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Associations between handedness and brain functional connectivity patterns in children

Psychology

Associations between handedness and brain functional connectivity patterns in children

D. Tomasi and N. D. Volkow

This groundbreaking study by Dardo Tomasi and Nora D. Volkow explores the intriguing links between handedness and brain connectivity in children. Discover how left-handers exhibit unique functional connectivity patterns, highlighting the brain's remarkable adaptability. Dive into the details of this compelling research that reveals significant differences in motor areas of the brain without structural connectivity variations.... show more
Abstract
Handedness develops early in life, but the structural and functional brain connectivity patterns associated with it remains unknown. Here we investigate associations between handedness and the asymmetry of brain connectivity in 9- to 10-years old children from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study. Compared to right-handers, left-handers had increased global functional connectivity density in the left-hand motor area and decreased it in the right-hand motor area. A connectivity-based index of handedness provided a sharper differentiation between right- and left-handers. The laterality of hand-motor connectivity varied as a function of handedness in unimodal sensorimotor cortices, heteromodal areas, and cerebellum (P<0.001) and reproduced across all regions of interest in Discovery and Replication subsamples. Here we show a strong association between handedness and the laterality of the functional connectivity patterns in the absence of differences in structural connectivity, brain morphometrics, and cortical myelin between left, right, and mixed handed children.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Mar 15, 2024
Authors
Dardo Tomasi, Nora D. Volkow
Tags
handedness
brain connectivity
functional connectivity density
children
sensorimotor cortices
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