Development of brain state dynamics involved in working memory

Author:

He Ying1ORCID,Liang Xinyuan1,Chen Menglu1ORCID,Tian Ting1,Zeng Yimeng1,Liu Jin1,Hao Lei1,Xu Jiahua1,Chen Rui1,Wang Yanpei1,Gao Jia-Hong23,Tan Shuping4,Taghia Jalil5,He Yong16,Tao Sha1,Dong Qi1,Qin Shaozheng16ORCID

Affiliation:

1. IDG/McGovern Institute for Brain Research, Department of Psychology, Beijing Normal University State Key Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience and Learning & , Beijing 100875 , China

2. Peking University Center for MRI Research, Academy for Advanced Interdisciplinary Studies, , Beijing 100871 , China

3. McGovern Institute for Brain Research, Peking University , Beijing 100871 , China

4. Beijing HuiLongGuan Hospital, Peking University , Beijing 100096 , China

5. Stanford University School of Medicine Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, , Stanford, CA 94305 , United States

6. Chinese Institute for Brain Research , Beijing 102206 , China

Abstract

Abstract Human functional brain networks are dynamically organized to enable cognitive and behavioral flexibility to meet ever-changing environmental demands. Frontal-parietal network (FPN) and default mode network (DMN) are recognized to play an essential role in executive functions such as working memory. However, little is known about the developmental differences in the brain-state dynamics of these two networks involved in working memory from childhood to adulthood. Here, we implemented Bayesian switching dynamical systems approach to identify brain states of the FPN and DMN during working memory in 69 school-age children and 51 adults. We identified five brain states with rapid transitions, which are characterized by dynamic configurations among FPN and DMN nodes with active and inactive engagement in different task demands. Compared with adults, children exhibited less frequent brain states with the highest activity in FPN nodes dominant to high demand, and its occupancy rate increased with age. Children preferred to attain inactive brain states with low activity in both FPN and DMN nodes. Moreover, children exhibited lower transition probability from low-to-high demand states and such a transition was positively correlated with working memory performance. Notably, higher transition probability from low-to-high demand states was associated with a stronger structural connectivity across FPN and DMN, but with weaker structure–function coupling of these two networks. These findings extend our understanding of how FPN and DMN nodes are dynamically organized into a set of transient brain states to support moment-to-moment information updating during working memory and suggest immature organization of these functional brain networks in childhood, which is constrained by the structural connectivity.

Funder

Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities

International Social Science Council

Open Research Fund of the State Key Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience and Learning

Beijing Brain Initiative of Beijing Municipal Science & Technology Commission

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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