Martínez Kenia, Janssen Joost, Pineda-Pardo José Ángel, Carmona Susanna, Román Francisco Javier, Alemán-Gómez Yasser, Garcia-Garcia David, Escorial Sergio, Quiroga María Ángeles, Santarnecchi Emiliano, Navas-Sánchez Francisco Javier, Desco Manuel, Arango Celso, Colom Roberto
Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Hospital General Universitario Gregorio Marañón, Madrid, Spain; Instituto de Investigación Sanitaria Gregorio Marañón (IISGM), Madrid, Spain; Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Salud Mental (CIBERSAM), Madrid, Spain; Universidad Europea de Madrid, Madrid, Spain.
Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Hospital General Universitario Gregorio Marañón, Madrid, Spain; Instituto de Investigación Sanitaria Gregorio Marañón (IISGM), Madrid, Spain; Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Salud Mental (CIBERSAM), Madrid, Spain; Department of Psychiatry, Brain Center Rudolf Magnus, University Medical Center Utrecht, The Netherlands.
Neuroimage. 2017 Jul 15;155:234-244. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2017.04.029. Epub 2017 Apr 13.
Global structural brain connectivity has been reported to be sex-dependent with women having increased interhemispheric connectivity (InterHc) and men having greater intrahemispheric connectivity (IntraHc). However, (a) smaller brains show greater InterHc, (b) larger brains show greater IntraHc, and (c) women have, on average, smaller brains than men. Therefore, sex differences in brain size may modulate sex differences in global brain connectivity. At the behavioural level, sex-dependent differences in connectivity are thought to contribute to men-women differences in spatial and verbal abilities. But this has never been tested at the individual level. The current study assessed whether individual differences in global structural connectome measures (InterHc, IntraHc and the ratio of InterHc relative to IntraHc) predict spatial and verbal ability while accounting for the effect of sex and brain size. The sample included forty men and forty women, who did neither differ in age nor in verbal and spatial latent components defined by a broad battery of tests and tasks. High-resolution T-weighted and diffusion-weighted images were obtained for computing brain size and reconstructing the structural connectome. Results showed that men had higher IntraHc than women, while women had an increased ratio InterHc/IntraHc. However, these sex differences were modulated by brain size. Increased InterHc relative to IntraHc predicted higher spatial and verbal ability irrespective of sex and brain size. The positive correlations between the ratio InterHc/IntraHc and the spatial and verbal abilities were confirmed in 1000 random samples generated by bootstrapping. Therefore, sex differences in global structural connectome connectivity were modulated by brain size and did not underlie sex differences in verbal and spatial abilities. Rather, the level of dominance of InterHc over IntraHc may be associated with individual differences in verbal and spatial abilities in both men and women.
据报道,全球大脑结构连通性存在性别差异,女性的半球间连通性(InterHc)增强,而男性的半球内连通性(IntraHc)更强。然而,(a)脑容量较小者显示出更强的InterHc,(b)脑容量较大者显示出更强的IntraHc,且(c)女性的平均脑容量小于男性。因此,脑容量的性别差异可能会调节全球大脑连通性的性别差异。在行为层面,连通性的性别依赖性差异被认为是导致男性和女性在空间和语言能力上存在差异的原因。但这从未在个体层面得到验证。本研究评估了全球结构连接组测量指标(InterHc、IntraHc以及InterHc与IntraHc的比值)的个体差异在考虑性别和脑容量影响的情况下是否能预测空间和语言能力。样本包括40名男性和40名女性,他们在年龄以及由一系列广泛测试和任务所定义的语言和空间潜在成分方面均无差异。获取了高分辨率T加权和扩散加权图像以计算脑容量并重建结构连接组。结果显示,男性的IntraHc高于女性,而女性的InterHc/IntraHc比值增加。然而,这些性别差异受到脑容量的调节。相对于IntraHc,InterHc增加预示着更高的空间和语言能力,而与性别和脑容量无关。通过自抽样生成的1000个随机样本证实了InterHc/IntraHc比值与空间和语言能力之间的正相关。因此,全球结构连接组连通性的性别差异受到脑容量的调节,并非语言和空间能力性别差异的基础。相反,InterHc相对于IntraHc的优势水平可能与男性和女性在语言和空间能力上的个体差异相关。