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The Limbic Overload Hypothesis of Hypomanic Vulnerability: A Dynamic Biosocial Perspective

Pushkarskaya, H.; Pearlson, G.; Pittenger, C.

2026-05-28 neuroscience
10.64898/2026.05.25.727695 bioRxiv
Show abstract

Hypomanic tendencies are associated with elevated goal-directed behavior, creativity, charisma, sociability, and entrepreneurial drive, but also with mood instability, irritability, impulsive persistence, and elevated risk for bipolar disorder and other psychopathology. Existing models often emphasize unidimensional constructs such as reward sensitivity or behavioral activation, yet these approaches incompletely capture the dynamic and often contradictory nature of the hypomanic temperament. We propose the Limbic Overload Hypothesis of Hypomanic Vulnerability, a dynamic biosocial framework suggesting that hypomanic tendencies reflect a persistent pattern of elevated engagement despite potential loss, coupled with reduced integration of negative emotional experience into subsequent behavioral regulation. Over time, this pattern may contribute to progressive "limbic overload," characterized by increasing emotional dysregulation, hypersensitivity to salient experiences, and vulnerability to psychopathology. Integrating evidence from personality research, affective neuroscience, and preliminary neuroimaging findings, we propose a dynamic cortico-limbic model linking prefrontal-limbic coordination, loss tolerance, emotional updating, and social reinforcement cycles. Preliminary pilot data suggest that individual differences in hypomanic tendencies are reflected not simply in baseline cortico-limbic organization, but in dynamic neural reconfiguration across pre-task resting-state [->] task [->] post-task resting-state transitions during loss-related decision making. Specifically, elevated hypomanic tendencies were associated with persistently elevated tolerance of potential losses and reduced integration of negative emotional information into subsequent behavioral regulation. We further propose that social connectedness and cognitive-emotional integration may mitigate progressive limbic overload and contribute to resilience. Together, this framework generates experimentally testable predictions regarding the neural, behavioral, and social processes underlying hypomanic vulnerability and resilience.

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