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Effects of age, sex, and puberty on neural efficiency of cognitive and motor control in adolescents

Authors :
Eva M. Müller-Oehring
Ian M. Colrain
Susan F. Tapert
Jui-Yang Hong
Devin Prouty
Dongjin Kwon
Adolf Pfefferbaum
Fiona C. Baker
Tilman Schulte
M.J. Meloy
Edith V. Sullivan
Weiwei Chu
Ty Brumback
Source :
Brain Imaging Behav
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2019.

Abstract

Critical changes in adolescence involve brain cognitive maturation of inhibitory control processes that are essential for a myriad of adult functions. Cognitive control advances into adulthood as there is more flexible integration of component processes, including inhibitory control of conflicting information, overwriting inappropriate response tendencies, and amplifying relevant responses for accurate execution. Using a modified Stroop task with fMRI, we investigated the effects of age, sex, and puberty on brain functional correlates of cognitive and motor control in 87 boys and 91 girls across the adolescent age range. Results revealed dissociable brain systems for cognitive and motor control processes, whereby adolescents flexibly adapted neural responses to control demands. Specifically, when response repetitions facilitated planning-based action selection, frontoparietal-insular regions associated with cognitive control operations were less activated, whereas cortical-pallidal-cerebellar motor regions associated with motor skill acquisition, were more activated. Attenuated middle cingulate cortex activation occurred with older adolescent age for both motor control and cognitive control with automaticity from repetition learning. Sexual dimorphism for control operations occurred in extrastriate cortices involved in visuo-attentional selection: While boys enhanced extrastriate selection processes for motor control, girls activated these regions more for cognitive control. These sex differences were attenuated with more advanced pubertal stage. Together, our findings show that brain cognitive and motor control processes are segregated, demand-specific, more efficient in older adolescents, and differ between sexes relative to pubertal development. Our findings advance our understanding of how distributed brain activity and the neurodevelopment of automaticity enhances cognitive and motor control ability in adolescence.

Details

ISSN :
19317565 and 19317557
Volume :
14
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Brain Imaging and Behavior
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b617556a8bf57411f42a2c430cd37cbf
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11682-019-00075-x