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Issues in Pediatric Neuroimaging Kathleen M. Thomas, Ph.D. Institute of Child Development University of Minnesota
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Acknowledgements B. J. Casey Ronald E. Dahl Charles A. Nelson Neal D. Ryan Paul J. Whalen Jane W. Couperus Jennifer J. Grubba-Derham Ruskin H. Hunt Lisa Rohrer Elise L. Townsend Angela Tseng Nathalie Vizueta Funding from: NIMH, NINDS, McKnight Foundation
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Face Processing Identity Identity Emotion Emotion Direction of gaze (intentions) Direction of gaze (intentions)
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The Specialness of Faces Newborn infants prefer to look at face-like objects over other objects. Johnson & Morton, 1991
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Holistic Processing
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Inversion Effects
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Facial Emotion Processing in Children Infants discriminate positive and negative facial expressions at least as young as 4 months of age Discrimination of emotions within valence categories appears to take longer to develop, extending well into childhood and even early adolescence
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0 45 87 129 171 213 255 300 ** Time (seconds) Stimuli Thomas et al, 2001, Biological Psychiatry fMRI of Facial Emotion in Children (8-15 yrs) and adults
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Y = -2Y = -4 LeftAmygdala Substantia Innominata/ Ventral Pallidum Y = -2 Y = -4 Fear vs. Fixation Amygdala Response to Fear
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Children Adults Fear vs. Neutral Percent MR Signal Change in Left Amygdala.2.1 0 -.1 -.2 Group Differences in Activity
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Percent MR Signal Change In Left & Right Amygdala Fear 2 minus Fear 1.3.2.1 0 -.1 -.2 -.3 Females Males Gender Differences in Habituation
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Summary The normal amygdala response to facial expressions differs across development Ambiguity hypothesis The amygdala response may differ between males and females These data do not address whether these changes are due to differences in bottom-up or top-down processing streams
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Amaral et al., (2003) Adult lesions to the amygdala in non-human primates result in a lack of normal fear responses to threatening stimuli Bilateral Amygdala Lesions
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Adolphs et al., 1999, Neuropsychologia Face Emotion Processing Brain Damaged Controls Bilateral Amygdala Lesions
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Birbaumer et al. (1998) Social phobics show an enhanced amygdala response to neutral faces compared to non-phobic controls The amygdala response to odors (neutral, positive & negative) was no different for social phobics suggesting the effect is specific to face stimuli The two groups did not differ in their ratings of the valence or aversiveness of the faces or odors Social Phobia
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Rauch et al, 2000, Biological Psychiatry Masked Fear vs Masked Happy Group Difference Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
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DeBellis et al. (2000) Amygdala Size in Childhood Anxiety
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Right Amygdala 0.01 0.05 p value Thomas et al, 2001, Arch Gen Psychiatry Fear vs. Neutral Anxious Children Anxious children showed differential right amygdala activation compared to non-anxious children
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% Signal Change in R. Amygdala Healthy Anxious Children (n=12) (n=12) 0.4 0.2 0 -0.2 -0.4 Relative Response to Fear Anxious children activated the right amygdala more for fear faces than neutral faces, unlike non- anxious children who showed significantly more activity for neutral faces
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Child Reported SCARED Score % Signal Change in R. Amygdala -.5 0.5 1.0 1.5 0102030405060 r = 0.624 p < 0.005 Correlation with Everyday Anxiety
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% Signal Change in R. Amygdala Healthy Anxious Depressed Children Children Children (n=5) (n=5) (n=5).6.3 0 -.3 -.6 Relative Response in Anxiety & Depression Depressed girls showed no change in the right amygdala for fear faces compared to neutral faces.
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Considerations in Pediatric Imaging Hemodynamic response Spatial normalization Behavioral task Interpreting developmental effects
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Does the hemodynamic response differ between adults and children? Richter, 2003
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Kang et al., 2003 The time course and amplitude of the hemodynamic response in a simple visual-motor response task is similar in adults and 7-8 year old children.
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Can we use a common stereotaxic space for adult and child data? Burgund et al, 2002
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Individual sulci were located within 4 mm of one another between adults and 7-8 year old children. This difference is within the resolution of most functional MRI measurements. Burgund et al, 2002
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Interpreting developmental differences Differences between age groups may include signal intensity (magnitude), extent of activity (volume), direction of effect, relation to behavior What does the group difference reflect?
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Children Adults 1800 1500 1200 900 600 300 0 Volume of Activity * * p <.05 Casey et al. 1997 DLPFC Children Adults Group Differences in Magnitude or Extent of Activity
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Correlation between Activity & Behavioral Performance Casey et al., 1997
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Group Differences in Activity- Behavior Relationship 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 0500100015002000 Volume of Orbitofrontal Activation in mm 3 Number of False Alarms 50010001500 20002500 35 0 Perinatal Insult Control 40 r = -.28r = -.41
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Percent Change in MR Signal Intensity False Alarms Perinatal Insult 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 -.60-.40-.20.20.40.60.80123400 -.80 40 35 45 r = -.77r =.12 r =.81 p <.05NS p <.0005 Control Group Differences in Activity- Behavior Relationship
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N-Back Spatial Working Memory + + + + Trial 1 Trial 2 Trial 3 Trial 4 Time Thomas et al, 1999
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1 2 3 4 5 100 - 80 - 60 - Runs Percent Accuracy Adults Children Equating Initial Performance Thomas et al, 1999
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Brown et al, 2005 Teasing Apart Age and Performance Area is active regardless of age or performance Activity differs as a function of performance rather than age Activity differs as a function of age, regardless of performance
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% MR Signal Change 1 3 5 Ventral Prefrontal Activity during Go/Nogo Task Adults Children number of go trials preceding a nogo trial 1 3 5 Behavioral Performance during Go/Nogo Task Adults Children number of go trials preceding a nogo trial nogo go Parametric Manipulation
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Continuous Recognition Memory Task Lag 2 Lag 5 New (Concrete) Old (Concrete)
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Medial Temporal Lobe Activity RL R L Adults 7-8 yr olds New > Old
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Concrete > Abstract Old > New Group Differences in Activity Adults 7-8 yr olds
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Abstract Concrete Adults Children Parietal New Lag 2 Lag 5 Adults Children Parietal Right Parietal Electrophysiological Data
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Child R R L R R L R R R Source Model Adult
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New Lag 2 Lag 5 Adults Children Parietal Right Parietal Adult Child Source Timing Analyses
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