"Unveiling the Diverse Brain Mechanisms of Anxiety: A Neuroimaging Study"

1 min read
Source: PsyPost
"Unveiling the Diverse Brain Mechanisms of Anxiety: A Neuroimaging Study"
Photo: PsyPost
TL;DR Summary

Neuroimaging research published in Nature Communications reveals that anxious individuals use different brain regions and neural mechanisms to regulate their emotional action tendencies compared to non-anxious individuals. The study found that anxious individuals have a more excitable frontopolar cortex (FPl) and stronger connectivity between the FPl and the amygdala, a region involved in processing emotions. Anxious individuals also exhibited a shift in neural activation, relying more on the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) and the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) for emotional control. These findings contribute to a better understanding of how anxiety affects decision-making and behavior in social situations.

Share this article

Reading Insights

Total Reads

0

Unique Readers

1

Time Saved

4 min

vs 5 min read

Condensed

90%

96298 words

Want the full story? Read the original article

Read on PsyPost