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Global cortical arousal effects in fMRI reveal brain markers of state and trait anxiety

Kimberly Kundert-Obando; Terra Lee; Caroline G. Martin; Kamalpreet Kaur; Juan Gomez Lagandara; Yamin Li; Jeffrey M. Harding; Shiyu Wang; Richard Song; Ruoqi Yang; Rithwik Guntaka; Sarah E. Goodale; Roza G. Bayrak; Lucina Q. Uddin; Martin Walter; Jeremy Hogeveen; Catie Chang (2026).泭.泭Cerebral Cortex, 36(2), bhag008.泭

This study explores how brain activity measured with functional MRI (fMRI) can help better understand and personalize the diagnosis and treatment of anxiety. Anxiety is not just a psychological experienceit also involves physical responses in the body, such as changes in heart rate and alertness (calledarousal). These bodily and brain-wide states can influence fMRI signals across the entire brain, often referred to as global signals. Traditionally, these global signals have been treated as noise or interference, but the researchers investigated whether they might actually contain meaningful information about anxiety.

To do this, the team analyzed fMRI data to identify patterns related to bothautonomic physiological activity(automatic body functions like heart rate) andcortical arousal(how alert or activated the brain is). They then examined how these patterns relate to two types of anxiety:state anxiety(temporary, situation-based anxiety) andtrait anxiety(a persons general tendency to feel anxious). The results showed clear links between these global brain signals and both forms of anxiety, with certain brain regions showing stronger associations. These patterns overlapped with well-known brain networks, including thedefault mode network, which is involved in self-reflection and internal thoughts.

Overall, the findings suggest that these global fMRI signals carry useful information about how anxiety is represented in the brain. This insight could help improve how anxiety is measured and understood, potentially leading to more personalized approaches to diagnosis and treatment.

Fig 1. Spatial association between global components and anxiety. a and b) Areas in which the FAI was significantly associated with state and trait

anxiety. c and d) Areas in which the GS was significantly associated with state and trait anxiety (GS was analyzed using a negative contrast). Maps show

the t-statistics thresholded at P <0.05 corrected.

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