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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2024 Jun 1.
Published in final edited form as: Psychol Med. 2022 Jan 7;53(8):3322–3334. doi: 10.1017/S0033291721005304

Table 3.

Summary of regions that showed associations with baseline symptoms or symptom trajectories, while accounting for other cortical and subcortical regions

Lobe Psychotic-like experiences Depressive symptoms Anxiety symptoms
Region Metric TPa ↑↓b Metric TPa ↑↓b Metric TPa ↑↓b
Temporal Transverse temporal Thickness Slope ↑↑ Middle temporal Thickness Baseline ↑↑ Entorhinal Area Baseline ↑↑
Fusiform Thickness Slope ↑↓ Inferior temporal Thickness Baseline ↑↓ Temporal pole Area Baseline ↑↓
Middle temporal Area Slope ↑↓ Entorhinal Area Baseline ↑↑ Fusiform Thickness Slope ↑↓
Parahippocampal Area Baseline ↑↓
Occipital Lateral occipital Thickness Slope ↑↑
Parietal Postcentral Thickness Baseline ↑↓ Precuneus Thickness Baseline ↑↑
Inferior parietal Thickness Slope ↑↓
Supramarginal Area Slope ↑↑
Limbic Posterior cingulate Area Baseline ↑↑ Isthmus cingulate Thickness Baseline ↑↑
Posterior cingulate Area Baseline ↑↑
Frontal Precentral Thickness Baseline ↑↓ Superior frontal Thickness Baseline ↑↓ Superior frontal Thickness Baseline ↑↓
Superior frontal Area Baseline ↑↓ Precentral Area Baseline ↑↓ Caudal middle frontal Thickness Slope ↑↑
Rostral middle frontal Thickness Slope ↑↓
a

Analysis timepoint.

b

Direction of the association, ↑↓ indicates that as thickness/area/volume goes down, symptoms increase, while ↑↑ indicates that as thickness goes up, symptoms go up.