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Self-compassion, self-referential caudate circuitry, and adolescent suicide ideation

Psychology

Self-compassion, self-referential caudate circuitry, and adolescent suicide ideation

G. Liu, G. Hao, et al.

Discover how self-compassion is linked to brain connectivity and suicide ideation in adolescents. This groundbreaking research by Guannim Liu, Guijuan Hao, Natasha Das, Janani Rantunaga, Corey Schneider, Li Yang, and Karina Quevedo reveals that stronger connectivity in the left caudate during self-appraisal can potentially serve as a biomarker for suicide risk reduction.... show more
Abstract
Suicide is a leading cause of death in youth, with depression a proximal predictor. Identifying protective psychological factors against suicide ideation in depressed adolescents is critical. Self-compassion is inversely associated with suicide ideation, but underlying neural mechanisms are unclear. Given links between self-referential caudate activity, self-compassion, and suicide ideation, this study tested whether caudate functional connectivity during self-appraisal explains their relationship. Seventy-nine depressed youth and 36 healthy controls, while undergoing fMRI, evaluated whether auditorily presented phrases were self-descriptive from multiple social perspectives. Self-compassion and suicide ideation were assessed via self-report and interview-based measures. Higher self-compassion was associated with stronger left caudate functional connectivity with bilateral posterior superior temporal sulcus/temporoparietal junction (pSTS/TPJ), left middle temporal gyrus (MTG), and left middle occipital gyrus during positive versus negative self-appraisals. Stronger left caudate–left MTG connectivity mediated the association between higher self-compassion and lower suicide ideation, controlling for depression (non-suicidal ideation) severity, anxiety severity, and non-suicidal self-injury. Findings suggest left caudate–MTG connectivity during positive versus negative self-referential processing as a potential biomarker and intervention target to reduce suicide ideation in depressed youth, particularly in conjunction with self-compassion training.
Publisher
Translational Psychiatry
Published On
Aug 20, 2024
Authors
Guannim Liu, Guijuan Hao, Natasha Das, Janani Rantunaga, Corey Schneider, Li Yang, Karina Quevedo
Tags
self-compassion
suicide ideation
adolescents
fMRI
caudate connectivity
self-appraisal
mental health
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