Salience network connectivity is altered in 6-week-old infants at heightened likelihood for developing autism

Author:

Tsang Tawny,Green Shulamite A.,Liu Janelle,Lawrence Katherine,Jeste Shafali,Bookheimer Susan Y.,Dapretto MirellaORCID

Abstract

AbstractConverging evidence implicates disrupted brain connectivity in autism spectrum disorder (ASD); however, the mechanisms linking altered connectivity early in development to the emergence of ASD symptomatology remain poorly understood. Here we examined whether atypicalities in the Salience Network – an early-emerging neural network involved in orienting attention to the most salient aspects of one’s internal and external environment – may predict the development of ASD symptoms such as reduced social attention and atypical sensory processing. Six-week-old infants at high likelihood of developing ASD based on family history exhibited stronger Salience Network connectivity with sensorimotor regions; infants at typical likelihood of developing ASD demonstrated stronger Salience Network connectivity with prefrontal regions involved in social attention. Infants with higher connectivity with sensorimotor regions had lower connectivity with prefrontal regions, suggesting a direct tradeoff between attention to basic sensory versus socially-relevant information. Early alterations in Salience Network connectivity predicted subsequent ASD symptomatology, providing a plausible mechanistic account for the unfolding of atypical developmental trajectories associated with vulnerability to ASD.

Funder

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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