| Literature DB >> 28706740 |
Diankun Gong1,2, Weiyi Ma3, Jinnan Gong1, Hui He1, Li Dong1, Dan Zhang1, Jianfu Li1, Cheng Luo1, Dezhong Yao1.
Abstract
With action video games (AVGs) becoming increasingly popular worldwide, the cognitive benefits of AVG experience have attracted continuous research attention over the past two decades. Research has repeatedly shown that AVG experience can causally enhance cognitive ability and is related to neural plasticity in gray matter and functional networks in the brain. However, the relation between AVG experience and the plasticity of white matter (WM) network still remains unclear. WM network modulates the distribution of action potentials, coordinating the communication between brain regions and acting as the framework of neural networks. And various types of cognitive deficits are usually accompanied by impairments of WM networks. Thus, understanding this relation is essential in assessing the influence of AVG experience on neural plasticity and using AVG experience as an interventional tool for impairments of WM networks. Using graph theory, this study analyzed WM networks in AVG experts and amateurs. Results showed that AVG experience is related to altered WM networks in prefrontal networks, limbic system, and sensorimotor networks, which are related to cognitive control and sensorimotor functions. These results shed new light on the influence of AVG experience on the plasticity of WM networks and suggested the clinical applicability of AVG experience.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28706740 PMCID: PMC5494573 DOI: 10.1155/2017/7543686
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neural Plast ISSN: 1687-5443 Impact factor: 3.599
Mathematical formulas used in graph theoretical analyses.
| Characteristics | Mathematical formulas | Interpretations |
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| Global efficiency |
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| Local efficiency |
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| Mean clustering coefficient |
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| Nodal clustering coefficient |
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| Nodal efficiency |
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| Nodal strength |
| The larger |
We defined the subgraph G as the set of nodes that is the direct neighbors of the ith node, that is, directly connected to the ith node with an edge. The degree of each node, K, is defined as the number of nodes in the subgraph G.
Figure 1The differences in structural connection at the group level. See Table 1 for full names of nodes. Red nodes were located at the prefrontal network; green nodes were at the limbic system; blue nodes were at the sensorimotor network (L = left, R = right). The gray lines denote the structural connection where experts had significant enhancements compared with amateurs.
Figure 2The differences in network and nodal characteristics at the group level. Red nodes were at the prefrontal network; green nodes were at the limbic system; blue nodes were at the sensorimotor network (L = left, R = right). All nodes denote the network or nodal characteristics where experts had significant enhancements compared with amateurs.
Detailed information on significant nodes. BA: Brodmann areas.
| Abbr. | Full name | BA | Involved networks | Involved functions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SFGmorb | Superior frontal gyrus, medial orbital | BA 10 | Prefrontal networks | Cognitive control |
| SFG | Superior frontal gyrus | BA 9 | Prefrontal networks | Cognitive control |
| SFGorb | Superior frontal gyrus, orbital | BA 11 | Prefrontal networks | Cognitive control |
| IFGorb | Inferior frontal gyrus, orbital | BA 47 | Prefrontal networks | Cognitive control |
| MFGorb | Middle frontal gyrus, orbital | BA 46 | Prefrontal networks | Cognitive control |
| IFGtri | Inferior frontal gyrus, triangular | BA 45 | Prefrontal networks | Cognitive control |
| IFGoper | Inferior frontal gyrus, opercular | BA 44 | Prefrontal networks | Cognitive control |
| REG | Rectus gyrus | BA 11 | Limbic system | Cognitive control |
| ACC | Anterior cingulate gyrus | BA 24 | Limbic system | Cognitive control |
| PUT | Lenticular nucleus, putamen | — | Limbic system | Motor learning and execution |
| PAL | Lenticular nucleus, pallidum | — | Limbic system | Regulating movements |
| CAU | Caudate nucleus | — | Limbic system | Spatial and motoric memory |
| AMRG | Amygdala | — | Limbic system | Stressing response |
| HIP | Hippocampus | — | Limbic system | Spatial memory and navigation |
| STGp | Superior temporal gyrus, temporal pole | BA 38 | Limbic system | Limbic associational integration |
| SMA | Supplementary motor network | BA 6 | Sensorimotor network | The control of movement |
| MTG | Middle temporal gyrus | BA 21 | Sensorimotor network | Temporal associational integration |
| STG | Superior temporal gyrus | BA 48 | Sensorimotor network | Audio-visual integration, and motion perception |
| SPG | Superior parietal gyrus | BA 7 | Sensorimotor network | Spatial orientation |
| SOG | Superior occipital gyrus | BA 19 | Sensorimotor network | Processing visual information |
| ANG | Angular gyrus | BA 39 | Sensorimotor network | Spatial orientation |
| CAL | Calcarine fissure and surrounding cortex | BA 18 | Sensorimotor network | Processing visual information |
| MOG | Middle occipital gyrus | BA 19 | Sensorimotor network | Processing visual information |
| PoCG | Postcentral gyrus | BA 3 | Sensorimotor network | Processing somatosensory information |
| SMG | Supramarginal gyrus | BA 40 | Sensorimotor network | Spatial orientation |