The development of brain network hubs

•Some brain regions are highly connected, acting as network hubs.•Structural hubs are present in an adult spatial configuration from birth.•Functional hubs emerge in primary areas and shift to association areas during childhood.•Hub connectivity, especially of frontal areas, strengthens from birth t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Developmental cognitive neuroscience 2019-04, Vol.36, p.100607-100607, Article 100607
Hauptverfasser: Oldham, Stuart, Fornito, Alex
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Some brain regions are highly connected, acting as network hubs.•Structural hubs are present in an adult spatial configuration from birth.•Functional hubs emerge in primary areas and shift to association areas during childhood.•Hub connectivity, especially of frontal areas, strengthens from birth to adulthood.•Methodological differences across studies can lead to inconsistent findings. Some brain regions have a central role in supporting integrated brain function, marking them as network hubs. Given the functional importance of hubs, it is natural to ask how they emerge during development and to consider how they shape the function of the maturing brain. Here, we review evidence examining how brain network hubs, both in structural and functional connectivity networks, develop over the prenatal, neonate, childhood, and adolescent periods. The available evidence suggests that structural hubs of the brain arise in the prenatal period and show a consistent spatial topography through development, but undergo a protracted period of consolidation that extends into late adolescence. In contrast, the hubs of brain functional networks show a more variable topography, being predominantly located in primary cortical areas in early development, before moving to association areas by late childhood. These findings suggest that while the basic anatomical infrastructure of hubs may be established early, the functional viability and integrative capacity of these areas undergoes extensive postnatal maturation. Not all findings are consistent with this view however. We consider methodological factors that might drive these inconsistencies, and which should be addressed to promote a more rigorous investigation of brain network development.
ISSN:1878-9293
1878-9307
DOI:10.1016/j.dcn.2018.12.005