Long-Term Stress and Trait Anxiety Affect Brain Network Balance in Dynamic Cognitive Computations

Author:

Liu Liangying12ORCID,Wu Jianhui3,Geng Haiyang13,Liu Chao13ORCID,Luo Yuejia134,Luo Jing5,Qin Shaozheng126

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience and Learning & IDG/McGovern Institute for Brain Research, Faculty of Psychology at Beijing Normal University, Beijing 100875, China

2. Beijing Key Laboratory of Brain Imaging and Connectomics, Beijing Normal University, Beijing 100875, China

3. Center for Brain Disorder and Cognitive Science, Shenzhen University, Shenzhen 518061, China

4. Center for Emotion and Brain, Shenzhen Institute of Neuroscience, Shenzhen 518061, China

5. School of Psychology, Capital Normal University, Beijing 100048, China

6. Chinese Institute for Brain Research, Beijing 102206, China

Abstract

Abstract Long-term stress has a profound impact on executive functions. Trait anxiety is recognized as a vulnerable factor accounting for stress-induced adaptive or maladaptive effects. However, the neurocognitive mechanisms underlying long-term stress and trait anxiety interactions remain elusive. Here we investigated how long-term stress and trait anxiety interact to affect dynamic decisions during n-back task performance by altering functional brain network balance. In comparison to controls, participants under long-term stress experienced higher psychological distress and exhibited faster evidence accumulation but had a lower decision-threshold when performing n-back tasks in general. This corresponded with hyper-activation in the anterior insula, less deactivation in the default-mode network, and stronger default-mode network decoupling with the frontoparietal network. Critically, high trait anxiety under long-term stress led to slower evidence accumulation through higher frontoparietal activity during cognitively demanding task, and increased decoupling between the default-mode and frontoparietal networks. Our findings suggest a neurocognitive model of how long-term stress and trait anxiety interplay to affect latent dynamic computations in executive functioning with adaptive and maladaptive changes, and inform personalized assessments and preventions for stress vulnerability.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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