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. 2017 Mar 1;27(3):1795-1807.
doi: 10.1093/cercor/bhw022.

Structural and Maturational Covariance in Early Childhood Brain Development

Affiliations

Structural and Maturational Covariance in Early Childhood Brain Development

Xiujuan Geng et al. Cereb Cortex. .

Abstract

Brain structural covariance networks (SCNs) composed of regions with correlated variation are altered in neuropsychiatric disease and change with age. Little is known about the development of SCNs in early childhood, a period of rapid cortical growth. We investigated the development of structural and maturational covariance networks, including default, dorsal attention, primary visual and sensorimotor networks in a longitudinal population of 118 children after birth to 2 years old and compared them with intrinsic functional connectivity networks. We found that structural covariance of all networks exhibit strong correlations mostly limited to their seed regions. By Age 2, default and dorsal attention structural networks are much less distributed compared with their functional maps. The maturational covariance maps, however, revealed significant couplings in rates of change between distributed regions, which partially recapitulate their functional networks. The structural and maturational covariance of the primary visual and sensorimotor networks shows similar patterns to the corresponding functional networks. Results indicate that functional networks are in place prior to structural networks, that correlated structural patterns in adult may arise in part from coordinated cortical maturation, and that regional co-activation in functional networks may guide and refine the maturation of SCNs over childhood development.

Keywords: cortical thickness; early brain development; functional connectivity; maturational covariance; structural covariance.

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Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Mean cortical thickness and cortical thickness growth in the first 2 years of life. Note: (e) has different min/max values compared with (d) and (f) to better show the contrast of growth rate.
Figure 2.
Figure 2.
SCN (a–c), MCN (d–f), and FCN (g–i) with posterior cingulate cortex (PCC) as seed region. Correlation coefficients are shown for only significant correlated regions.
Figure 3.
Figure 3.
SCN (a–c), MCN (d–f), and FCN (g–i) with IPS as seed region. Correlation coefficients are shown for only significant correlated regions.
Figure 4.
Figure 4.
SCN (a–c), MCN (d–f), and FCN (g–i) with primary visual cortex (Vis) as seed region. Correlation coefficients are shown for only significant correlated regions.
Figure 5.
Figure 5.
SCN (a–c), MCN (d–f), and FCN (g–i) with primary motor cortex (Motor) as seed region. Correlation coefficients are shown for only significant correlated regions.
Figure 6.
Figure 6.
The overlapping regions between the MCN and FCN for each seed. The purple color patches show the overlaps between the networks for the (a) PCC, (b) IPS, (c) Visual, and (d) Motor seeds.
Figure 6.
Figure 6.
The overlapping regions between the MCN and FCN for each seed. The purple color patches show the overlaps between the networks for the (a) PCC, (b) IPS, (c) Visual, and (d) Motor seeds.

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