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Brain network modularity predicts changes in cortical thickness in children involved in a physical activity intervention.

Laura Chaddock-HeymanTimothy B WengPsyche LouiCaitlin KienzlerRobert WeisshappelEric S DrolletteLauren B RaineDaniel R WestfallShih-Chun KaoDominika M PindusPauline BaniquedDarla M CastelliCharles H HillmanArthur F Kramer
Published in: Psychophysiology (2021)
Individual differences in brain network modularity at baseline can predict improvements in cognitive performance after cognitive and physical interventions. This study is the first to explore whether brain network modularity predicts changes in cortical brain structure in 8- to 9-year-old children involved in an after-school physical activity intervention (N = 62), relative to children randomized to a wait-list control group (N = 53). For children involved in the physical activity intervention, brain network modularity at baseline predicted greater decreases in cortical thickness in the anterior frontal cortex and parahippocampus. Further, for children involved in the physical activity intervention, greater decrease in cortical thickness was associated with improvements in cognitive efficiency. The relationships among baseline modularity, changes in cortical thickness, and changes in cognitive performance were not present in the wait-list control group. Our exploratory study has promising implications for the understanding of brain network modularity as a biomarker of intervention-related improvements with physical activity.
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