Part of brain network much bigger in people with depression, scientists find
Briefly

The findings revealed that people with depression exhibit a 73% expansion in the frontostriatal salience network, indicating a significant alteration in brain structure.
Dr. Charles Lynch noted that the enlargement of the brain area associated with reward and threat attention reduces space for neighboring networks, impacting mental health processes.
Using precision functional mapping, researchers compared fMRI data from 141 depressed individuals with that of 37 healthy controls to understand structural differences in brain organization.
The study observed that while the size of the salience network remained stable, synchronization of brain signals diminished in relation to specific depressive symptoms.
Read at www.theguardian.com
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