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Author Notes:

Tony W. Wilson, Center for Magnetoencephalography, 988422 Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, NE, 68198-8422, USA. Email: twwilson@unmc.edu

Subjects:

Research Funding:

This work was supported by the National Science Foundation (#1539067) and the National Institutes of Health (R01-MH-121101, R01-MH-103220, R01-MH-116782, R01-MH-118013; F31-AG-055332; P20-GM-103472; R01-EB-020407; U54-GM115458). The funders had no role in the study design, collection, analysis, or interpretation of data, nor did they influence writing the report or the decision to submit this work for publication. The authors report no conflicts of interest.

Keywords:

  • Dev-CoG
  • Fluid intelligence
  • MEG
  • Oscillations
  • Sex effects
  • Theta
  • Adolescent
  • Brain
  • Child
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Intelligence
  • Magnetoencephalography
  • Male
  • Sex Characteristics

Neural oscillatory dynamics serving abstract reasoning reveal robust sex differences in typically-developing children and adolescents

Tools:

Journal Title:

Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience

Volume:

Volume 42

Publisher:

, Pages 100770-100770

Type of Work:

Article | Final Publisher PDF

Abstract:

Fluid intelligence, the ability to problem-solve in novel situations, is linked to higher-order cognitive abilities, and to academic achievement in youth. Previous research has demonstrated that fluid intelligence and the underlying neural circuitry continues to develop throughout adolescence. Neuroimaging studies have predominantly focused on identifying the spatial distribution of brain regions associated with fluid intelligence, with only a few studies examining the temporally-sensitive cortical oscillatory dynamics underlying reasoning abilities. The present study collected magnetoencephalography (MEG) during an abstract reasoning task to examine these spatiotemporal dynamics in a sample of 10-to-16 year-old youth. We found increased cortical activity across a distributed frontoparietal network. Specifically, our key results showed: (1) age was associated with increased theta activity in occipital and cerebellar regions, (2) robust sex differences were distributed across frontoparietal regions, and (3) that specific frontoparietal regions differentially predicted abstract reasoning performance among males versus females despite similar mean performance. Among males, increased theta activity mediated the relationship between age and faster reaction times; conversely, among females, decreased theta mediated the relationship between age and improved accuracy. These findings may suggest that males and females engage in distinct neurocognitive strategies across development to achieve similar behavioral outcomes during fluid reasoning tasks.

Copyright information:

© 2020 The Author(s)

This is an Open Access work distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/rdf).
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