Very preterm brain at rest: Longitudinal social-cognitive network connectivity during childhood

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Abstract

Very preterm (VPT: ≤32 weeks of gestational age) birth poses an increased risk for social and cognitive morbidities that persist throughout life. Resting-state functional network connectivity studies provide information about the intrinsic capacity for cognitive processing. We studied the following four social-cognitive resting-state networks: the default mode, salience, frontal-parietal and language networks. We examined functional connectivity using magnetoencephalography with individual head localization using each participant's MRI at 6 (n = 40) and 8 (n = 40) years of age compared to age- and sex-matched full-term (FT) born children (n = 38 at 6 years and n = 43 at 8 years). VPT children showed increased connectivity compared to FT children in the gamma band (30-80 Hz) at 6 years within the default mode network (DMN), and between the DMN and the salience, frontal-parietal and language networks, pointing to more diffuse, less segregated processing across networks at this age. At 8 years, VPT children had more social and academic difficulties. Increased DMN connectivity at 6 years was associated with social and working memory difficulties at 8 years. Therefore, we suggest that increased DMN connectivity contributes to the observed emerging social and cognitive morbidities in school age.

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Mossad, S. I., Young, J. M., Wong, S. M., Dunkley, B. T., Hunt, B. A. E., Pang, E. W., & Taylor, M. J. (2022). Very preterm brain at rest: Longitudinal social-cognitive network connectivity during childhood. Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, 17(4), 377–386. https://doi.org/10.1093/scan/nsab110

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