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Functional brain network community structure in childhood: Unfinished territories and fuzzy boundaries.

Authors :
Tooley, Ursula A.
Bassett, Danielle S.
Mackey, Allyson P.
Source :
NeuroImage. Feb2022, Vol. 247, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

• Children show similar community structure to adults in sensory and motor communities. • Association areas are less reliably assigned and interact flexibly across communities. • Uncertainty is high in attention areas, suggestive of unsolidified boundaries. • Data-driven community assignments are highly stable in a replication sample. [Display omitted] Adult cortex is organized into distributed functional communities. Yet, little is known about community architecture of children's brains. Here, we uncovered the community structure of cortex in childhood using fMRI data from 670 children aged 9–11 years (48% female, replication sample n = 544 , 56% female) from the Adolescent Brain and Cognitive Development study. We first applied a data-driven community detection approach to cluster cortical regions into communities, then employed a generative model-based approach called the weighted stochastic block model to further probe community interactions. Children showed similar community structure to adults, as defined by Yeo and colleagues in 2011, in early-developing sensory and motor communities, but differences emerged in transmodal areas. Children have more cortical territory in the limbic community, which is involved in emotion processing, than adults. Regions in association cortex interact more flexibly across communities, creating uncertainty for the model-based assignment algorithm, and perhaps reflecting cortical boundaries that are not yet solidified. Uncertainty was highest for cingulo-opercular areas involved in flexible deployment of cognitive control. Activation and deactivation patterns during a working memory task showed that both the data-driven approach and a set of adult communities statistically capture functional organization in middle childhood. Collectively, our findings suggest that community boundaries are not solidified by middle childhood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10538119
Volume :
247
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
NeuroImage
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
154737014
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2021.118843