Developmental Variations in Recurrent Spatiotemporal Brain Propagations from Childhood to Adulthood

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Vydáno v:bioRxiv (Feb 5, 2025)
Hlavní autor: Byeon, Kyoungseob
Další autoři: Park, Hyunjin, Park, Shinwon, Cluce, Jon, Mehta, Kahini, Cieslak, Matthew, Cui, Zaixu, Seok-Jun, Hong, Chang, Catie, Smallwood, Jonathan, Satterthwaite, Theodore D, Milham, Michael P, Xu, Ting
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Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
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LEADER 00000nab a2200000uu 4500
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022 |a 2692-8205 
024 7 |a 10.1101/2025.02.04.635765  |2 doi 
035 |a 3163596210 
045 0 |b d20250205 
100 1 |a Byeon, Kyoungseob 
245 1 |a Developmental Variations in Recurrent Spatiotemporal Brain Propagations from Childhood to Adulthood 
260 |b Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press  |c Feb 5, 2025 
513 |a Working Paper 
520 3 |a The brain undergoes profound structural and functional transformations from childhood to adolescence. Convergent evidence suggests that neurodevelopment proceeds in a hierarchical manner, characterized by heterogeneous maturation patterns across brain regions and networks. However, the maturation of the intrinsic spatiotemporal propagations of brain activity remains largely unexplored. This study aims to bridge this gap by delineating spatiotemporal propagations from childhood to early adulthood. By leveraging a recently developed approach that captures time-lag dynamic propagations, we characterized intrinsic dynamic propagations along three axes: sensory-association (S-A), 'task-positive' to default networks (TP-D), and somatomotor-visual (SM-V) networks, which progress towards adult-like brain dynamics from childhood to early adulthood. Importantly, we demonstrated that as participants mature, there is a prolonged occurrence of the S-A and TP-D propagation states, indicating that they spend more time in these states. Conversely, the prevalence of SM-V propagation states declines during development. Notably, top-down propagations along the S-A axis exhibited an age-dependent increase in occurrence, serving as a superior predictor of cognitive scores compared to bottom-up S-A propagation. These findings were replicated across two independent cohorts (N = 677 in total), emphasizing the robustness and generalizability of these findings. Our results provide new insights into the emergence of adult-like functional dynamics during youth and their role in supporting cognition.Competing Interest StatementThe authors have declared no competing interest. 
653 |a Propagation 
653 |a Neurodevelopment 
653 |a Structure-function relationships 
653 |a Maturation 
653 |a Children 
653 |a Childhood 
653 |a Adults 
700 1 |a Park, Hyunjin 
700 1 |a Park, Shinwon 
700 1 |a Cluce, Jon 
700 1 |a Mehta, Kahini 
700 1 |a Cieslak, Matthew 
700 1 |a Cui, Zaixu 
700 1 |a Seok-Jun, Hong 
700 1 |a Chang, Catie 
700 1 |a Smallwood, Jonathan 
700 1 |a Satterthwaite, Theodore D 
700 1 |a Milham, Michael P 
700 1 |a Xu, Ting 
773 0 |t bioRxiv  |g (Feb 5, 2025) 
786 0 |d ProQuest  |t Biological Science Database 
856 4 1 |3 Citation/Abstract  |u https://www.proquest.com/docview/3163596210/abstract/embedded/7BTGNMKEMPT1V9Z2?source=fedsrch 
856 4 0 |3 Full text outside of ProQuest  |u https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.02.04.635765v1