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Mind blanking is a distinct mental state linked to a recurrent brain profile of globally positive connectivity during ongoing mentation
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.
-
Abstract
- Mind blanking (MB) is a waking state during which we do not report any mental content, challenging the view of a constantly thought-oriented brain. Here, we comprehensively characterize the MB’s neurobehavioral profile with the aim to delineate its role during ongoing mentation. Using fMRI experience-sampling, we show that MB is reported less frequently, faster, and with low transitional dynamics among other mental states, pointing to its role as a transient mental relay. Regarding its neural underpinnings, we observe higher global signal amplitude during MB reports, indicating a distinct physiological substrate. Using the time-varying functional connectome MB reports get classified with high accuracy, suggesting that MB has a unique neural composition. Indeed, a pattern of globally positive-phase coherence shows the highest similarity to the connectivity patterns associated with MB reports. We observe that this pattern’s rigid signal architecture hinders content reportability due to the brain’s inability to differentiate signals in an informative way. Collectively, we show that MB has a unique neurobehavioural profile, indicating that non-reportable mental events can happen during wakefulness. Our results add to the characterization of spontaneous mentation and pave the way for more mechanistic investigations of MB’s phenomenology.Significance StatementThe human mind is generally assumed to be thought-oriented. Mind blanking (MB) challenges this stance because it appears as if we are derived of any particular mental content to report. We here show that, during spontaneous thinking, MB is a mental state that happens by default, it has a unique behavioural profile, and it is of a rigid neural architecture that does not permit the formulation of reportable contents. Our work essentially proposes that non-reportable mental events can happen during wakefulness, and challenges the view of the mind as a constant thought-oriented operator.
- Subjects :
- Computer science
fluctuations
consciousness
Thinking
mental content
Connectome
Humans
Longitudinal Studies
signal regression
sleep
resting state
Default mode network
amplitude
Brain Mapping
Multidisciplinary
functional connectivity
Brain
Information flow
dynamics
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
mind blanking
experience sampling
networks
impact
Wakefulness
Neuroscience
Neurocognitive
Blanking
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....6e7464996bfce691f165d13bc7565fb8