Longitudinal growth curves of brain function underlying inhibitory control through adolescence

Neuroimaging studies suggest that developmental improvements in inhibitory control are primarily supported by changes in prefrontal executive function. However, studies are contradictory with respect to how activation in prefrontal regions changes with age, and they have yet to analyze longitudinal...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of neuroscience 2013-11, Vol.33 (46), p.18109-18124
Hauptverfasser: Ordaz, Sarah J, Foran, William, Velanova, Katerina, Luna, Beatriz
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container_end_page 18124
container_issue 46
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container_title The Journal of neuroscience
container_volume 33
creator Ordaz, Sarah J
Foran, William
Velanova, Katerina
Luna, Beatriz
description Neuroimaging studies suggest that developmental improvements in inhibitory control are primarily supported by changes in prefrontal executive function. However, studies are contradictory with respect to how activation in prefrontal regions changes with age, and they have yet to analyze longitudinal data using growth curve modeling, which allows characterization of dynamic processes of developmental change, individual differences in growth trajectories, and variables that predict any interindividual variability in trajectories. In this study, we present growth curves modeled from longitudinal fMRI data collected over 302 visits (across ages 9 to 26 years) from 123 human participants. Brain regions within circuits known to support motor response control, executive control, and error processing (i.e., aspects of inhibitory control) were investigated. Findings revealed distinct developmental trajectories for regions within each circuit and indicated that a hierarchical pattern of maturation of brain activation supports the gradual emergence of adult-like inhibitory control. Mean growth curves of activation in motor response control regions revealed no changes with age, although interindividual variability decreased with development, indicating equifinality with maturity. Activation in certain executive control regions decreased with age until adolescence, and variability was stable across development. Error-processing activation in the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex showed continued increases into adulthood and no significant interindividual variability across development, and was uniquely associated with task performance. These findings provide evidence that continued maturation of error-processing abilities supports the protracted development of inhibitory control over adolescence, while motor response control regions provide early-maturing foundational capacities and suggest that some executive control regions may buttress immature networks as error processing continues to mature.
doi_str_mv 10.1523/jneurosci.1741-13.2013
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source MEDLINE; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; PubMed Central
subjects Adolescent
Adolescent Behavior - physiology
Adolescent Behavior - psychology
Adult
Brain - growth & development
Child
Cohort Studies
Female
Growth Charts
Humans
Longitudinal Studies
Male
Neural Inhibition - physiology
Photic Stimulation - methods
Psychomotor Performance - physiology
Young Adult
title Longitudinal growth curves of brain function underlying inhibitory control through adolescence
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