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  • Review Article
  • Published:

Imaging structural and functional brain development in early childhood

Key Points

  • Adult patterns of regional cortical thickness seem to be present at birth, and cortical grey matter expands rapidly in the first year of life. Cortical thickness peaks between 1 and 2 years, whereas surface area expands through childhood

  • White-matter tracts are established before birth, and postnatal myelination of these tracts occurs rapidly over the first 2 years of life. The white-matter connectome is fairly mature at birth

  • Sensorimotor resting-state functional networks are present at birth, whereas higher-order functional networks gradually emerge and develop over the first 2 years of life

  • Studies have begun to explore genetic and environmental influences on early-childhood brain development and the predictive value of early imaging biomarkers

  • Future studies will need to better define normal and abnormal brain development in early childhood and determine whether it is possible to identify early imaging biomarkers of later cognitive and behavioural outcomes

Abstract

In humans, the period from term birth to 2 years of age is characterized by rapid and dynamic brain development and plays an important role in cognitive development and risk of disorders such as autism and schizophrenia. Recent imaging studies have begun to delineate the growth trajectories of brain structure and function in the first years after birth and their relationship to cognition and risk of neuropsychiatric disorders. This Review discusses the development of grey and white matter and structural and functional networks, as well as genetic and environmental influences on early-childhood brain development. We also discuss initial evidence regarding the usefulness of early imaging biomarkers for predicting cognitive outcomes and risk of neuropsychiatric disorders.

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Figure 1: Structural brain development in early childhood.
Figure 2: Estimated trajectories of brain structural parameters during development.
Figure 3: The development of resting-state functional networks during infancy.

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Acknowledgements

The authors thank members of the University of North Carolina Early Brain Development Laboratory for their help with the manuscript and figures and M. Styner and D. Rubinow for their thoughtful reading and comments. This work is supported by the US National Institutes of Health: grants MH070890, HD053000 and MH111944 to J.H.G.; grants NS088975, DA043171 and DA036645 to W.G.; and grants MH092335 and MH104330 to R.C.K.

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The authors all researched data for the article, provided a substantial contribution to discussion of the content, wrote the article and reviewed and edited the manuscript before submission.

Corresponding author

Correspondence to John H. Gilmore.

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The authors declare no competing financial interests.

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Glossary

Axial diffusivity

(AD). Water diffusion along the principal axis of a fibre, thought to be dependent on fibre compactness and microstructure.

Radial diffusivity

(RD). Water diffusion perpendicular to the main axis of the fibre, sensitive to myelination.

Fractional anisotropy

(FA). A summary measure of microstructure that takes into account axial diffusivity and radial diffusivity.

Network integration

The overall capacity of the network to be interconnected and exchange information.

Network segregation

The degree to which parts of a network form localized clusters of nodes or modules of connections.

Structural covariance networks

(SCNs). Regions of cortical grey matter with correlated variance in cortical thickness.

Maturational networks

Regions of cortical grey matter with correlated changes in cortical thickness over time.

Core structure

The collection of key hub regions that possess the most connections that bring the whole network together.

Dorsal attention network

The network involved with the 'top–down', or voluntary, focusing of attention; includes the intraparietal sulcus, frontal eye fields and middle temporal regions.

Salience network

The network involved with the selection of relevant stimuli; includes the insula, anterior cingulate cortex and amygdala.

Step-wise analysis

A technique that attempts to identify intermediate connector regions and multistep links between two brain regions that do not show directly correlated functional activity.

Predictive encoding

Theoretical framework in which higher-level cortices continuously generate predictions about the environment on the basis of learned input regularities, to minimize errors between lower-level inputs and predictions.

Heritability

The proportion of variance in a trait or measure that is due to genetic variation.

Path length

A measure of efficiency in a network; the average number of edges along the shortest paths connecting all pairs of nodes within a network.

Clustering coefficient

A measure of the proportion of existing links between one node's neighbours divided by the total number of links for a fully connected neighbourhood. It reflects how densely one node and its neighbours are locally connected.

Methylome

The pattern of DNA methylation within a genome.

Internalizing behaviour

Problem behaviours that are typically directed inward, such as anxiety, depression, social withdrawal and somatic symptoms.

Externalizing behaviour

Problem behaviours that are directed outward towards others, such as physical aggression, defiance, hyperactivity, bullying and theft.

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Gilmore, J., Knickmeyer, R. & Gao, W. Imaging structural and functional brain development in early childhood. Nat Rev Neurosci 19, 123–137 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1038/nrn.2018.1

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