Sex, gender diversity, and brain structure in early adolescence

Author:

Torgerson Carinna12,Ahmadi Hedyeh1,Choupan Jeiran2ORCID,Fan Chun Chieh34ORCID,Blosnich John R.5,Herting Megan M.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Population and Public Health Sciences University of Southern California Los Angeles California USA

2. Mark and Mary Stevens Neuroimaging and Informatics Institute University of Southern California Los Angeles California USA

3. Center for Population Neuroscience and Genetics Laureate Institute for Brain Research Tulsa Oklahoma USA

4. Department of Radiology, School of Medicine University of California San Diego California USA

5. Suzanne Dworak‐Peck School of Social Work University of Southern California Los Angeles California USA

Abstract

AbstractThere remains little consensus about the relationship between sex and brain structure, particularly in early adolescence. Moreover, few pediatric neuroimaging studies have analyzed both sex and gender as variables of interest—many of which included small sample sizes and relied on binary definitions of gender. The current study examined gender diversity with a continuous felt‐gender score and categorized sex based on X and Y allele frequency in a large sample of children ages 9–11 years old (N = 7195). Then, a statistical model‐building approach was employed to determine whether gender diversity and sex independently or jointly relate to brain morphology, including subcortical volume, cortical thickness, gyrification, and white matter microstructure. Additional sensitivity analyses found that male versus female differences in gyrification and white matter were largely accounted for by total brain volume, rather than sex per se. The model with sex, but not gender diversity, was the best‐fitting model in 60.1% of gray matter regions and 61.9% of white matter regions after adjusting for brain volume. The proportion of variance accounted for by sex was negligible to small in all cases. While models including felt‐gender explained a greater amount of variance in a few regions, the felt‐gender score alone was not a significant predictor on its own for any white or gray matter regions examined. Overall, these findings demonstrate that at ages 9–11 years old, sex accounts for a small proportion of variance in brain structure, while gender diversity is not directly associated with neurostructural diversity.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

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