4.6 Article

Developmental maturation of causal signaling hubs in voluntary control of saccades and their functional controllability

Journal

CEREBRAL CORTEX
Volume 32, Issue 21, Pages 4746-4762

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhab514

Keywords

causal circuits; controllability; frontal eye fields; inhibitory control; saccades

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [HD074652, MH105625, EB022907, NS086085, MH121069]
  2. Indo-U.S. Science and Technology Forum [IUSSTF/JC-110/2019]

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The ability to adaptively respond to behaviorally relevant cues in the environment undergoes significant maturation from childhood to adulthood, and it influences the developmental trajectories of several key cognitive domains. However, little is known about the underlying causal functional circuit mechanisms. This study investigates the maturation of causal signaling mechanisms underlying voluntary control over saccades using state-space and control-theoretic modeling. The results show that directed causal interactions in a saccade network undergo significant maturation between childhood and adulthood, with the frontal eye field being an immature causal signaling hub in children. Control-theoretic analysis demonstrates that the saccade network is less controllable in children compared to adults.
The ability to adaptively respond to behaviorally relevant cues in the environment, including voluntary control of automatic but inappropriate responses and deployment of a goal-relevant alternative response, undergoes significant maturation from childhood to adulthood. Importantly, the maturation of voluntary control processes influences the developmental trajectories of several key cognitive domains, including executive function and emotion regulation. Understanding the maturation of voluntary control is therefore of fundamental importance, but little is known about the underlying causal functional circuit mechanisms. Here, we use state-space and control-theoretic modeling to investigate the maturation of causal signaling mechanisms underlying voluntary control over saccades. We demonstrate that directed causal interactions in a canonical saccade network undergo significant maturation between childhood and adulthood. Crucially, we show that the frontal eye field (FEF) is an immature causal signaling hub in children during control over saccades. Using control-theoretic analysis, we then demonstrate that the saccade network is less controllable in children and that greater energy is required to drive FEF dynamics in children compared to adults. Our findings provide novel evidence that strengthening of causal signaling hubs and controllability of FEF are key mechanisms underlying age-related improvements in the ability to plan and execute voluntary control over saccades.

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