| Literature DB >> 30924854 |
Laetitia Mwilambwe-Tshilobo1, Tian Ge2, Minqi Chong3, Michael A Ferguson4, Bratislav Misic1, Anthony L Burrow5, Richard M Leahy3, R Nathan Spreng1,6.
Abstract
Social relationships imbue life with meaning, whereas loneliness diminishes one's sense of meaning in life. Yet the extent of interdependence between these psychological constructs remains poorly understood. We took a multivariate network approach to examine resting-state fMRI functional connectivity's association with loneliness and meaning in a large cohort of adults (N = 942). Loneliness and meaning in life were negatively correlated with one another. In their relationship with individually parcelled whole-brain measures of functional connectivity, a significant and reliable pattern was observed. Greater loneliness was associated with dense, and less modular, connections between default, frontoparietal, attention and perceptual networks. A greater sense of life meaning was associated with increased, and more modular, connectivity between default and limbic networks. Low loneliness was associated with more modular brain connectivity, and lower life meaning was associated with higher between-network connectivity. These findings advance our understanding of loneliness and life meaning as distinct, yet interdependent, features of sociality. The results highlight a potential role of the default network as a central hub, providing a putative neural mechanism for shifting between feelings of isolation and purpose.Entities:
Keywords: individual differences; partial least squares; personality; resting-state functional connectivity
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30924854 PMCID: PMC6523421 DOI: 10.1093/scan/nsz021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci ISSN: 1749-5016 Impact factor: 3.436
Sample Demographics
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| Age | 28.04 | 3.45 | 23–37 |
| Loneliness | 50.97 | 8.51 | 37.6–82.9 |
| Meaning & Purpose | 51.91 | 8.73 | 29.4–71.6 |
| MMSE | 29.05 | 0.99 | 23–30 |
| Neuroticism | 16.42 | 7.34 | 0–43 |
| Extroversion | 30.73 | 6.04 | 10–47 |
| Agreeableness | 32.12 | 4.95 | 13–45 |
| Conscientiousness | 34.56 | 5.91 | 11–48 |
| Openness | 28.33 | 6.26 | 10–47 |
| Positive Affect | 50.22 | 7.83 | 21.9–71.6 |
Fig. 1Behavioral PLS results. Analysis revealed one significant latent variable (LV). The functional connections that most reliably express the brain/behavior correlations thresholded at 95% bootstrap ratio. The pattern of connectivity for LV1 depicted in (A) blue represent the connectivity weights for LV1 that covary negatively with loneliness, while those in (B) red covary positively with meaning in life (MIL). The top 2% connections are shown for each. (C) Correlations between participants’ brain connectivity scores and behavioral measures for LV1. Error bars indicate the 95% confidence intervals derived from the bootstrap estimate. Scatter plots show the relationship captured by the PLS analysis for individual brain connectivity scores corrected for age, gender, positive affect, and personality measures as a function of loneliness (D) and MIL (E).
Fig. 2Functional network organization. (A) The correlation matrix of reliable pairwise connections associated with loneliness and meaning in life (MIL; thresholded bootstrap ratio ± 2.0 to 3.5). Significant contributions of resting-state network pairs to the connectivity pattern for the (B) negative expression of the first latent variable (LV1) and (C) positive expression of LV1. Sagittal and axial views of the resting-state functional connectivity pattern associated (D) loneliness and (E) MIL. The colors indicate the nodes that belong to the same module and node size is proportional to the number of edges connecting it to the network. VIS = visual; SOM = somatomotor; DAN = dorsal attention; VAN = ventral attention, LIM = limbic, FPN = frontoparietal network; DN = default network.
Fig. 3Cortical surface maps of the resting-state functional connectivity (RSFC) modules. (a) the modular organization for RSFC defined by 7 network parcellation of Yeo . Modular organization of the connectivity pattern associated with (b) high-loneliness/low-meaning in life and (c) high-meaning in life/low-loneliness. Color-coding brain regions according the module assignment in (a).