Time-varying EEG networks of major depressive disorder during facial emotion tasks

Cogn Neurodyn. 2024 Oct;18(5):2605-2619. doi: 10.1007/s11571-024-10111-2. Epub 2024 Apr 20.

Abstract

Depression is a mental disease involved in emotional and cognitive impairments. Neuroimaging studies have found abnormalities in the structure and functional network of brain for major depressive disorder (MDD).However, neural mechanism of the dynamic connectivity for emotional attention of MDD is currently insufficient. In this study, event-related potentials (ERP) and time-varying network were analyzed to investigate attention bias and corresponding neural mechanisms induced by emotional facial stimuli. In the ERP results, N100 components in MDD had shorter latencies and smaller amplitudes than those in healthy controls (HC) for sad and fear faces. The P200 amplitudes induced by sad faces in MDD were significantly higher than those induced by happy and fear faces in MDD, and those induced by sad faces in HC. It was indicated that MDD patients had attention bias towards sad faces. For the time-varying network analysis, adaptive directed transfer function was explored to construct dynamic network connectivity. MDD patients had stronger information outflow from the right frontal region and weaker information outflow from parieto-occipital regions for sad faces. In addition, the network properties of sad faces were significantly correlated with PHQ-9 scores for MDD group. These findings may provide further explanation for understanding the MDD's neural mechanism of attention bias during facial emotional tasks.

Keywords: Adaptive directed transfer function (ADTF); Attention bias; Event-related potentials (ERP); Major depressive disorder (MDD); Network connectivity.