Intrinsic Brain Networks Underlying the Experience and Expression of Subclinical Anxiety
Shruti Kinger, Mrinmoy Chakrabarty

TL;DR
This study investigates how different components of subclinical anxiety are supported by distinct intrinsic brain networks using resting-state functional connectivity analysis.
Contribution
It identifies specific brain connectivity patterns associated with behavioral, physiological, and subjective anxiety components in subclinical individuals.
Findings
Higher subclinical anxiety linked to faster responses under threat.
ACC-insula connectivity related to behavioral responses.
ACC-OFC connectivity associated with physiological arousal.
Abstract
Anxiety includes behavioural, physiological, and subjective components that do not always align, and it remains unclear whether these dimensions are supported by distinct intrinsic brain networks. Guided by the two-system framework, we tested whether resting-state functional connectivity (rsFC) differentiates these components in subclinical anxiety. Forty-seven young adults spanning a range of subclinical anxiety levels completed a threat anticipation task measuring behavioral responses (reaction time) and physiological arousal (skin conductance), along with the NIH Fear-Affect self-report of anxiety severity. These measures were related to rsFC using region-of-interest analyses. Higher subclinical anxiety was associated with faster responses under temporally uncertain threat, consistent with increased vigilance, while no association was found with physiological arousal. At the neural…
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