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. 2020 Nov 20;10:20302. doi: 10.1038/s41598-020-76847-z

Figure 5.

Figure 5

Men showed a larger effect of perceived SES on brain network co-activation. Participant-level design salience score estimates from task PLS that were averaged to create Fig. 4A were extracted and analyzed by participant gender. Results revealed that network sensitivity to target SES was driven primarily by men in the sample. Men showed a significant effect of SES in their brain co-activation scores, as indicated by the asterisks, p < .001. Error bars indicate a 95% confidence interval in t-tests against zero, which represents the overall mean contribution to the latent variable across all task conditions and participants. In contrast with the seed and primary task PLS analyses (Figs. 3 and 4, respectively) which utilized bootstrapping to generate confidence intervals, here we generated confidence intervals from between-participants variance in condition-specific co-activation estimates for each participant, which were the units for this analysis.