AI Article Synopsis

  • - Pediatric obesity rates in the U.S. have greatly increased, and there are observable links between obesity and cognitive deficits, particularly in understanding how body mass impacts brain function in kids and teens.
  • - A study involving 72 youth aged 9-16 examined brain activity while they performed an abstract reasoning task using magnetoencephalography, focusing on correlations between their body mass index (zBMI) and neural responses.
  • - Results indicated that higher zBMI was associated with reduced theta brain wave activity in regions important for reasoning, which corresponded to slower reaction times, suggesting that obesity may negatively affect cognitive performance in youth.

Article Abstract

Pediatric obesity rates have quadrupled in the United States, and deficits in higher-order cognition have been linked to obesity, though it remains poorly understood how deviations from normal body mass are related to the neural dynamics serving cognition in youth. Herein, we determine how age- and sex-adjusted measures of body mass index (zBMI) scale with neural activity in brain regions underlying fluid intelligence. Seventy-two youth aged 9-16 years underwent high-density magnetoencephalography while performing an abstract reasoning task. The resulting data were transformed into the time-frequency domain and significant oscillatory responses were imaged using a beamformer. Whole-brain correlations with zBMI were subsequently conducted to quantify relationships between zBMI and neural activity serving abstract reasoning. Our results reveal that participants with higher zBMI exhibit attenuated theta (4-8 Hz) responses in both the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and left temporoparietal junction, and that weaker temporoparietal responses scale with slower reaction times. These findings suggest that higher zBMI values are associated with weaker theta oscillations in key brain regions and altered performance during an abstract reasoning task. Thus, future investigations should evaluate neurobehavioral function during abstract reasoning in youth with more severe obesity to identify the potential impact.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11461743PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s42003-024-06924-wDOI Listing

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