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Functional Connectivity of Corticostriatal Circuitry and Psychosis-Like Experiences in the General Community

Authors :
Ben J. Harrison
Andrew Zalesky
Linden Parkes
Francesco Sforazzini
Christos Pantelis
Alex Fornito
Kristina Sabaroedin
Ari Pinar
Amy Finlay
Vanessa Cropley
Beth Patricia Johnson
Mark A. Bellgrove
Jeggan Tiego
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2018.

Abstract

BackgroundPsychotic symptoms are proposed lie on a continuum, ranging from isolated psychosis-like experiences (PLEs) in non-clinical populations to frank disorder. Here, we investigate neurobiological correlates of this symptomatologic continuum by examining whether functional connectivity of dorsal corticostriatal circuitry, which is disrupted in patients and high-risk individuals, is associated with the severity of subclinical PLEs.MethodsA community sample of 672 adults with no history of psychiatric or neurological illnesses completed a battery of seven questionnaires spanning various PLE domains. Principal component analysis (PCA) estimated major dimensions of PLEs from the questionnaires. PCA dimension scores were then correlated with whole-brain voxelwise functional connectivity (FC) maps of the striatum in a subset of 353 participants who completed a resting-state neuroimaging protocol.ResultsPCA identified two dimensions of PLEs accounting for 62.57% of variance in the measures, corresponding to positive and negative PLEs. Reduced FC between the dorsal striatum and prefrontal cortex correlated with higher positive PLEs. Negative PLEs correlated with increased FC between the dorsal striatum and visual and sensorimotor areas. In the ventral corticostriatal system, positive and negative PLEs were both associated with FC between the ventro-rostral putamen and sensorimotor cortices.ConclusionsConsistent with past findings in patients and high-risk individuals, subthreshold positive symptomatology is associated with reduced FC of the dorsal circuit. These findings suggest that the connectivity of this circuit tracks the expression of psychotic phenomena across a broad spectrum of severity, extending from the subclinical domain to clinical diagnosis.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....367502fd7d9e06569bc0f85b5625c9ec