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Seasonality in human cognitive brain responses

Seasonality in human cognitive brain responses
Seasonality in human cognitive brain responses
Daily variations in the environment have shaped life on Earth, with circadian cycles identified in most living organisms. Likewise, seasons correspond to annual environmental fluctuations to which organisms have adapted. However, little is known about seasonal variations in human brain physiology. We investigated annual rhythms of brain activity in a cross-sectional study of healthy young participants. They were maintained in an environment free of seasonal cues for 4.5 d, after which brain responses were assessed using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) while they performed two different cognitive tasks. Brain responses to both tasks varied significantly across seasons, but the phase of these annual rhythms was strikingly different, speaking for a complex impact of season on human brain function. For the sustained attention task, the maximum and minimum responses were located around summer and winter solstices, respectively, whereas for the working memory task, maximum and minimum responses were observed around autumn and spring equinoxes. These findings reveal previously unappreciated process-specific seasonality in human cognitive brain function that could contribute to intraindividual cognitive changes at specific times of year and changes in affective control in vulnerable populations.
0027-8424
3066-3071
Meyer, Christelle
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Muto, Vincenzo
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Jaspar, Mathieu
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Kussé, Caroline
041e1b6b-2cd8-4cff-b2fd-8f593f9a270f
Lambot, Erik
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Chellappa, Sarah
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Degueldre, Christian
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Balteau, Evelyne
ebe0197e-1d2c-43f5-a2cd-1764927f75fa
Luxen, André
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Middleton, Benita
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Archer, Simon N.
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Collette, Fabienne
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Dijk, Derk-jan
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Phillips, Christophe
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Maquet, Pierre
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Vandewalle, Gilles
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Meyer, Christelle
12e0ea1b-c23c-4da2-9e37-1b6486289db2
Muto, Vincenzo
ce7ba591-3383-4fa3-ab02-edc341c35eb9
Jaspar, Mathieu
329c9b0a-cdd3-435b-8cd5-0fe47900000f
Kussé, Caroline
041e1b6b-2cd8-4cff-b2fd-8f593f9a270f
Lambot, Erik
9348f578-3edf-43bc-8695-8333eda4f4bf
Chellappa, Sarah
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Degueldre, Christian
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Balteau, Evelyne
ebe0197e-1d2c-43f5-a2cd-1764927f75fa
Luxen, André
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Middleton, Benita
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Archer, Simon N.
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Collette, Fabienne
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Dijk, Derk-jan
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Phillips, Christophe
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Maquet, Pierre
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Vandewalle, Gilles
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Meyer, Christelle, Muto, Vincenzo, Jaspar, Mathieu, Kussé, Caroline, Lambot, Erik, Chellappa, Sarah, Degueldre, Christian, Balteau, Evelyne, Luxen, André, Middleton, Benita, Archer, Simon N., Collette, Fabienne, Dijk, Derk-jan, Phillips, Christophe, Maquet, Pierre and Vandewalle, Gilles (2016) Seasonality in human cognitive brain responses. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 113 (11), 3066-3071. (doi:10.1073/pnas.1518129113).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Daily variations in the environment have shaped life on Earth, with circadian cycles identified in most living organisms. Likewise, seasons correspond to annual environmental fluctuations to which organisms have adapted. However, little is known about seasonal variations in human brain physiology. We investigated annual rhythms of brain activity in a cross-sectional study of healthy young participants. They were maintained in an environment free of seasonal cues for 4.5 d, after which brain responses were assessed using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) while they performed two different cognitive tasks. Brain responses to both tasks varied significantly across seasons, but the phase of these annual rhythms was strikingly different, speaking for a complex impact of season on human brain function. For the sustained attention task, the maximum and minimum responses were located around summer and winter solstices, respectively, whereas for the working memory task, maximum and minimum responses were observed around autumn and spring equinoxes. These findings reveal previously unappreciated process-specific seasonality in human cognitive brain function that could contribute to intraindividual cognitive changes at specific times of year and changes in affective control in vulnerable populations.

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Published date: 8 February 2016

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 479685
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/479685
ISSN: 0027-8424
PURE UUID: a02459e6-df60-4e99-bd0b-e6f56ae90b29
ORCID for Sarah Chellappa: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6190-464X

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Date deposited: 26 Jul 2023 16:47
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:20

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Contributors

Author: Christelle Meyer
Author: Vincenzo Muto
Author: Mathieu Jaspar
Author: Caroline Kussé
Author: Erik Lambot
Author: Sarah Chellappa ORCID iD
Author: Christian Degueldre
Author: Evelyne Balteau
Author: André Luxen
Author: Benita Middleton
Author: Simon N. Archer
Author: Fabienne Collette
Author: Derk-jan Dijk
Author: Christophe Phillips
Author: Pierre Maquet
Author: Gilles Vandewalle

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