When self comes to a wandering mind: Brain representations and dynamics of self-generated concepts in spontaneous thought

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Abstract

Self-relevant concepts are major building blocks of spontaneous thought, and their dynamics in a natural stream of thought are likely to reveal one's internal states that are important for mental health. Here, we conducted a functional magnetic resonance imaging experiment (n = 62) to examine brain representations and dynamics of self-generated concepts in the context of spontaneous thought using a newly developed free association-based thought sampling task. The dynamics of conceptual associations were predictive of individual differences in general negative affectivity, replicating across multiple datasets (n = 196). Reflecting on self-generated concepts strongly engaged brain regions linked to autobiographical memory, conceptual processes, emotion, and autonomic regulation, including the medial prefrontal and medial temporal subcortical structures. Multivariate pattern- based predictive modeling revealed that the neural representations of valence became more person-specific as the level of perceived self-relevance increased. Overall, this study sheds light on how self-generated concepts in spontaneous thought construct inner affective states and idiosyncrasies.

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APA

Kim, B., Andrews-Hanna, J. R., Han, J., Lee, E., & Woo, C. W. (2022). When self comes to a wandering mind: Brain representations and dynamics of self-generated concepts in spontaneous thought. Science Advances, 8(35). https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.abn8616

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