Yang Xun, Zhou Ming, Lama Sunima, Chen Lizhou, Hu Xinyu, Wang Song, Chen Taolin, Shi Yan, Huang Xiaoqi, Gong Qiyong
Huaxi MR Research Center, Department of Radiology, West China Hospital of Sichuan UniversityChengdu, China; Department of Sociality and Psychology, Southwest University for NationalitiesChengdu, China.
Huaxi MR Research Center, Department of Radiology, West China Hospital of Sichuan University Chengdu, China.
Front Behav Neurosci. 2017 Mar 13;11:43. doi: 10.3389/fnbeh.2017.00043. eCollection 2017.
Male and female show significant differences in important behavioral features such as shyness, yet the neural substrates of these differences remain poorly understood. Previous neuroimaging studies have demonstrated that both shyness and social anxiety in healthy subjects are associated with increased activation in the fronto-limbic and cognitive control areas. However, it remains unknown whether these brain abnormalities would be shared by different genders. Therefore, in the current study, we used resting-state fMRI (r-fMRI) to investigate sex differences in intrinsic cerebral activity that may contribute to shyness and social anxiety. Sixty subjects (28 males, 32 females) participated in r-fMRI scans, and the amplitude of low-frequency fluctuations (ALFF) and fractional ALFF (fALFF) were used to measure the spontaneous regional cerebral activity in all subjects. We first compared the differences between male and female both in the ALFF and fALFF and then we also examined the whole brain correlation between the ALFF/fALFF and the severity of shyness as well as social anxiety by genders. Referring to shyness measure, we found a significant positive correlation between shyness scores (CBSS) and ALFF/fALFF value in the frontoparietal control network and a negative correlation in the cingulo-insular network in female; while in male, there is no such correlation. For the social anxiety level, we found positive correlations between Leibowitz Social Anxiety Scale (LSAS) scores and spontaneous activity in the frontal-limbic network in male and negative correlation between the frontal-parietal network; however, such correlation was not prominent in female. This pattern suggests that shy female individuals engaged a proactive control process, driven by a positive association with activity in frontoparietal network and negative association in cingulo-insular network, whereas social anxiety males relied more on a reactive control process, driven by a positive correlation of frontal-limbic network and negative correlation of frontoparietal network. Our results reveal that shyness or social anxiety is associated with disrupted spontaneous brain activity patterns and that these patterns are influenced by sex.
男性和女性在诸如害羞等重要行为特征上表现出显著差异,但这些差异的神经基础仍知之甚少。先前的神经影像学研究表明,健康受试者的害羞和社交焦虑都与额边缘和认知控制区域的激活增加有关。然而,这些大脑异常是否为不同性别所共有仍不清楚。因此,在本研究中,我们使用静息态功能磁共振成像(r-fMRI)来研究可能导致害羞和社交焦虑的大脑内在活动的性别差异。60名受试者(28名男性,32名女性)参与了r-fMRI扫描,低频波动幅度(ALFF)和分数ALFF(fALFF)被用于测量所有受试者的自发性局部脑活动。我们首先比较了男性和女性在ALFF和fALFF方面的差异,然后还按性别检查了ALFF/fALFF与害羞程度以及社交焦虑之间的全脑相关性。关于害羞测量,我们发现女性的害羞得分(CBSS)与额顶叶控制网络中的ALFF/fALFF值呈显著正相关,而在扣带回-脑岛网络中呈负相关;而在男性中则没有这种相关性。对于社交焦虑水平,我们发现男性的莱博维茨社交焦虑量表(LSAS)得分与额边缘网络中的自发活动呈正相关,与额顶叶网络呈负相关;然而,这种相关性在女性中并不显著。这种模式表明,害羞的女性个体参与了一个主动控制过程,由与额顶叶网络活动的正相关和扣带回-脑岛网络活动的负相关驱动,而社交焦虑的男性更多地依赖于一个反应性控制过程,由额边缘网络的正相关和额顶叶网络的负相关驱动。我们的结果表明,害羞或社交焦虑与自发脑活动模式的紊乱有关,并且这些模式受性别影响。