TY - JOUR
T1 - Comparison of sustained and transient activity in children and adults using a mixed blocked/event-related fMRI design
AU - Wenger, Kristin K.
AU - Visscher, Kristina M.
AU - Miezin, Francis M.
AU - Petersen, Steven E.
AU - Schlaggar, Bradley L.
N1 - Funding Information:
We would like to thank Mark McAvoy and Avi Snyder for assistance with fMRI analysis methods, and Heather Lugar for assistance with a pilot study. This research was supported by NIH grants NS41255 (S.E.P.), NS46424 (S.E.P.), NSADA (B.L.S); and the John Merck Scholars Fund (B.L.S.), Dana Foundation (B.L.S.), and Burroughs-Wellcome Fund (B.L.S.). Portions of this work were reported at the Child Neurology Society 32nd Annual Meeting, Miami Beach, FL (October 2003), and the Society for Neuroscience 33rd Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA (November 2003).
PY - 2004/6
Y1 - 2004/6
N2 - The ability to make direct comparisons between adult and child neuroimaging data is important to the study of the neural basis of cognitive development. Recent fMRI studies in adults have used mixed blocked/event-related designs to extract activity consistent with separable sustained, task-related processes and transient, trial-related processes. Because brain regions with different time courses of activity may have different roles in cognitive processing, the ability to distinguish between sustained and transient signals would contribute to understanding the functional roles of regions involved in cognitive processing. The developmental profile of such activity would give insight into how cognitive processing develops over time. The purpose of this study was to assess the utility of the mixed design to detect and dissociate sustained and transient activity in children, and to determine if the time courses or magnitudes of the extracted signals differ from those extracted from adults. An fMRI experiment was performed on 10 adults and 10 children (ages 7-8) using counterphase flickering checkerboard stimuli that produced sustained, transient, and a combination of sustained and transient responses in visual cortex. Analyses were performed using the general linear model (GLM) assuming a shape for sustained effects, but not for transient effects. In visual cortex, neither transient nor sustained effects showed significant between-group differences. For both groups, flickering checkerboard stimuli produced robust responses in visual cortex contralateral but not ipsilateral to the stimulus. Results extend the feasibility of direct statistical comparison of adults and children; mixed designs provide a means to examine neural activity in both adults and children related to sustained, task-level processes, likely related to task-level control.
AB - The ability to make direct comparisons between adult and child neuroimaging data is important to the study of the neural basis of cognitive development. Recent fMRI studies in adults have used mixed blocked/event-related designs to extract activity consistent with separable sustained, task-related processes and transient, trial-related processes. Because brain regions with different time courses of activity may have different roles in cognitive processing, the ability to distinguish between sustained and transient signals would contribute to understanding the functional roles of regions involved in cognitive processing. The developmental profile of such activity would give insight into how cognitive processing develops over time. The purpose of this study was to assess the utility of the mixed design to detect and dissociate sustained and transient activity in children, and to determine if the time courses or magnitudes of the extracted signals differ from those extracted from adults. An fMRI experiment was performed on 10 adults and 10 children (ages 7-8) using counterphase flickering checkerboard stimuli that produced sustained, transient, and a combination of sustained and transient responses in visual cortex. Analyses were performed using the general linear model (GLM) assuming a shape for sustained effects, but not for transient effects. In visual cortex, neither transient nor sustained effects showed significant between-group differences. For both groups, flickering checkerboard stimuli produced robust responses in visual cortex contralateral but not ipsilateral to the stimulus. Results extend the feasibility of direct statistical comparison of adults and children; mixed designs provide a means to examine neural activity in both adults and children related to sustained, task-level processes, likely related to task-level control.
KW - Child
KW - Neuroimaging
KW - fMRI
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/2942562863
U2 - 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2004.02.028
DO - 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2004.02.028
M3 - Article
C2 - 15193629
AN - SCOPUS:2942562863
SN - 1053-8119
VL - 22
SP - 975
EP - 985
JO - NeuroImage
JF - NeuroImage
IS - 2
ER -