquired while participants watched realistic and emotionally arousing cinematographic material. Results demonstrate that cohesion within the salience network monotonically increases with arousal, while cohesion of this network with the executive control network peaks at moderate arousal. Our findings explain how cognitive performance shifts as a function of arousal, and provide new insights into vulnerability for stress-related psychopathology.
能够暂时将快速且警觉的反应置于较慢的高阶认知功能之上,这对于适应性应对威胁至关重要。这种重新排序被认为反映了支持这些认知功能的大规模脑网络之间资源分配的变化,包括突显网络和执行控制网络。然而,随着与威胁相关的唤醒,此类网络内部以及之间的通信变化如何动态展开仍不清楚。为了解决这个问题,我们收集了120名健康成年人在观看引发情绪且符合生态效度的电影素材时的功能磁共振成像数据,并持续评估他们的心率。然后,我们开发了一种分析方法,通过量化网络内部和网络之间的交互水平来追踪大规模网络凝聚力的动态变化。我们发现心率(一种唤醒的生理指标)与突显网络内的网络凝聚力之间存在单调递增关系,这表明突显网络内活动的协调动态地追踪唤醒。令人惊讶的是,突显 - 执行控制网络间的凝聚力在中等唤醒水平时达到峰值。这些发现表明,在与最佳去甲肾上腺素能信号相关的中等唤醒水平下,突显网络能够最佳地与执行控制网络协作以协调认知活动,但在与急性应激相关的持续性升高的去甲肾上腺素能水平下则无法做到。我们的发现将应激相关神经调节信号在细胞水平上的影响的神经生理模型扩展到大规模神经系统,从而解释了急性应激期间认知功能的变化,这可能在应激相关精神障碍的发展和维持中起重要作用。
在引发唤醒或压力的情境中,大脑功能如何变化?现有文献表明,通过全局投射,与唤醒相关的神经调节变化可以迅速改变全脑神经系统或大规模网络中神经活动的协调。由于尚不清楚这些过程如何展开,我们开发了一种方法来动态追踪网络内部和网络之间的交互水平。我们将此技术应用于参与者观看逼真且引发情绪的电影素材时获取的人类神经影像数据。结果表明,突显网络内的凝聚力随着唤醒单调增加,而该网络与执行控制网络的凝聚力在中等唤醒水平时达到峰值。我们的发现解释了认知表现如何随唤醒而变化,并为应激相关精神病理学的易感性提供了新的见解。