Patterns of Coordinated Anatomical Change in Human Cortical Development: A Longitudinal Neuroimaging Study of Maturational Coupling

Understanding of human structural brain development has rapidly advanced in recent years, but remains fundamentally “localizational” in nature. Here, we use 376 longitudinally acquired structural brain scans from 108 typically developing adolescents to conduct the first study of coordinated anatomic...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neuron (Cambridge, Mass.) Mass.), 2011-12, Vol.72 (5), p.873-884
Hauptverfasser: Raznahan, Armin, Lerch, Jason P., Lee, Nancy, Greenstein, Dede, Wallace, Gregory L., Stockman, Michael, Clasen, Liv, Shaw, Phillip W., Giedd, Jay N.
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container_end_page 884
container_issue 5
container_start_page 873
container_title Neuron (Cambridge, Mass.)
container_volume 72
creator Raznahan, Armin
Lerch, Jason P.
Lee, Nancy
Greenstein, Dede
Wallace, Gregory L.
Stockman, Michael
Clasen, Liv
Shaw, Phillip W.
Giedd, Jay N.
description Understanding of human structural brain development has rapidly advanced in recent years, but remains fundamentally “localizational” in nature. Here, we use 376 longitudinally acquired structural brain scans from 108 typically developing adolescents to conduct the first study of coordinated anatomical change within the developing cortex. Correlation in rates of anatomical change was regionally heterogeneous, with fronto-temporal association cortices showing the strongest and most widespread maturational coupling with other cortical areas, and lower-order sensory cortices showing the least. Canonical cortical systems with rich structural and functional interconnectivity showed significantly elevated maturational coupling. Evidence for sexually dimorphic maturational coupling was found within a frontopolar-centered prefrontal system involved in complex decision-making. By providing the first link between cortical connectivity and the coordination of cortical development, we reveal a hitherto unseen property of healthy brain maturation, which may represent a target for neurodevelopmental disease processes, and a substrate for sexually dimorphic behavior in adolescence. ► Rates of structural maturation are highly coordinated within the cortical sheet ► Maturational coupling with other cortices is maximal in association cortex ► Maturational coupling echoes known patterns of structural and functional connectivity ► Prefrontal maturational coupling in adolescence is sexually dimorphic
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.neuron.2011.09.028
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subjects Adolescent
Brain
Brain Mapping
Cerebral Cortex - anatomy & histology
Cerebral Cortex - diagnostic imaging
Cerebral Cortex - growth & development
Child
Child development
Decision Making - physiology
Female
Functional Laterality
Humans
Hypotheses
Image Processing, Computer-Assisted
Longitudinal Studies
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Male
Medical imaging
Neuropsychological Tests
Sex Characteristics
Statistics as Topic
Studies
Tomography, X-Ray Computed
Young Adult
title Patterns of Coordinated Anatomical Change in Human Cortical Development: A Longitudinal Neuroimaging Study of Maturational Coupling
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