Watanabe, Kyosuke, Sasaki, Akihiro T, Tajima, Kanako et al. · Scientific reports · 2019 · DOI
When healthy people become mentally tired from doing difficult thinking tasks, their brains start paying more attention to sad and negative images. This study used computer tasks to measure how people's attention shifts before and after mental exhaustion. The findings suggest that fatigue changes how our brains process sad information, which may help explain why ME/CFS patients often struggle with mood-related challenges.
This study provides mechanistic insight into why ME/CFS patients commonly report mood-related symptoms and attentional difficulties alongside fatigue. Understanding how fatigue alters emotional processing at the cognitive level may inform both biological mechanisms and targeted interventions for affective complications in ME/CFS.
This study does not prove that the same mechanisms operate in ME/CFS patients, as it involved healthy individuals with acute mental fatigue rather than chronically fatigued patients. The study does not establish that this attentional shift causes mood disorders or represents a causal pathway—only that an association exists after mental fatigue. It also does not address whether physical fatigue, post-exertional malaise, or prolonged ME/CFS-related fatigue produces identical effects.
About the PEM badge: “PEM required” means post-exertional malaise was an explicit required diagnostic criterion for participant inclusion in this study — not that PEM was studied, observed, or discussed. Studies using criteria that do not require PEM (e.g. Fukuda, Oxford) are tagged “PEM not required”. How the atlas works →
Spotted an error in this entry? Report it →