Age-related differences in resting-state, task-related, and structural brain connectivity: graph theoretical analyses and visual search performance.

IF 2.7 3区 医学 Q1 ANATOMY & MORPHOLOGY
Brain Structure & Function Pub Date : 2024-09-01 Epub Date: 2024-06-10 DOI:10.1007/s00429-024-02807-2
David J Madden, Jenna L Merenstein, Hollie A Mullin, Shivangi Jain, Marc D Rudolph, Jessica R Cohen
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Previous magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) research suggests that aging is associated with a decrease in the functional interconnections within and between groups of locally organized brain regions (modules). Further, this age-related decrease in the segregation of modules appears to be more pronounced for a task, relative to a resting state, reflecting the integration of functional modules and attentional allocation necessary to support task performance. Here, using graph-theoretical analyses, we investigated age-related differences in a whole-brain measure of module connectivity, system segregation, for 68 healthy, community-dwelling individuals 18-78 years of age. We obtained resting-state, task-related (visual search), and structural (diffusion-weighted) MRI data. Using a parcellation of modules derived from the participants' resting-state functional MRI data, we demonstrated that the decrease in system segregation from rest to task (i.e., reconfiguration) increased with age, suggesting an age-related increase in the integration of modules required by the attentional demands of visual search. Structural system segregation increased with age, reflecting weaker connectivity both within and between modules. Functional and structural system segregation had qualitatively different influences on age-related decline in visual search performance. Functional system segregation (and reconfiguration) influenced age-related decline in the rate of visual evidence accumulation (drift rate), whereas structural system segregation contributed to age-related slowing of encoding and response processes (nondecision time). The age-related differences in the functional system segregation measures, however, were relatively independent of those associated with structural connectivity.

Abstract Image

静息态、任务相关和结构性大脑连接中与年龄相关的差异:图论分析和视觉搜索表现。
以往的磁共振成像(MRI)研究表明,衰老与局部组织的脑区(模块)群内部和之间的功能互连减少有关。此外,相对于静息状态,这种与年龄相关的模块分离减少似乎在任务中更为明显,这反映了支持任务执行所需的功能模块整合和注意力分配。在这里,我们使用图论分析方法,研究了68名18-78岁健康、居住在社区的个体在模块连接性的全脑测量--系统分离--中与年龄相关的差异。我们获得了静息态、任务相关(视觉搜索)和结构性(扩散加权)核磁共振成像数据。利用从参与者的静息态功能磁共振成像数据中得出的模块划分,我们证明了从静息态到任务的系统分离(即重组)随着年龄的增长而增加,这表明视觉搜索的注意力需求所需的模块整合与年龄相关。结构系统分离随着年龄的增长而增加,反映出模块内部和模块之间的连接性减弱。功能系统分离和结构系统分离对与年龄相关的视觉搜索能力下降有着不同的影响。功能系统分离(和重组)影响了与年龄相关的视觉证据积累速度(漂移率)的下降,而结构系统分离则导致了与年龄相关的编码和反应过程(非决策时间)的减慢。然而,功能系统分离测量中与年龄相关的差异相对独立于与结构连接相关的差异。
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来源期刊
Brain Structure & Function
Brain Structure & Function 医学-解剖学与形态学
CiteScore
6.00
自引率
6.50%
发文量
168
审稿时长
8 months
期刊介绍: Brain Structure & Function publishes research that provides insight into brain structure−function relationships. Studies published here integrate data spanning from molecular, cellular, developmental, and systems architecture to the neuroanatomy of behavior and cognitive functions. Manuscripts with focus on the spinal cord or the peripheral nervous system are not accepted for publication. Manuscripts with focus on diseases, animal models of diseases, or disease-related mechanisms are only considered for publication, if the findings provide novel insight into the organization and mechanisms of normal brain structure and function.
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