1. Conscientiousness associated with efficiency of the salience/ventral attention network: Replication in three samples using individualized parcellation.
- Author
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Sassenberg, Tyler A., Burton, Philip C., Mwilambwe-Tshilobo, Laetitia, Jung, Rex E., Rustichini, Aldo, Spreng, R. Nathan, and DeYoung, Colin G.
- Subjects
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CONSCIENTIOUSNESS , *PREFRONTAL cortex , *FUNCTIONAL connectivity , *KNOWLEDGE transfer , *SALIENCE network - Abstract
• Conscientiousness was associated with nodes in salience/ventral attention network. • Associations with efficiency among these nodes were replicated in 3 samples. • Associations were unique to conscientiousness relative to the other Big 5. • Associations did not generalize to efficiency of other important networks. • Supports theory that neural processes in prioritizing goals influence this trait. Conscientiousness, and related constructs impulsivity and self-control, have been related to structural and functional properties of regions in the prefrontal cortex (PFC) and anterior insula. Network-based conceptions of brain function suggest that these regions belong to a single large-scale network, labeled the salience/ventral attention network (SVAN). The current study tested associations between conscientiousness and resting-state functional connectivity in this network using two community samples (N's = 244 and 239) and data from the Human Connectome Project (N = 1000). Individualized parcellation was used to improve functional localization accuracy and facilitate replication. Functional connectivity was measured using an index of network efficiency, a graph theoretical measure quantifying the capacity for parallel information transfer within a network. Efficiency of a set of parcels in the SVAN was significantly associated with conscientiousness in all samples. Findings are consistent with a theory of conscientiousness as a function of variation in neural networks underlying effective prioritization of goals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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