Introduction
Personality is associated with cognitive, emotional, and social functioning, and can play a role in ageârelated cognitive decline and dementia risk; however, little is known about the brain dynamics underlying personality characteristics, and whether they are moderated by age.
Methods
We investigated the associations between personality and restingâstate functional MRI data from 365 individuals across the adult lifespan (20â80Â years). Participants completed the 50âitem International Personality Item Pool and a restingâstate imaging protocol on a 3T MRI scanner. Withinânetwork connectivity values were computed based on predefined networks. Regression analyzes were conducted in order to investigate personalityâconnectivity associations, as well as moderation by age. All models controlled for potential confounders (such as age, sex, education, IQ, and the other personality traits).
Results
We found that openness was positively associated with connectivity in the defaultâmode network, neuroticism was negatively associated with both the ventral and dorsal attention networks, and agreeableness was negatively associated with the dorsal attention network. In addition, age moderated the association between conscientiousness and the frontoparietal network, indicating that this association become stronger in older age.
Conclusions
Our findings demonstrate that personality is associated with brain connectivity, which may contribute to identifying personality profiles that play a role in protection against or risk for ageârelated brain changes and dementia.