“…Prolonged grief perhaps involves more automatic constraints over thought content : the continued salience of mental representations of the deceased and/or their death could underlie the prolonged emotional pain, intense yearning, and/or the intrusive nature of thoughts about the loss that characterize prolonged grief (Robinaugh et al, 2016 ). Thoughts in prolonged grief might also be less variable over time , given that grief‐related rumination likely involves core midline default network regions that have been implicated in other forms of maladaptive self‐referential thought (e.g., Fonzo & Etkin, 2017 ; Zhou et al, 2020 ) and other disorders characterized by high levels of perseveration and distress show reduced dFNC variability (e.g., Demirtaş et al, 2016 ; Kaiser et al, 2016 ). Operantly defined, higher levels of prolonged grief symptoms might be reflected in greater affective (automatic) constraints over thought content, and less variability, as evidenced by (1) positive correlation between salience network and midline default network time courses (Menon, 2011 ) and (2) fewer transitions between different dFNC “states” (transient, yet recurrent functional network configurations, and/or longer dwell time in one dFNC state.…”