Zareba Michal Rafal, Davydova Tatiana, Palomar-García María-Ángeles, Adrián-Ventura Jesús, Costumero Victor, Visser Maya
Neuropsychology and Functional Neuroimaging Group, Department of Basic and Clinical Psychology and Psychobiology, Jaume I University, 12071, Castellón de la Plana, Spain.
Neuropsychology and Functional Neuroimaging Group, Department of Basic and Clinical Psychology and Psychobiology, Jaume I University, 12071, Castellón de la Plana, Spain.
Sleep Med. 2025 Jul;131:106527. doi: 10.1016/j.sleep.2025.106527. Epub 2025 Apr 18.
Chronic unhealthy sleeping behaviours are a major risk factor for the emergence of mood and anxiety disorders. Nevertheless, we are still lacking understanding why some individuals are more prone than others to affective dysregulation caused by sleep disruption. With preliminary evidence suggesting that brain activity during positive and negative emotional processing might play an important modulating role, we conducted whole-brain resting-state functional connectivity analyses in a large cohort of healthy young adults (N = 155). Using regions consistently affected in insomnia disorder as seeds, we investigated sleep quality-related neural connectivity patterns that were both insensitive and sensitive to the interactions with individual measures of reward and punishment processing, additionally assessing the links with indices of emotional health. The majority of the findings reflected interactions between sleep quality and reinforcement sensitivity, with the opposite associations reported in the good and poor sleepers. One of such connections, the coupling between precentral gyrus and posterior insula, was additionally negatively linked to trait anxiety, with the lowest connectivity values observed in poor sleepers with higher sensitivity to punishment. In turn, the only finding associated solely with sleep quality, i.e. coupling between subgenual anterior cingulate cortex and thalamus, was also related to the habitual use of emotion suppression strategies. As such, the present study provides evidence that reinforcement sensitivity plays an essential role in understanding the associations of poor sleep quality with brain connectivity and emotional health, hinting at a potential link that may help explain individual differences in susceptibility to sleep-related affective dysregulation.
长期不健康的睡眠行为是情绪和焦虑障碍出现的主要危险因素。然而,我们仍不清楚为什么有些人比其他人更容易因睡眠中断而出现情感失调。有初步证据表明,在积极和消极情绪处理过程中的大脑活动可能起着重要的调节作用,我们对一大群健康的年轻人(N = 155)进行了全脑静息态功能连接分析。以失眠症中持续受影响的区域为种子点,我们研究了与睡眠质量相关的神经连接模式,这些模式对与奖励和惩罚处理的个体测量指标的相互作用既不敏感也敏感,此外还评估了与情绪健康指标的联系。大多数研究结果反映了睡眠质量和强化敏感性之间的相互作用,在睡眠良好者和睡眠不佳者中报告的关联相反。其中一种连接,中央前回和后岛叶之间的耦合,还与特质焦虑呈负相关,在对惩罚更敏感的睡眠不佳者中观察到最低的连接值。反过来,唯一仅与睡眠质量相关的发现,即膝下前扣带回皮质和丘脑之间的耦合,也与习惯性使用情绪抑制策略有关。因此,本研究提供了证据,表明强化敏感性在理解睡眠质量差与大脑连接和情绪健康之间的关联中起着重要作用,暗示了一个潜在的联系,可能有助于解释个体在与睡眠相关的情感失调易感性方面的差异。