Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience (Oct 2020)

Early microstructure of white matter associated with infant attention

  • Kristin N. Dowe,
  • Elizabeth M. Planalp,
  • Douglas C. Dean, III,
  • Andrew L. Alexander,
  • Richard J. Davidson,
  • H. Hill Goldsmith

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 45
p. 100815

Abstract

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Early infancy is characterized by rapid brain development that occurs alongside, and in response to, the development of cognitive and behavioral functions, including attention. Infants’ ability to orient and sustain attention to stimuli develops in concert with refinement of the orienting network in frontoparietal regions of the brain. Infants (n = 97) underwent magnetic resonance imaging at one-month of age and data were fit to a diffusion tensor imaging model to calculate fractional anisotropy (FA) and radial diffusivity (RD), as well as to a neurite orientation dispersion and density imaging model to calculate intracellular volume fraction (νic). Infant attention was assessed at six months of age using a dynamic puppet task (Cuevas and Bell, 2014). Infants with higher FA in the corpus callosum and anterior cingulum showed increased orienting behaviors. Our findings indicate that increased microstructure of the white matter tracts in the orienting network may play a role in the early neurodevelopment of attentional orienting behaviors.

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