학술논문

A neuromarker of sustained attention from whole-brain functional connectivity
Document Type
Report
Source
Nature Neuroscience. January 1, 2016, p165, 10 p.
Subject
Observations
Research
Neural circuitry -- Observations
Brain mapping -- Research
Brain research
Attention (Psychology) -- Observations
Attention -- Observations
Language
English
ISSN
1097-6256
Abstract
Attention is integral to cognition and perception, underlying performance on almost every task in daily life. However, despite--or maybe because of--attention's pervasiveness, attention research is increasingly specialized and fragmented, and [...]
Although attention plays a ubiquitous role in perception and cognition, researchers lack a simple way to measure a person's overall attentional abilities. Because behavioral measures are diverse and difficult to standardize, we pursued a neuromarker of an important aspect of attention, sustained attention, using functional magnetic resonance imaging. To this end, we identified functional brain networks whose strength during a sustained attention task predicted individual differences in performance. Models based on these networks generalized to previously unseen individuals, even predicting performance from resting- state connectivity alone. Furthermore, these same models predicted a clinical measure of attention--symptoms of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder--from resting-state connectivity in an independent sample of children and adolescents. These results demonstrate that whole-brain functional network strength provides a broadly applicable neuromarker of sustained attention.