Adolescent development of multiscale structural wiring and functional interactions in the human connectome

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Abstract

Adolescence is a time of profound changes in the physical wiring and function of the brain. Here, we analyzed structural and functional brain network development in an accelerated longitudinal cohort spanning 14 to 25 y (n = 199). Core to our work was an advanced in vivo model of cortical wiring incorporating MRI features of corticocortical proximity, microstructural similarity, and white matter tractography. Longitudinal analyses assessing age-related changes in cortical wiring identified a continued differentiation of multiple corticocortical structural networks in youth. We then assessed structure–function coupling using resting-state functional MRI measures in the same participants both via cross-sectional analysis at baseline and by studying longitudinal change between baseline and follow-up scans. At baseline, regions with more similar structural wiring were more likely to be functionally coupled. Moreover, correlating longitudinal structural wiring changes with longitudinal functional connectivity reconfigurations, we found that increased structural differentiation, particularly between sensory/unimodal and default mode networks, was reflected by reduced functional interactions. These findings provide insights into adolescent development of human brain structure and function, illustrating how structural wiring interacts with the maturation of macroscale functional hierarchies.

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Park, B. Y., Paquola, C., Bethlehem, R. A. I., Benkarim, O., Mišić, B., Smallwood, J., … Bernhardt, B. C. (2022). Adolescent development of multiscale structural wiring and functional interactions in the human connectome. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 119(27). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2116673119

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