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Hippocampal seed connectome-based modeling predicts the feeling of stress.

Citation
Goldfarb, E., et al. “Hippocampal Seed Connectome-Based Modeling Predicts The Feeling Of Stress.”. Nature Communications, p. 2650.
Center Yale University
Author Elizabeth Goldfarb V, Monica D Rosenberg, Dongju Seo, Todd Constable, Rajita Sinha
Abstract

Although the feeling of stress is ubiquitous, the neural mechanisms underlying this affective experience remain unclear. Here, we investigate functional hippocampal connectivity throughout the brain during an acute stressor and use machine learning to demonstrate that these networks can specifically predict the subjective feeling of stress. During a stressor, hippocampal connectivity with a network including the hypothalamus (known to regulate physiological stress) predicts feeling more stressed, whereas connectivity with regions such as dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (associated with emotion regulation) predicts less stress. These networks do not predict a subjective state unrelated to stress, and a nonhippocampal network does not predict subjective stress. Hippocampal networks are consistent, specific to the construct of subjective stress, and broadly informative across measures of subjective stress. This approach provides opportunities for relating hypothesis-driven functional connectivity networks to clinically meaningful subjective states. Together, these results identify hippocampal networks that modulate the feeling of stress.

Year of Publication
2020
Journal
Nature communications
Volume
11
Issue
1
Number of Pages
2650
Date Published
12/2020
ISSN Number
2041-1723
DOI
10.1038/s41467-020-16492-2
Alternate Journal
Nat Commun
PMID
32461583
PMCID
PMC7253445
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