| Literature DB >> 34270921 |
Valerie J Sydnor1, Bart Larsen1, Danielle S Bassett2, Aaron Alexander-Bloch3, Damien A Fair4, Conor Liston5, Allyson P Mackey6, Michael P Milham7, Adam Pines1, David R Roalf8, Jakob Seidlitz3, Ting Xu9, Armin Raznahan10, Theodore D Satterthwaite11.
Abstract
The human brain undergoes a prolonged period of cortical development that spans multiple decades. During childhood and adolescence, cortical development progresses from lower-order, primary and unimodal cortices with sensory and motor functions to higher-order, transmodal association cortices subserving executive, socioemotional, and mentalizing functions. The spatiotemporal patterning of cortical maturation thus proceeds in a hierarchical manner, conforming to an evolutionarily rooted, sensorimotor-to-association axis of cortical organization. This developmental program has been characterized by data derived from multimodal human neuroimaging and is linked to the hierarchical unfolding of plasticity-related neurobiological events. Critically, this developmental program serves to enhance feature variation between lower-order and higher-order regions, thus endowing the brain's association cortices with unique functional properties. However, accumulating evidence suggests that protracted plasticity within late-maturing association cortices, which represents a defining feature of the human developmental program, also confers risk for diverse developmental psychopathologies.Entities:
Keywords: MRI; adolescence; association cortex; axis; evolution; gradient; microscale; neurodevelopment; neuroimaging; psychopathology
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34270921 PMCID: PMC8448958 DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2021.06.016
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuron ISSN: 0896-6273 Impact factor: 18.688