McIntyre Clayton C, Khodaei Mohammadreza, Lyday Robert G, Weiner Jeffrey L, Laurienti Paul J, Shappell Heather M
Neuroscience Graduate Program, Wake Forest Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, United States.
Virginia Tech-Wake Forest University School of Biomedical Engineering and Sciences, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, United States.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res (Hoboken). 2025 Jun;49(6):1206-1220. doi: 10.1111/acer.70043. Epub 2025 May 30.
The human brain is a highly interconnected and dynamic system. The study of neuroimaging indicators of future teen drinking has primarily focused on the activation of individual brain regions. We applied novel methodology to identify relationships between functional brain network dynamics and future drinking outcomes in non/low drinking teens.
Resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) time series from 17-year-old non-/low drinking participants (n = 295) of the National Consortium on Alcohol and NeuroDevelopment in Adolescence (NCANDA) study were used to fit a Hidden semi-Markov Model (HSMM). Regions of the default mode network (DMN), salience network (SN), and central executive network (CEN), collectively known as the Triple Network, were included in modeling. The HSMM identified each participant's most likely brain state sequence through five brain states. Poisson regression models assessed relationships between occupancy time in brain states and future drinking frequency/intensity. Sex differences were assessed with permutation testing and interaction terms in regression models.
No sex differences in network dynamics were observed. However, the relationship between occupancy times and future drinking frequency differed by sex for three brain states. Occupancy time in a state characterized by high activation in the DMN and SN, but low activation in the CEN, was negatively associated with future drinking in both sexes.
Brain network dynamics may be useful neural markers of teen drinking predisposition. Brain dynamics that make teens vulnerable or resilient to drinking may differ between sexes.
人类大脑是一个高度互联且动态的系统。对未来青少年饮酒的神经影像学指标的研究主要集中在个体脑区的激活上。我们应用了新颖的方法来确定非饮酒/低饮酒青少年功能性脑网络动态与未来饮酒结果之间的关系。
来自青少年酒精与神经发育全国联盟(NCANDA)研究的17岁非饮酒/低饮酒参与者(n = 295)的静息态功能磁共振成像(fMRI)时间序列被用于拟合一个隐半马尔可夫模型(HSMM)。默认模式网络(DMN)、突显网络(SN)和中央执行网络(CEN)(统称为三重网络)的区域被纳入建模。HSMM通过五种脑状态确定了每个参与者最可能的脑状态序列。泊松回归模型评估了脑状态的占据时间与未来饮酒频率/强度之间的关系。通过置换检验和回归模型中的交互项评估性别差异。
未观察到网络动态方面的性别差异。然而,对于三种脑状态,占据时间与未来饮酒频率之间的关系存在性别差异。在一种以DMN和SN高激活但CEN低激活为特征的状态下的占据时间与两性的未来饮酒均呈负相关。
脑网络动态可能是青少年饮酒易感性的有用神经标志物。使青少年易受饮酒影响或具有抗饮酒能力的脑动态可能存在性别差异。