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Resting State Dynamics in People with Varying Degrees of Anxiety and Mindfulness: A Nonlinear and Nonstationary Perspective.

Authors :
Jaiswal, Satish
Huang, Shih-Lin
Juan, Chi-Hung
Huang, Norden E.
Liang, Wei-Kuang
Source :
Neuroscience. May2023, Vol. 519, p177-197. 21p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

• An electrophysiological study showing the dominance of anxiety over mindfulness. • Advanced EEG analysis methods accounting for nonlinearity and non-stationarity. • Anxiety may be linked to higher arousal reflected by higher delta and theta power. • Higher electrophysiological arousal in anxious people might be due to uncertainty. Anxiety and mindfulness are two inversely linked traits shown to be involved in various physiological domains. The current study used resting state electroencephalography (EEG) to explore differences between people with low mindfulness-high anxiety (LMHA) (n = 29) and high mindfulness-low anxiety (HMLA) (n = 27). The resting EEG was collected for a total of 6 min, with a randomized sequence of eyes closed and eyes opened conditions. Two advanced EEG analysis methods, Holo-Hilbert Spectral Analysis and Holo-Hilbert cross-frequency phase clustering (HHCFPC) were employed to estimate the power-based amplitude modulation of carrier frequencies, and cross-frequency coupling between low and high frequencies, respectively. The presence of higher oscillation power across the delta and theta frequencies in the LMHA group than the HMLA group might have been due to the similarity between the resting state and situations of uncertainty, which reportedly triggers motivational and emotional arousal. Although these two groups were formed based on their trait anxiety and trait mindfulness scores, it was anxiety that was found to be significant predictor of the EEG power, not mindfulness. It led us to conclude that it might be anxiety, not mindfulness, which might have contributed to higher electrophysiological arousal. Additionally, a higher δ-β and δ-γ CFC in LMHA suggested greater local–global neural integration, consequently a greater functional association between cortex and limbic system than in the HMLA group. The present cross-sectional study may guide future longitudinal studies on anxiety aiming with interventions such as mindfulness to characterize the individuals based on their resting state physiology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03064522
Volume :
519
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Neuroscience
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
163846862
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroscience.2023.03.012