PsychologyNature Mental Health
Recent advances in the neuroscience of spontaneous and off-task thought: implications for mental health
A. Kucyi, J. W. Y. Kam, et al.
People spend 30–50% of awake life off-task; this review synthesizes neuroscience advances linking spontaneous thought and mind-wandering to the default mode network, hippocampal memory processes (sharp-wave ripples, replay), and neuromodulatory systems, and explores how distinct brain states relate to adaptive or maladaptive mental health outcomes and new avenues for personalized biomarkers and therapies. This research was conducted by Aaron Kucyi, Julia W. Y. Kam, Jessica R. Andrews-Hanna, Kalina Christoff, and Susan Whitfield-Gabrieli.
Related Publications
Explore these studies to deepen your understanding
Adjacent work that informs or extends this paper's methodology and findings.
Medicine and Health
Increasing Effectiveness and Equity in Strengthening Health Research Capacity Using Data and Metrics: Recent Advances of the ESSENCE Mechanism
P. H. Kilmarx, T. Maitin, et al.
Psychology
The role of positive emotion in harmful health behavior: Implications for theory and public health campaigns
K. Wang, V. W. Rees, et al.
Psychology
The development of cognitive flexibility and its implications for mental health disorders
K. Tong, X. Fu, et al.
Psychology
Not all mindfulness is equal: certain facets of mindfulness have important implications for well-being and mental health across the lifespan
N. J. Johnson, R. J. Smith, et al.

