Association between long-range temporal correlations in intrinsic EEG activity and subjective sense of identity
Abstract The long-range temporal correlation (LRTC) in resting-state intrinsic brain activity is known to be associated with temporal behavioral patterns, including decision making based on internal criteria such as self-knowledge. However, the association between the neuronal LRTC and the subjectiv...
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doaj-fa21ac4acb0a4f33b31ea67dbdaa825b2021-01-17T12:30:34ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222021-01-0111111110.1038/s41598-020-79444-2Association between long-range temporal correlations in intrinsic EEG activity and subjective sense of identityKazumi Sugimura0Yasuhiro Iwasa1Ryota Kobayashi2Tatsuru Honda3Junya Hashimoto4Shiho Kashihara5Jianhong Zhu6Kazuki Yamamoto7Tsuyoshi Kawahara8Mayo Anno9Risa Nakagawa10Kai Hatano11Takashi Nakao12Graduate School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Hiroshima UniversityGraduate School of Education, Hiroshima UniversityGraduate School of Education, Hiroshima UniversityGraduate School of Education, Hiroshima UniversityGraduate School of Education, Hiroshima UniversityGraduate School of Education, Hiroshima UniversityGraduate School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Hiroshima UniversityGraduate School of Education, Hiroshima UniversityGraduate School of Education, Hiroshima UniversityFaculty of Education, Hiroshima UniversityGraduate School of Education, Hiroshima UniversityFaculty of Liberal Arts and Science, Osaka Prefecture UniversityGraduate School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Hiroshima UniversityAbstract The long-range temporal correlation (LRTC) in resting-state intrinsic brain activity is known to be associated with temporal behavioral patterns, including decision making based on internal criteria such as self-knowledge. However, the association between the neuronal LRTC and the subjective sense of identity remains to be explored; in other words, whether our subjective sense of consistent self across time relates to the temporal consistency of neural activity. The present study examined the relationship between the LRTC of resting-state scalp electroencephalography (EEG) and a subjective sense of identity measured by the Erikson Psychosocial Stage Inventory (EPSI). Consistent with our prediction based on previous studies of neuronal-behavioral relationships, the frontocentral alpha LRTC correlated negatively with identity confusion. Moreover, from the descriptive analyses, centroparietal beta LRTC showed negative correlations with identity confusion, and frontal theta LRTC showed positive relationships with identity synthesis. These results suggest that more temporal consistency (reversely, less random noise) in intrinsic brain activity is associated with less confused and better-synthesized identity. Our data provide further evidence that the LRTC of intrinsic brain activity might serve as a noise suppression mechanism at the psychological level.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-79444-2 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Kazumi Sugimura Yasuhiro Iwasa Ryota Kobayashi Tatsuru Honda Junya Hashimoto Shiho Kashihara Jianhong Zhu Kazuki Yamamoto Tsuyoshi Kawahara Mayo Anno Risa Nakagawa Kai Hatano Takashi Nakao |
spellingShingle |
Kazumi Sugimura Yasuhiro Iwasa Ryota Kobayashi Tatsuru Honda Junya Hashimoto Shiho Kashihara Jianhong Zhu Kazuki Yamamoto Tsuyoshi Kawahara Mayo Anno Risa Nakagawa Kai Hatano Takashi Nakao Association between long-range temporal correlations in intrinsic EEG activity and subjective sense of identity Scientific Reports |
author_facet |
Kazumi Sugimura Yasuhiro Iwasa Ryota Kobayashi Tatsuru Honda Junya Hashimoto Shiho Kashihara Jianhong Zhu Kazuki Yamamoto Tsuyoshi Kawahara Mayo Anno Risa Nakagawa Kai Hatano Takashi Nakao |
author_sort |
Kazumi Sugimura |
title |
Association between long-range temporal correlations in intrinsic EEG activity and subjective sense of identity |
title_short |
Association between long-range temporal correlations in intrinsic EEG activity and subjective sense of identity |
title_full |
Association between long-range temporal correlations in intrinsic EEG activity and subjective sense of identity |
title_fullStr |
Association between long-range temporal correlations in intrinsic EEG activity and subjective sense of identity |
title_full_unstemmed |
Association between long-range temporal correlations in intrinsic EEG activity and subjective sense of identity |
title_sort |
association between long-range temporal correlations in intrinsic eeg activity and subjective sense of identity |
publisher |
Nature Publishing Group |
series |
Scientific Reports |
issn |
2045-2322 |
publishDate |
2021-01-01 |
description |
Abstract The long-range temporal correlation (LRTC) in resting-state intrinsic brain activity is known to be associated with temporal behavioral patterns, including decision making based on internal criteria such as self-knowledge. However, the association between the neuronal LRTC and the subjective sense of identity remains to be explored; in other words, whether our subjective sense of consistent self across time relates to the temporal consistency of neural activity. The present study examined the relationship between the LRTC of resting-state scalp electroencephalography (EEG) and a subjective sense of identity measured by the Erikson Psychosocial Stage Inventory (EPSI). Consistent with our prediction based on previous studies of neuronal-behavioral relationships, the frontocentral alpha LRTC correlated negatively with identity confusion. Moreover, from the descriptive analyses, centroparietal beta LRTC showed negative correlations with identity confusion, and frontal theta LRTC showed positive relationships with identity synthesis. These results suggest that more temporal consistency (reversely, less random noise) in intrinsic brain activity is associated with less confused and better-synthesized identity. Our data provide further evidence that the LRTC of intrinsic brain activity might serve as a noise suppression mechanism at the psychological level. |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-79444-2 |
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