The temporal dedifferentiation of global brain signal fluctuations during human brain ageing

The variation of brain functions as healthy ageing has been discussed widely using resting-state brain imaging. Previous conclusions may be misinterpreted without considering the effects of global signal (GS) on local brain activities. Up to now, the variation of GS with ageing has not been estimate...

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Published inScientific reports Vol. 12; no. 1; p. 3616
Main Authors Ao, Yujia, Kou, Juan, Yang, Chengxiao, Wang, Yifeng, Huang, Lihui, Jing, Xiujuan, Cui, Qian, Cai, Xueli, Chen, Jing
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London Nature Publishing Group UK 07.03.2022
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Summary:The variation of brain functions as healthy ageing has been discussed widely using resting-state brain imaging. Previous conclusions may be misinterpreted without considering the effects of global signal (GS) on local brain activities. Up to now, the variation of GS with ageing has not been estimated. To fill this gap, we defined the GS as the mean signal of all voxels in the gray matter and systematically investigated correlations between age and indices of GS fluctuations. What’s more, these tests were replicated with data after hemodynamic response function (HRF) de-convolution and data without noise regression as well as head motion data to verify effects of non-neural information on age. The results indicated that GS fluctuations varied as ageing in three ways. First, GS fluctuations were reduced with age. Second, the GS power transferred from lower frequencies to higher frequencies with age. Third, the GS power was more evenly distributed across frequencies in ageing brain. These trends were partly influenced by HRF and physiological noise, indicating that the age effects of GS fluctuations are associated with a variety of physiological activities. These results may indicate the temporal dedifferentiation hypothesis of brain ageing from the global perspective.
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ISSN:2045-2322
2045-2322
DOI:10.1038/s41598-022-07578-6