4.8 Article

Connectivity at the origins of domain specificity in the cortical face and place networks

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1911359117

Keywords

development; fMRI; fusiform face area; parahippocampal place area; neonates

Funding

  1. Emory College, Emory University
  2. National Eye Institute [R01 EY029724, T32EY7092]
  3. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program [DGE-1444932]
  4. Eleanor Munsterberg Koppitz Dissertation Fellowship
  5. National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia & Depression Young Investigator Award
  6. Emory University HERCULES Exposome Research Center [NIEHS P30 ES019776]

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It is well established that the adult brain contains a mosaic of domain-specific networks. But how do these domain-specific networks develop? Here we tested the hypothesis that the brain comes prewired with connections that precede the development of domain-specific function. Using resting-state fMRI in the youngest sample of newborn humans tested to date, we indeed found that cortical networks that will later develop strong face selectivity (including the proto occipital face area and fusiform face area) and scene selectivity (including the proto parahippocampal place area and retrosplenial complex) by adulthood, already show domain-specific patterns of functional connectivity as early as 27 d of age (beginning as early as 6 d of age). Furthermore, we asked how these networks are functionally connected to early visual cortex and found that the proto face network shows biased functional connectivity with fovea! V1, while the proto scene network shows biased functional connectivity with peripheral V1. Given that faces are almost always experienced at the fovea, while scenes always extend across the entire periphery, these differential inputs may serve to facilitate domain-specific processing in each network after that function develops, or even guide the development of domain-specific function in each network in the first place. Taken together, these findings reveal domain-specific and eccentricity-biased connectivity in the earliest days of life, placing new constraints on our understanding of the origins of domain-specific cortical networks.

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