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White matter and task-switching in young adults: A Diffusion Tensor Imaging study

Authors :
Domenico D'Avella
Eleonora Mastrorilli
Alessandra Bertoldo
Antonino Vallesi
Francesco Causin
Source :
Neuroscience
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2016.

Abstract

Highlights • DTI and performance data on three task-switching paradigms were collected on young adults. • Frontal inter-hemispheric white matter integrity favors sustained task-switching. • This result was observed when switching between spatial rules or color-shape ones. • No relation between behavior and white matter was observed for verbal rule switching. • Task-specific features determine whether white matter mediates task-switching performance.<br />The capacity to flexibly switch between different task rules has been previously associated with distributed fronto-parietal networks, predominantly in the left hemisphere for phasic switching sub-processes, and in the right hemisphere for more tonic aspects of task-switching, such as rule maintenance and management. It is thus likely that the white matter (WM) connectivity between these regions is critical in sustaining the flexibility required by task-switching. This study examined the relationship between WM microstructure in young adults and task-switching performance in different paradigms: classical shape-color, spatial and grammatical tasks. The main results showed an association between WM integrity in anterior portions of the corpus callosum (genu and body) and a sustained measure of task-switching performance. In particular, a higher fractional anisotropy and a lower radial diffusivity in these WM regions were associated with smaller mixing costs both in the spatial task-switching paradigm and in the shape-color one, as confirmed by a conjunction analysis. No association was found with behavioral measures obtained in the grammatical task-switching paradigm. The switch costs, a measure of phasic switching processes, were not correlated with WM microstructure in any task. This study shows that a more efficient inter-hemispheric connectivity within the frontal lobes favors sustained task-switching processes, especially with task contexts embedding non-verbal components.

Details

ISSN :
03064522
Volume :
329
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neuroscience
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a5ce6ade6b13210aa8e24ccc73da1e1c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroscience.2016.05.026