4.8 Article

Shared and unique brain network features predict cognitive, personality, and mental health scores in the ABCD study

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-29766-8

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Singapore National Research Foundation (NRF) Fellowship
  2. NUS Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine [NUHSRO/2020/124/TMR/LOA]
  3. Singapore National Medical Research Council (NMRC) LCG [OFLCG19May-0035]
  4. NMRC STaR [STaR20nov-0003]
  5. USA NIH [R01MH120080]
  6. National Institutes of Health [U01DA041048, U01DA050989, U01DA051016, U01DA041022, U01DA051018, U01DA051037, U01DA050987]
  7. [U01DA041174]
  8. [U01DA041106]
  9. [U01DA041117]
  10. [U01DA041028]
  11. [U01DA041134]
  12. [U01DA050988]
  13. [U01DA051039]
  14. [U01DA041156]
  15. [U01DA041025]
  16. [U01DA041120]
  17. [U01DA051038]
  18. [U01DA041148]
  19. [U01DA041093]
  20. [U01DA041089]
  21. [U24DA041123]
  22. [U24DA041147]

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How individual differences in brain network organization track behavioral variability is a fundamental question in systems neuroscience. The authors use data from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development study to show how individual variation in cognition, personality and mental health can be predicted by shared and unique brain network features.
How individual differences in brain network organization track behavioral variability is a fundamental question in systems neuroscience. Recent work suggests that resting-state and task-state functional connectivity can predict specific traits at the individual level. However, most studies focus on single behavioral traits, thus not capturing broader relationships across behaviors. In a large sample of 1858 typically developing children from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study, we show that predictive network features are distinct across the domains of cognitive performance, personality scores and mental health assessments. On the other hand, traits within each behavioral domain are predicted by similar network features. Predictive network features and models generalize to other behavioral measures within the same behavioral domain. Although tasks are known to modulate the functional connectome, predictive network features are similar between resting and task states. Overall, our findings reveal shared brain network features that account for individual variation within broad domains of behavior in childhood. Here, the authors use data from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development study to show how individual variation in cognition, personality and mental health can be predicted by shared and unique brain network features.

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