| Literature DB >> 26509809 |
Brian B Avants1, Daniel A Hackman2, Laura M Betancourt3, Gwendolyn M Lawson2, Hallam Hurt3, Martha J Farah2.
Abstract
What are the long-term effects of childhood experience on brain development? Research with animals shows that the quality of environmental stimulation and parental nurturance both play important roles in shaping lifelong brain structure and function. Human research has so far been limited to the effects of abnormal experience and pathological development. Using a unique longitudinal dataset of in-home measures of childhood experience at ages 4 and 8 and MRI acquired in late adolescence, we were able to relate normal variation in childhood experience to later life cortical thickness. Environmental stimulation at age 4 predicted cortical thickness in a set of automatically derived regions in temporal and prefrontal cortex. In contrast, age 8 experience was not predictive. Parental nurturance was not predictive at either age. This work reveals an association between childhood experience and later brain structure that is specific relative to aspects of experience, regions of brain, and timing.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26509809 PMCID: PMC4624931 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0138217
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Cortical eigenanatomy related to environmental stimulation in the home at age 4.
Brodmann Areas are determined via a template-based mapping between our population-specific coordinate system and the standard Talairach space. The primarily left inferior temporal gyrus eigenanatomy region includes a contribution from prefrontal cortex; the primarily right inferior temporal gyrus includes a small contribution from contralateral angular gyrus. Model beta values and standard error for age 4 environmental stimulation are also shown. The middle columns show uncorrected p-values and FDR-corrected q-values for the relation of cortical thickness to environmental stimulation. Other variables entered into the models were age at scan, gender, gestational cocaine exposure (GCE; yes or no), history of foster care (yes or no), parental nurturance composite from the HOME, maternal IQ and child IQ (at age 18). The right-most column shows other factors in the model that were related to cortical thickness with at least p<0.05 significance, uncorrected.
| Principal brain regions | Environmental stimulation, age 4 | Other significant factors | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brief Descriptio of Eigen-anatomy | Brodmann Areas | Talairach Coords |
| Standardized Beta | p | q | Level of significance * p<0.05, ** p<0.01, ***p<0.001 |
| L lateral inferior temporal—posterior | 20 | 5, -11, -27 | yellow | -0.479 | 0.002 | 0. 047 | GCE* (control Ss thinner), age* (older Ss thinner) |
| L lateral Inferior temporal -anterior | 20 | 54, -11, -27 | blue | -0.599 | 0.000 | 0.010 | GCE* (control Ss thinner), age* (older Ss thinner) |
| Bilateral fusiform | 37 | +/-42, -58, -10 | violet | -0.433 | 0.000 | 0.047 | Gender*** (Female Ss thinner) |
| R lateral inferior temporal | 20 | -61–29–14 | red | -0.448 | 0.005 | 0.047 | Gender** (Female Ss thinner) |
Fig 1Eigenanatomy regions where cortical thickness is significantly predicted by age 4 environmental stimulation.
Effects are present in bilateral fusiform and lateral inferior temporal lobe. Two components show a small amount of network structure with some frontal involvement on the right side and some parietal involvement on the left. The most significant region, in Brodmann area 20 on the left, is denoted by a dagger and survives family-wise error rate correction.
Fig 2Increased environmental stimulation in the home at age 4 decreases cortical thickness as measured during young adulthood.
The scatter plots show environmental stimulation in the home environment versus residualized cortical thickness in each of the significant regions. The thickness is residualized against the nuisance covariates of age at scan, maternal IQ, gender, foster care and prenatal cocaine exposure before plotting.