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Home Exclusive Neuroimaging

Neuroticism is linked to altered communication between the brain’s emotional networks

by Karina Petrova
March 17, 2026
Reading Time: 4 mins read
[Adobe Stock]

[Adobe Stock]

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A recent study published in NeuroImage reveals that neuroticism is linked to altered communication between different brain networks rather than isolated brain activity. Researchers discovered that people with higher levels of this personality trait show increased connectivity between brain regions responsible for processing emotions, regulating memory, and detecting threats. These findings suggest that emotional instability arises from how the brain’s emotional hubs synchronize with other areas.

Marvin S. Meiering, a researcher at the Medical School Berlin, led the study alongside a team of scientists. The group wanted to understand the biological foundations of neuroticism, a personality trait involving a tendency to experience intense negative emotions on a regular basis. People with high levels of neuroticism often struggle to bounce back from stressful events and face a higher risk of developing mental health conditions like depression.

For a long time, researchers thought neuroticism was simply caused by an overly active amygdala. The amygdala is an almond-shaped structure deep inside the brain that acts as an emotional alarm system. It detects potential threats in the environment and triggers fear or anxiety responses, but recent scientific reviews have questioned this straightforward idea.

Newer theories propose a different mechanism for emotional instability. The focus has shifted toward how the amygdala communicates with other parts of the brain. One important partner is the hippocampus, a brain region primarily known for helping us form memories and navigate physical spaces.

Recent scientific models suggest the hippocampus also plays a role in creating time stamps for emotional experiences. It helps anchor our feelings to specific events and contexts. If the amygdala becomes too active, it might interrupt this time-stamping process.

Without clear boundaries, negative emotional memories can bleed into other situations. This causes bad feelings to persist long after a stressful event has ended. The researchers wanted to map how the amygdala interacts with the hippocampus in people with varying levels of neuroticism.

Another important brain area they examined is the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. This region sits near the front of the brain and acts like a control center. It is heavily involved in cognitive control, which includes the ability to regulate and calm emotional responses.

To investigate this, Meiering and his colleagues recruited 115 healthy adults between the ages of 18 and 45. The researchers used functional magnetic resonance imaging to monitor the participants’ brains. This scanning technology tracks blood flow in the brain, allowing scientists to see which areas are active in real time.

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While inside the scanner, the participants viewed a series of pictures. Some images showed human faces displaying negative emotions like fear, disgust, and sadness. Other images were simply neutral, scrambled patterns surrounded by colored borders.

The emotional faces used in the experiment came from a specialized database designed for psychological research. The pictures featured actors displaying specific, intense emotional states. This visual setup has a proven track record of reliably activating the brain regions responsible for processing negative feelings.

The researchers did not ask the participants to actively manage their feelings during the experiment. Instead, they gave the volunteers a simple task. The participants just had to identify the gender of the faces or the color of the borders around the scrambled images.

This simple activity ensured that any emotional regulation happening in the brain was completely automatic and unconscious. Before the brain scans, the participants also completed five different personality questionnaires. The researchers combined the results from these surveys into a single, highly accurate score for each person.

This mathematical approach helps eliminate the random errors that often happen when relying on just one survey. When analyzing the brain scans, the team first checked the isolated activity levels of specific brain regions. The results regarding isolated brain activity were not statistically significant.

The amygdala did not simply work harder or light up more in highly neurotic individuals. Instead, the differences appeared in the way different brain regions synchronized their activity. The researchers measured functional connectivity, which tracks how closely the activity patterns of two brain areas match up over time.

They found that people with higher neuroticism scores showed increased communication between the left amygdala and the left hippocampus. This hyperactive connection aligns with the newer theories about emotional memory. If the amygdala and hippocampus are constantly interacting during negative experiences, it might disrupt the brain’s ability to box up those emotions.

This biological quirk could explain why highly neurotic people struggle with lingering negative moods that generalize to safe situations. The researchers also discovered increased communication between the amygdala and the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. Because this prefrontal area usually calms emotions down, increased connectivity here might initially seem like a positive trait.

However, the researchers suspect it actually reflects an inefficient emotional control system. The brain of a highly neurotic person might have to work extra hard to manage negative feelings automatically. Their control centers must constantly communicate with the amygdala to keep baseline emotional reactions in check, which could leave them feeling emotionally drained.

Expanding their view to look at the entire brain, the research team found even more unique wiring patterns. The right amygdala showed strong connections to the anterior insula and the midcingulate cortex. Both of these brain areas are core components of the salience network.

The salience network is a large brain system that constantly scans the environment for important information. It helps the brain decide which external stimuli or internal feelings require immediate attention. Increased synchronization between the amygdala and this network suggests a persistent state of hypervigilance.

The brains of highly neurotic individuals seem specially wired to constantly hunt for potential threats. The anterior insula, in particular, helps bridge the gap between physical sensations and conscious emotions. Its strong connection to the amygdala during this experiment provides new biological evidence for the physical discomfort often reported by highly neurotic people.

Like all scientific investigations, this study comes with limitations. The imaging methods used can only show a relationship between brain connectivity and personality traits. They cannot prove that these specific brain patterns directly cause a person to become neurotic.

The researchers also noted that they only examined the participants at a single point in time. This makes it difficult to separate permanent personality traits from temporary bad moods. Future research will need to track participants over several years to see if these neural signatures remain stable over a lifetime.

Additionally, brain and behavior studies often struggle with small mathematical effect sizes. The researchers acknowledged that many of their findings would not pass traditional, strict statistical hurdles. To adapt, they relied on advanced statistical models that focus on the general size and direction of the brain patterns. Moving forward, scientists will need to replicate this experiment with thousands of participants to verify these subtle differences in brain connectivity.

The study, “Neuroticism is associated with increased amygdala connectivity to hippocampal and prefrontal regions during emotional face processing,” was authored by Marvin S. Meiering, David Weigner, Simone Grimm, and Sören Enge.

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