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Maturity of white matter tracts is associated with episodic memory recall during development
Author(s) -
Antoine Bouyeure,
Dhaif Bekha,
Sandesh Patil,
Lucie HertzPannier,
Marion Noulhiane
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
cerebral cortex communications
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2632-7376
DOI - 10.1093/texcom/tgac004
Subject(s) - white matter , uncinate fasciculus , psychology , fractional anisotropy , episodic memory , maturity (psychological) , recall , diffusion mri , cingulum (brain) , fasciculus , association (psychology) , developmental psychology , neuroscience , cognition , cognitive psychology , medicine , magnetic resonance imaging , psychotherapist , radiology
The structure-function relationship between white matter microstructure and episodic memory (EM) has been poorly studied in the developing brain, particularly in early childhood. Previous studies in adolescents and adults have shown that episodic memory recall is associated with prefrontal-limbic white matter microstructure. It is unknown whether this association is also observed during early ontogeny. Here, we investigated the association between prefrontal-limbic tract microstructure and EM performance in a cross-sectional sample of children aged 4 to 12 years. We used a multivariate partial least squares correlation approach to extract tract-specific latent variables representing shared information between age and diffusion parameters describing tract microstructure. Individual projections onto these latent variables describe patterns of interindividual differences in tract maturation that can be interpreted as scores of white matter tract microstructural maturity. Using these estimates of microstructural maturity, we showed that maturity scores of the uncinate fasciculus and dorsal cingulum bundle correlated with distinct measures of EM recall. Furthermore, the association between tract maturity scores and EM recall was comparable between younger and older children. Our results provide new evidence on the relation between white matter maturity and EM performance during development.

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