Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6256099 Behavioural Brain Research 2016 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Depression is associated with predominance of DMN over task-positive network (TPN).•This evidence has been obtained using fMRI in patients.•Here we used seed-based EEG oscillatory-power envelope correlation analysis.•Depressive symptoms were associated with predominance of DMN over TPN.•Implicated in depression mechanism may be in action even at preclinical stages.

Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) has been associated with predominance of the default-mode network (DMN) over the task-positive network (TPN), which is considered a neurobiological base for ruminative responding. It is not known whether this predominance is a signature of the full-blown MDD or it already exists at preclinical stages. Besides, all relevant evidence has been obtained using fMRI, which allows for a precise spatial characterization of resting state networks (RSNs), but their neural correlates remain elusive. Here we show that after leakage correction of beamformer-projected resting EEG time series, seed-based oscillatory-power envelope correlation analysis allows revealing RSNs with significant similarity to respective fMRI RSNs. In a non-clinical sample, depressive symptoms, as measured by the Beck Depression Inventory, are associated with predominance of DMN over TPN connectivity in the right insula and the right temporal lobe in the delta frequency band. These findings imply that in individuals with heightened level of depressive symptoms, emotional circuits are stronger connected with DMN than TPN and should be more easily engaged in self-referential rumination than in responding to environmental challenges. The study's findings are in agreement with fMRI evidence, thus confirming the neural base of the observed in fMRI research effects and showing that implicated in depression neural mechanism may already be in action even at preclinical stages.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Neuroscience Behavioral Neuroscience
Authors
, , , , ,