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Development of subcortical volumes across adolescence in males and females: a multisample study of longitudinal changes

journal contribution
posted on 2018-05-15, 00:00 authored by M M Herting, C Johnson, K L Mills, Nandi VijayakumarNandi Vijayakumar, M Dennison, C Liu, A L Goddings, R E Dahl, E R Sowell, S Whittle, N B Allen, C K Tamnes
The developmental patterns of subcortical brain volumes in males and females observed in previous studies have been inconsistent. To help resolve these discrepancies, we examined developmental trajectories using three independent longitudinal samples of participants in the age-span of 8–22 years (total 216 participants and 467 scans). These datasets, including Pittsburgh (PIT; University of Pittsburgh, USA), NeuroCognitive Development (NCD; University of Oslo, Norway), and Orygen Adolescent Development Study (OADS; The University of Melbourne, Australia), span three countries and were analyzed together and in parallel using mixed-effects modeling with both generalized additive models and general linear models. For all regions and across all samples, males were found to have significantly larger volumes as compared to females, and significant sex differences were seen in age trajectories over time. However, direct comparison of sample trajectories and sex differences identified within samples were not consistent. The trajectories for the amygdala, putamen, and nucleus accumbens were most consistent between the three samples. Our results suggest that even after using similar preprocessing and analytic techniques, additional factors, such as image acquisition or sample composition may contribute to some of the discrepancies in sex specific patterns in subcortical brain changes across adolescence, and highlight region-specific variations in congruency of developmental trajectories.

History

Journal

NeuroImage

Volume

172

Pagination

194 - 205

Publisher

Elsevier

Location

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

ISSN

1053-8119

eISSN

1095-9572

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2018, Elsevier Inc.