Tracking functional network connectivity dynamics in the elderly

Kaichao Wu, Beth Jelfs, Seedahmed S Mahmoud, Katrina Neville, John Q Fang

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Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) has shown that aging disturbs healthy brain organization and functional connectivity. However, how this age-induced alteration impacts dynamic brain function interaction has not yet been fully investigated. Dynamic function network connectivity (DFNC) analysis can produce a brain representation based on the time-varying network connectivity changes, which can be further used to study the brain aging mechanism for people at different age stages.

METHOD: This presented investigation examined the dynamic functional connectivity representation and its relationship with brain age for people at an elderly stage as well as in early adulthood. Specifically, the resting-state fMRI data from the University of North Carolina cohort of 34 young adults and 28 elderly participants were fed into a DFNC analysis pipeline. This DFNC pipeline forms an integrated dynamic functional connectivity (FC) analysis framework, which consists of brain functional network parcellation, dynamic FC feature extraction, and FC dynamics examination.

RESULTS: The statistical analysis demonstrates that extensive dynamic connection changes in the elderly concerning the transient brain state and the method of functional interaction in the brain. In addition, various machine learning algorithms have been developed to verify the ability of dynamic FC features to distinguish the age stage. The fraction time of DFNC states has the highest performance, which can achieve a classification accuracy of over 88% by a decision tree.

DISCUSSION: The results proved there are dynamic FC alterations in the elderly, and the alteration was found to be correlated with mnemonic discrimination ability and could have an impact on the balance of functional integration and segregation.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1146264
Number of pages15
JournalFrontiers in Neuroscience
Volume17
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 20 Mar 2023

Bibliographical note

Copyright © 2023 Wu, Jelfs, Mahmoud, Neville and Fang.

Keywords

  • aging
  • dynamic functional network connectivity
  • graph theory
  • mnemonic discrimination ability
  • functional integration and segregation

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