4.6 Article

Developmental trajectory of MEG resting-state oscillatory activity in children and adolescents: a longitudinal reliability study

期刊

CEREBRAL CORTEX
卷 32, 期 23, 页码 5404-5419

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhac023

关键词

magnetoencephalography; neurodevelopment; reliability; resting state; spectral power

资金

  1. National Science Foundation (NSF) [1539067, 2112455]
  2. National Institutes of Health [P50 AA022534, R01MH121101, P30GM122734]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Neural oscillations are sensitive to brain maturation and developmental changes. This study examined reliability in typically developing children and adolescents over a period of 2.25 years, finding sex-specific differences and correlations with brain structure.
Neural oscillations may be sensitive to aspects of brain maturation such as myelination and synaptic density changes. Better characterization of developmental trajectories and reliability is necessary for understanding typical and atypical neurodevelopment. Here, we examined reliability in 110 typically developing children and adolescents (aged 9-17 years) across 2.25 years. From 10 min of magnetoencephalography resting-state data, normalized source spectral power and intraclass correlation coefficients were calculated. We found sex-specific differences in global normalized power, with males showing age-related decreases in delta and theta, along with age-related increases in beta and gamma. Females had fewer significant age-related changes. Structural magnetic resonance imaging revealed that males had more total gray, subcortical gray, and cortical white matter volume. There were significant age-related changes in total gray matter volume with sex-specific and frequency-specific correlations to normalized power. In males, increased total gray matter volume correlated with increased theta and alpha, along with decreased gamma. Split-half reliability was excellent in all frequency bands and source regions. Test-retest reliability ranged from good (alpha) to fair (theta) to poor (remaining bands). While resting-state neural oscillations can have fingerprint-like quality in adults, we show here that neural oscillations continue to evolve in children and adolescents due to brain maturation and neurodevelopmental change.

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