4.7 Article

An open-access accelerated adult equivalent of the ABCD Study neuroimaging dataset (a-ABCD)

期刊

NEUROIMAGE
卷 255, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2022.119215

关键词

Development; Working memory; Inhibitory control; Reward processing; fMRI

资金

  1. National Institutes of Health [U01DA041022, U01DA041028, U01DA041048, U01DA041089, U01DA041106, U01DA041117, U01DA041120, U01DA041134, U01DA041148, U01DA041156, U01DA041174, U24DA041123, U24DA041147]
  2. National Institute of Mental Health of the National Institutes of Health from the National Institute of Drug Abuse [UG3-DA045251]
  3. [R25MH120869]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

As public access to longitudinal developmental datasets like the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development Study increases, it is important to have resources to differentiate time-dependent effects. In this study, an accelerated adult equivalent of the ABCD Study dataset was created to quantify developmental changes. The results showed that task-based brain activation was more similar within individuals across repeated scan sessions than between individuals, indicating differences in data reliability.
As public access to longitudinal developmental datasets like the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development StudySM (ABCD Study (R)) increases, so too does the need for resources to benchmark time-dependent effects. Scan-to-scan changes observed with repeated imaging may reflect development but may also reflect practice effects, dayto-day variability in psychological states, and/or measurement noise. Resources that allow disentangling these time-dependent effects will be useful in quantifying actual developmental change. We present an accelerated adult equivalent of the ABCD Study dataset (a-ABCD) using an identical imaging protocol to acquire magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) structural, diffusion-weighted, resting-state and task-based data from eight adults scanned five times over five weeks. We report on the task-based imaging data ( n = 7). In-scanner stop-signal (SST), monetary incentive delay (MID), and emotional n-back (EN-back) task behavioral performance did not change across sessions. Post-scan recognition memory for emotional n-back stimuli, however, did improve as participants became more familiar with the stimuli. Functional MRI analyses revealed that patterns of task-based activation reflecting inhibitory control in the SST, reward success in the MID task, and working memory in the EN-back task were more similar within individuals across repeated scan sessions than between individuals. Within-subject, activity was more consistent across sessions during the EN-back task than in the SST and MID task, demonstrating differences in fMRI data reliability as a function of task. The a-ABCD dataset provides a unique testbed for characterizing the reliability of brain function, structure, and behavior across imaging modalities in adulthood and benchmarking neurodevelopmental change observed in the open-access ABCD Study.

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