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The Cerebellum and Cognitive Function: Anatomical Evidence from a Transdiagnostic Sample.
- Source :
-
Cerebellum (London, England) [Cerebellum] 2024 Aug; Vol. 23 (4), pp. 1399-1410. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Dec 27. - Publication Year :
- 2024
-
Abstract
- Multiple lines of evidence across human functional, lesion, and animal data point to a cerebellar role, in particular of crus I, crus II, and lobule VIIB, in cognitive function. However, a mapping of distinct facets of cognitive function to cerebellar structure is missing. We analyzed structural neuroimaging data from the Healthy Brain Network (HBN). Cerebellar parcellation was performed with a validated automated segmentation pipeline (CERES) and stringent visual quality check (n = 662 subjects retained from initial n = 1452). Canonical correlation analyses (CCA) examined regional gray matter volumetric (GMV) differences in association to cognitive function (quantified with NIH Toolbox Cognition domain, NIH-TB), accounting for psychopathology severity, age, sex, scan location, and intracranial volume. Multivariate CCA uncovered a significant correlation between two components entailing a latent cognitive canonical (NIH-TB subscales) and a brain canonical variate (cerebellar GMV and intracranial volume, ICV), surviving bootstrapping and permutation procedures. The components correspond to partly shared cerebellar-cognitive function relationship with a first map encompassing cognitive flexibility (r = 0.89), speed of processing (r = 0.65), and working memory (r = 0.52) associated with regional GMV in crus II (r = 0.57) and lobule X (r = 0.59) and a second map including the crus I (r = 0.49) and lobule VI (r = 0.49) associated with working memory (r = 0.51). We show evidence for a structural subspecialization of the cerebellum topography for cognitive function in a transdiagnostic sample.<br /> (© 2023. The Author(s).)
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 1473-4230
- Volume :
- 23
- Issue :
- 4
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Cerebellum (London, England)
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 38151675
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s12311-023-01645-y