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Changes in electrophysiological static and dynamic human brain functional architecture from childhood to late adulthood

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Date
2020
Author
Coquelet, N.
Wens, V.
Mary, A.
Niesen, M.
Puttaert, D.
Ranzini, M.
Vander Ghinst, M.
Bourguignon, M.
Peigneux, P.
Goldman, S.
Woolrich, M.
De Tiège, X.
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Coquelet, N., Wens, V., Mary, A. et al. Changes in electrophysiological static and dynamic human brain functional architecture from childhood to late adulthood. Sci Rep 10, 18986 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-75858-0
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10810/47882
Abstract
This magnetoencephalography study aimed at characterizing age-related changes in resting-state functional brain organization from mid-childhood to late adulthood. We investigated neuromagnetic brain activity at rest in 105 participants divided into three age groups: children (6–9 years), young adults (18–34 years) and healthy elders (53–78 years). The effects of age on static resting-state functional brain integration were assessed using band-limited power envelope correlation, whereas those on transient functional brain dynamics were disclosed using hidden Markov modeling of power envelope activity. Brain development from childhood to adulthood came with (1) a strengthening of functional integration within and between resting-state networks and (2) an increased temporal stability of transient (100–300 ms lifetime) and recurrent states of network activation or deactivation mainly encompassing lateral or medial associative neocortical areas. Healthy aging was characterized by decreased static resting-state functional integration and dynamic stability within the primary visual network. These results based on electrophysiological measurements free of neurovascular biases suggest that functional brain integration mainly evolves during brain development, with limited changes in healthy aging. These novel electrophysiological insights into human brain functional architecture across the lifespan pave the way for future clinical studies investigating how brain disorders affect brain development or healthy aging.
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