Thomas F Varley, Olaf Sporns, Nathan J Stevenson, Pauliina Yrjölä, Martha G Welch, Michael M Myers, Sampsa Vanhatalo, Anton Tokariev
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Emergence of a synergistic scaffold in the brains of human infants.
The human brain is a complex organ comprising billions of interconnected neurons, which enables interaction with both physical and social environments. Neural dynamics of the whole brain go far beyond just the sum of its individual elements; a property known as "synergy". Previously it has been shown that synergy is crucial for many complex brain functions and cognition, however, it remains unknown how and when the large number of discrete neurons evolve into the unified system able to support synergistic interactions. Here we analyzed high-density electroencephalography data from the late fetal period to one month after term age. We found that the human brain transitions from a redundancy-dominated to a synergy-dominated system around birth. Frontal regions lead the emergence of a synergistic scaffold comprised of overlapping subsystems, while the integration of sensory areas developed gradually, from occipital to central regions. Strikingly, early developmental trajectories of brain synergy were modulated by environmental enrichment associated with enhanced mother-infant interactions, and the level of synergy near term equivalent age was associated with later neurocognitive development.
期刊介绍:
Communications Biology is an open access journal from Nature Research publishing high-quality research, reviews and commentary in all areas of the biological sciences. Research papers published by the journal represent significant advances bringing new biological insight to a specialized area of research.