Developmental differences in functional organization of multispectral networks

Author:

Petro Nathan M12ORCID,Picci Giorgia123ORCID,Embury Christine M12ORCID,Ott Lauren R4ORCID,Penhale Samantha H5ORCID,Rempe Maggie P16ORCID,Johnson Hallie J1,Willett Madelyn P1,Wang Yu-Ping7ORCID,Stephen Julia M8ORCID,Calhoun Vince D9ORCID,Doucet Gaelle E123ORCID,Wilson Tony W123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Boys Town National Research Hospital Institute for Human Neuroscience, , Boys Town, NE , United States

2. Boys Town National Research Hospital Center for Pediatric Brain Health, , Boys Town, NE , United States

3. Creighton University Department of Pharmacology & Neuroscience, , Omaha, NE , United States

4. San Diego State University/University of California San Diego Joint Doctoral Program in Clinical Psychology , San Diego, CA , United States

5. Department of Clinical and Health Psychology, University of Florida , Gainesville, FL , USA

6. University of Nebraska Medical Center College of Medicine, , Omaha, NE , United States

7. Tulane University Department of Biomedical Engineering, , New Orleans, LA , United States

8. Mind Research Network , Albuquerque, NM , United States

9. Georgia State University, Georgia Institute of Technology, and Emory University Tri-Institutional Center for Translational Research in Neuroimaging and Data Science (TReNDS), , Atlanta, GA , United States

Abstract

Abstract Assessing brain connectivity during rest has become a widely used approach to identify changes in functional brain organization during development. Generally, previous works have demonstrated that brain activity shifts from more local to more distributed processing from childhood into adolescence. However, the majority of those works have been based on functional magnetic resonance imaging measures, whereas multispectral functional connectivity, as measured using magnetoencephalography (MEG), has been far less characterized. In our study, we examined spontaneous cortical activity during eyes-closed rest using MEG in 101 typically developing youth (9–15 years old; 51 females, 50 males). Multispectral MEG images were computed, and connectivity was estimated in the canonical delta, theta, alpha, beta, and gamma bands using the imaginary part of the phase coherence, which was computed between 200 brain regions defined by the Schaefer cortical atlas. Delta and alpha connectivity matrices formed more communities as a function of increasing age. Connectivity weights predominantly decreased with age in both frequency bands; delta-band differences largely implicated limbic cortical regions and alpha band differences in attention and cognitive networks. These results are consistent with previous work, indicating the functional organization of the brain becomes more segregated across development, and highlight spectral specificity across different canonical networks.

Funder

National Science Foundation

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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