Functional brain connectivity predicts sleep duration in youth and adults

Sleep is critical to a variety of cognitive functions and insufficient sleep can have negative consequences for mood and behavior across the lifespan. An important open question is how sleep duration is related to functional brain organization which may in turn impact cognition. To characterize the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Human brain mapping 2023-12, Vol.44 (18), p.6293-6307
Hauptverfasser: Mummaneni, Anurima, Kardan, Omid, Stier, Andrew J., Chamberlain, Taylor A., Chao, Alfred F., Berman, Marc G., Rosenberg, Monica D.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Sleep is critical to a variety of cognitive functions and insufficient sleep can have negative consequences for mood and behavior across the lifespan. An important open question is how sleep duration is related to functional brain organization which may in turn impact cognition. To characterize the functional brain networks related to sleep across youth and young adulthood, we analyzed data from the publicly available Human Connectome Project (HCP) dataset, which includes n‐back task‐based and resting‐state fMRI data from adults aged 22–35 years (task n = 896; rest n = 898). We applied connectome‐based predictive modeling (CPM) to predict participants' mean sleep duration from their functional connectivity patterns. Models trained and tested using 10‐fold cross‐validation predicted self‐reported average sleep duration for the past month from n‐back task and resting‐state connectivity patterns. We replicated this finding in data from the 2‐year follow‐up study session of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study, which also includes n‐back task and resting‐state fMRI for adolescents aged 11–12 years (task n = 786; rest n = 1274) as well as Fitbit data reflecting average sleep duration per night over an average duration of 23.97 days. CPMs trained and tested with 10‐fold cross‐validation again predicted sleep duration from n‐back task and resting‐state functional connectivity patterns. Furthermore, demonstrating that predictive models are robust across independent datasets, CPMs trained on rest data from the HCP sample successfully generalized to predict sleep duration in the ABCD Study sample and vice versa. Thus, common resting‐state functional brain connectivity patterns reflect sleep duration in youth and young adults. Resting‐state functional connections that predict more sleep (left) and less sleep (right) in the Human Connectome Project and Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development Study datasets.
ISSN:1065-9471
1097-0193
DOI:10.1002/hbm.26488