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Age-related decrease in inter-subject similarity of cortical morphology and task and resting-state functional connectivity.

Junhong Yu
Published in: GeroScience (2023)
"All old people are the same" is an unfortunate characterization of the perceived homogeneity in the older age group. This study attempts to debunk this myth in the context of the structural and functional brain. Within older relative to younger age groups, individuals are hypothesized to be more dissimilar to their similar-aged peers-thus demonstrating an age-related divergence. This study analyzed functional connectivity (FC) during multiple fMRI paradigms (2 rest + 5 tasks) and cortical thickness (CT) data from two lifespan datasets (N total  = 1161). On average, between-subject FC/CT correlations became weaker in the older age groups. Further analyses ruled out the possibility that more rapid age-related changes in older brains have increased the dissimilarity in these older age groups. Brain-wide analyses revealed significant effects of age-related divergence across most of the brain. Finally, CT similarity between a dyad significantly predicted their FC similarity across multiple fMRI task paradigms-demonstrating a close relationship between brain structure and function even at the between-dyad level. Contrary to the myth that "all old people are the same," these findings suggest young people are more similar to each other. This study presents major implications in the study of neural fingerprinting and brain-behavior associations.
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