| Literature DB >> 34875687 |
Christopher J Hyatt1, Bruce E Wexler2, Brian Pittman2, Alycia Nicholson1, Godfrey D Pearlson1,3, Silvia Corbera2,4, Morris D Bell2,5, Kevin Pelphrey6, Vince D Calhoun7, Michal Assaf1,2.
Abstract
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and schizophrenia (SZ) are separate clinical entities but share deficits in social-emotional processing and static neural functional connectivity patterns. We compared patients' dynamic functional network connectivity (dFNC) state engagement with typically developed (TD) individuals during social-emotional processing after initially characterizing such dynamics in TD. Young adults diagnosed with ASD (n = 42), SZ (n = 41), or TD (n = 55) completed three functional MRI runs, viewing social-emotional videos with happy, sad, or neutral content. We examined dFNC of 53 spatially independent networks extracted using independent component analysis and applied k-means clustering to windowed dFNC matrices, identifying four unique whole-brain dFNC states. TD showed differential engagement (fractional time, mean dwell time) in three states as a function of emotion. During Happy videos, patients spent less time than TD in a happy-associated state and instead spent more time in the most weakly connected state. During Sad videos, only ASD spent more time than TD in a sad-associated state. Additionally, only ASD showed a significant relationship between dFNC measures and alexithymia and social-emotional recognition task scores, potentially indicating different neural processing of emotions in ASD and SZ. Our results highlight the importance of examining temporal whole-brain reconfiguration of FNC, indicating engagement in unique emotion-specific dFNC states.Entities:
Keywords: autism spectrum disorder; emotion processing; functional network connectivity; schizophrenia; social cognition
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 34875687 PMCID: PMC9376868 DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhab423
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cereb Cortex ISSN: 1047-3211 Impact factor: 4.861