Associations between digital media use and brain surface structural measures in preschool-aged children

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作者
John S. Hutton
Jonathan Dudley
Thomas DeWitt
Tzipi Horowitz-Kraus
机构
[1] Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center,Division of General and Community Pediatrics
[2] University of Cincinnati College of Medicine,Reading and Literacy Discovery Center
[3] Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center,Pediatric Neuroimaging Research Consortium
[4] University of Cincinnati College of Medicine,Educational Neuroimaging Group, Education in Science and Technology
[5] Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center,Department of Psychiatry
[6] University of Cincinnati College of Medicine,undefined
[7] Biomedical Engineering,undefined
[8] Technion,undefined
[9] Kennedy Krieger Institute,undefined
[10] Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine,undefined
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摘要
The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends limits on digital media use (“screen time”), citing cognitive-behavioral risks. Media use in early childhood is ubiquitous, though few imaging-based studies have been conducted to quantify impacts on brain development. Cortical morphology changes dynamically from infancy through adulthood and is associated with cognitive-behavioral abilities. The current study involved 52 children who completed MRI and cognitive testing at a single visit. The MRI protocol included a high-resolution T1-weighted anatomical scan. The child’s parent completed the ScreenQ composite measure of media use. MRI measures included cortical thickness (CT) and sulcal depth (SD) across the cerebrum. ScreenQ was applied as a predictor of CT and SD first in whole-brain regression analyses and then for regions of interest (ROIs) identified in a prior study of screen time involving adolescents, controlling for sex, age and maternal education. Higher ScreenQ scores were correlated with lower CT in right-lateralized occipital, parietal, temporal and fusiform areas, and also lower SD in right-lateralized inferior temporal/fusiform areas, with substantially greater statistical significance in ROI-based analyses. These areas support primary visual and higher-order processing and align with prior findings in adolescents. While differences in visual areas likely reflect maturation, those in higher-order areas may suggest under-development, though further studies are needed.
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