Arousal state alters brain network switching and moderates cognitive task performance
Kundert-Obando, K.; Pourmotabbed, H.; Kaur, K.; Wang, S.; Gomez Lagandara, J.; Goodale, S. E.; Martin, C.; Morgan, V. L.; Englot, D. J.; Uddin, L. Q.; Rubinov, M.; Chang, C.
Show abstract
Arousal relates to cognitive performance, but the neural underpinnings of this relationship remain unclear. One candidate marker is switching rate, a dynamic measure that has been linked to cognition and has been speculated to be sensitive to arousal. However, whether switching rate is altered across arousal states has not been directly tested. Here, using fMRI together with concurrent eye monitoring and EEG, we examined how the switching rates of the default mode, salience, and central executive networks are altered across arousal states. Default mode and anterior salience networks exhibited significant differences in switching rates across arousal states determined with eye tracking. Notably, thalamic subregions showed arousal-dependent changes in switching rate that were replicated across independent datasets and arousal measures. Additionally, arousal moderated the relationship between average network switching and performance on a relational processing task. Together, these findings suggest that switching rate may index neural underpinnings of arousal-dependent cognition.
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