Complex and subtle structural changes in prefrontal cortex induced by inhibitory control training from childhood to adolescence |
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Authors: | Lisa Delalande,Marine Moyon,Clo lia Tissier,Val rie Dorriere,Bernard Guillois,Katel Mevell,Sylvain Charron,Emilie Salvia,Nicolas Poirel,Julie Vidal,St phanie Lion,Catherine Oppenheim,Olivier Houd ,Arnaud Cachia,Gr goire Borst |
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Affiliation: | Lisa Delalande,Marine Moyon,Cloélia Tissier,Valérie Dorriere,Bernard Guillois,Katel Mevell,Sylvain Charron,Emilie Salvia,Nicolas Poirel,Julie Vidal,Stéphanie Lion,Catherine Oppenheim,Olivier Houdé,Arnaud Cachia,Grégoire Borst |
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Abstract: | A number of training interventions have been designed to improve executive functions and inhibitory control (IC) across the lifespan. Surprisingly, no study has investigated the structural neuroplasticity induced by IC training from childhood to late adolescence, a developmental period characterized by IC efficiency improvement and protracted maturation of prefrontal cortex (PFC) subregions involved in IC. The aim of the present study was to investigate the behavioral and structural changes induced by a 5‐week computerized and adaptive IC training in school‐aged children (10‐year‐olds) and in adolescents (16‐year‐olds). Sixty‐four children and 59 adolescents were randomly assigned to an IC (i.e. Color‐Word Stroop and Stop‐Signal tasks) or an active control (AC) (knowledge‐ and vocabulary‐based tasks) training group. In the pre‐ and posttraining sessions, participants performed the Color‐Word Stroop and Stop‐signal tasks, and an anatomical resonance imaging (MRI) was acquired for each of them. Children's IC efficiency improved from the pre‐ to the posttraining session in boys but not in girls. In adolescents, IC efficiency did not improve after IC training. Similar to the neuroplastic mechanisms observed during brain maturation, we observed IC training‐related changes in cortical thickness and cortical surface area in several PFC subregions (e.g. the pars opercularis, triangularis, and orbitalis of the inferior frontal gyri) that were age‐ and gender‐specific. Because no correction for multiple comparisons was applied, the results of our study provide only preliminary evidence of the complex structural neuroplastic mechanisms at the root of behavioral changes in IC efficiency from pre‐ to posttraining in school‐aged children and adolescents. |
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Keywords: | adolescence childhood inhibitory control neuroplasticity training |
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