AI Article Synopsis

  • Males typically have a total brain size that is about 8-10% larger than females, but specific regional differences remain unclear.
  • The study analyzed 829 scans from 387 subjects aged 3 to 27, emphasizing the importance of tracking brain size changes over time instead of just comparing average sizes across broad age groups.
  • Key findings indicate that females have a peak in total cerebral volume at around 10.5 years, while males peak at 14.5 years; males also show a faster increase in white matter during adolescence, and females reach peak sizes in gray matter 1 to 2 years earlier.

Article Abstract

Human total brain size is consistently reported to be approximately 8-10% larger in males, although consensus on regionally specific differences is weak. Here, in the largest longitudinal pediatric neuroimaging study reported to date (829 scans from 387 subjects, ages 3 to 27 years), we demonstrate the importance of examining size-by-age trajectories of brain development rather than group averages across broad age ranges when assessing sexual dimorphism. Using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) we found robust male/female differences in the shapes of trajectories with total cerebral volume peaking at age 10.5 in females and 14.5 in males. White matter increases throughout this 24-year period with males having a steeper rate of increase during adolescence. Both cortical and subcortical gray matter trajectories follow an inverted U shaped path with peak sizes 1 to 2 years earlier in females. These sexually dimorphic trajectories confirm the importance of longitudinal data in studies of brain development and underline the need to consider sex matching in studies of brain development.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2040300PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2007.03.053DOI Listing

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