NeuroImage (Jul 2022)

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

  • Kristina M. Rapuano,
  • May I. Conley,
  • Anthony C. Juliano,
  • Gregory M. Conan,
  • Maria T. Maza,
  • Kylie Woodman,
  • Steven A. Martinez,
  • Eric Earl,
  • Anders Perrone,
  • Eric Feczko,
  • Damien A. Fair,
  • Richard Watts,
  • B.J. Casey,
  • Monica D. Rosenberg

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 255
p. 119215

Abstract

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As public access to longitudinal developmental datasets like the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development StudySM (ABCD Study®) 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, day-to-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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