A multiverse analysis of stomach-brain coupling in humans

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Abstract

The gastric-brain axis is a burgeoning field of neuroscience; however, inferences from neuroimaging research are often constrained by the high dimensionality of methodological choices potentially leading to disparate outcomes. This study addresses such concerns by performing a multiverse analysis of gastric-brain coupling in humans. We systematically evaluated 1,728 unique analytic pipelines using electroencephalography (EEG) and electrogastrography (EGG) data to quantify the robustness of observed gastric-brain coupling. Our results reveal that whilst analytic decisions influence the magnitude of observed coupling, at the group level the phenomenon remains relatively robust across the parameter space. High inter-individual variance can, however, be observed. Coupling was observed in the alpha, theta, and beta bands, with the latter two bands showing robust coupling across the largest number of electrodes. Robust coupling across frequency bands was primarily seen in medial electrodes, with some left lateral coupling also observed. Overall, these findings suggest that gastric-brain coupling is likely to be a robust physiological feature in healthy participants, providing a stable foundation for future studies.

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