Login / Signup

The co-activation pattern between the DMN and other brain networks affects the cognition of older adults: evidence from naturalistic stimulation fMRI data.

Fengzhu SunDong CuiQing JiaoJinpeng NiuXiao-Tong ZhangYajun ShiHaiqin LiuZhen OuyangGuang-Hui YuRuhai DouYongxin GuoLi DongWeifang Cao
Published in: Cerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991) (2023)
Brain function changes affect cognitive functions in older adults, yet the relationship between cognition and the dynamic changes of brain networks during naturalistic stimulation is not clear. Here, we recruited the young, middle-aged and older groups from the Cambridge Center for Aging and Neuroscience to investigate the relationship between dynamic metrics of brain networks and cognition using functional magnetic resonance imaging data during movie-watching. We found six reliable co-activation pattern (CAP) states of brain networks grouped into three pairs with opposite activation patterns in three age groups. Compared with young and middle-aged adults, older adults dwelled shorter time in CAP state 4 with deactivated default mode network (DMN) and activated salience, frontoparietal and dorsal-attention networks (DAN), and longer time in state 6 with deactivated DMN and activated DAN and visual network, suggesting altered dynamic interaction between DMN and other brain networks might contribute to cognitive decline in older adults. Meanwhile, older adults showed easier transfer from state 6 to state 3 (activated DMN and deactivated sensorimotor network), suggesting that the fragile antagonism between DMN and other cognitive networks might contribute to cognitive decline in older adults. Our findings provided novel insights into aberrant brain network dynamics associated with cognitive decline.
Keyphrases
  • cognitive decline
  • resting state
  • functional connectivity
  • mild cognitive impairment
  • white matter
  • physical activity
  • middle aged
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • spinal cord
  • working memory
  • deep learning
  • spinal cord injury