Mittwoch, 6. März 2013

Dimensionality of brain networks linked to life-long individual differences in self-control

Dimensionality of brain networks linked to life-long individual differences in self-control
Marc G Bermann et al., 2013
http://selfcontrol.psych.lsa.umich.edu/papers/2013_Bermanetal_Nature.pdf

 

Abstract

The ability to delay gratification in childhood has been linked to positive outcomes in adolescence and adulthood. Here we examine a subsample of participants from a seminal longitudinal study of self-control throughout a subject’s life span. Self-control, first studied in children at age 4 years, is now re-examined 40 years later, on a task that required control over the contents of working memory. We examine whether patterns of brain activation on this task can reliably distinguish participants with consistently low and high self-control abilities (low versus high delayers). We find that low delayers recruit significantly higherdimensional neural networks when performing the task compared with high delayers. High delayers are also more homogeneous as a group in their neural patterns compared with low delayers. From these brain patterns, we can predict with 71% accuracy, whether a participant is a high or low delayer. The present results suggest that dimensionality of neural networks is a biological predictor of self-control abilities.

Keine Kommentare:

Kommentar veröffentlichen