Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience (Dec 2019)

Identifying reproducible individual differences in childhood functional brain networks: An ABCD study

  • Scott Marek,
  • Brenden Tervo-Clemmens,
  • Ashley N. Nielsen,
  • Muriah D. Wheelock,
  • Ryland L. Miller,
  • Timothy O. Laumann,
  • Eric Earl,
  • William W. Foran,
  • Michaela Cordova,
  • Olivia Doyle,
  • Anders Perrone,
  • Oscar Miranda-Dominguez,
  • Eric Feczko,
  • Darrick Sturgeon,
  • Alice Graham,
  • Robert Hermosillo,
  • Kathy Snider,
  • Anthony Galassi,
  • Bonnie J. Nagel,
  • Sarah W. Feldstein Ewing,
  • Adam T. Eggebrecht,
  • Hugh Garavan,
  • Anders M. Dale,
  • Deanna J. Greene,
  • Deanna M. Barch,
  • Damien A. Fair,
  • Beatriz Luna,
  • Nico U.F. Dosenbach

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 40

Abstract

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The 21-site Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study provides an unparalleled opportunity to characterize functional brain development via resting-state functional connectivity (RSFC) and to quantify relationships between RSFC and behavior. This multi-site data set includes potentially confounding sources of variance, such as differences between data collection sites and/or scanner manufacturers, in addition to those inherent to RSFC (e.g., head motion). The ABCD project provides a framework for characterizing and reproducing RSFC and RSFC-behavior associations, while quantifying the extent to which sources of variability bias RSFC estimates. We quantified RSFC and functional network architecture in 2,188 9-10-year old children from the ABCD study, segregated into demographically-matched discovery (N = 1,166) and replication datasets (N = 1,022). We found RSFC and network architecture to be highly reproducible across children. We did not observe strong effects of site; however, scanner manufacturer effects were large, reproducible, and followed a “short-to-long” association with distance between regions. Accounting for potential confounding variables, we replicated that RSFC between several higher-order networks was related to general cognition. In sum, we provide a framework for how to characterize RSFC-behavior relationships in a rigorous and reproducible manner using the ABCD dataset and other large multi-site projects. Keywords: ABCD, Resting state fMRI, Functional connectivity, Development, Cognitive ability, Reproducibility