Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience (Aug 2023)

Individual differences in T1w/T2w ratio development during childhood

  • Austin L. Boroshok,
  • Cassidy L. McDermott,
  • Panagiotis Fotiadis,
  • Anne T. Park,
  • Ursula A. Tooley,
  • Mārtiņš M. Gataviņš,
  • M. Dylan Tisdall,
  • Dani S. Bassett,
  • Allyson P. Mackey

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 62
p. 101270

Abstract

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Myelination is a key developmental process that promotes rapid and efficient information transfer. Myelin also stabilizes existing brain networks and thus may constrain neuroplasticity, defined here as the brain's potential to change in response to experiences rather than the canonical definition as the process of change. Characterizing individual differences in neuroplasticity may shed light on mechanisms by which early experiences shape learning, brain and body development, and response to interventions. The T1-weighted/T2-weighted (T1w/T2w) MRI signal ratio is a proxy measure of cortical microstructure and thus neuroplasticity. Here, in pre-registered analyses, we investigated individual differences in T1w/T2w ratios in children (ages 4–10, n = 157). T1w/T2w ratios were positively associated with age within early-developing sensorimotor and attention regions. We also tested whether socioeconomic status, cognition (crystallized knowledge or fluid reasoning), and biological age (as measured with molar eruption) were related to T1w/T2w signal but found no significant effects. Associations among T1w/T2w ratios, early experiences, and cognition may emerge later in adolescence and may not be strong enough to detect in moderate sample sizes.

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