Subjective sleep quality in healthy young adults moderates associations of sensitivity to punishment and reward with functional connectivity of regions relevant for insomnia disorder

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Abstract

Chronic unhealthy sleeping behaviours are a major risk factor for the emergence of mood and anxiety disorders. Nevertheless, we are still lacking understanding why some individuals are more prone than others to affective dysregulation caused by sleep disruption. With preliminary evidence suggesting that brain activity during positive and negative emotional processing might play an important modulating role, we conducted whole-brain resting-state functional connectivity analyses in a large cohort of healthy young adults (N = 155). Using regions consistently affected in insomnia disorder as seeds, we investigated sleep quality-related neural connectivity patterns that were both insensitive and sensitive to the interactions with individual measures of reward and punishment processing, additionally assessing the links with indices of emotional health. Majority of the findings reflected interactions between sleep quality and reinforcement sensitivity, with the opposite associations reported in the good and poor sleepers. One of such connections, the coupling between precentral gyrus and posterior insula, was additionally negatively linked to trait anxiety, with the lowest connectivity values observed in poor sleepers with higher sensitivity to punishment. In turn, the only finding associated solely with sleep quality, i.e. coupling between subgenual anterior cingulate cortex and thalamus, was also related to the habitual use of emotion suppression strategies. As such, the present study provides evidence that affective functioning plays an essential role in determining the effects of poor sleep quality on brain connectivity and emotional health, providing a plausible mechanism for why certain individuals are more susceptible to sleep-related affective dysregulation than others.

Highlights

  • Functional connectivity of insomnia-related brain regions is altered in poor sleepers

  • Sleep quality interacts with reinforcement sensitivity for most of such effects

  • Distinct sleep-related mechanisms are linked to trait anxiety and emotion suppression

  • Poor sleep and high punishment sensitivity increase the risk of affect dysregulation.

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