The Developmental Trajectory of the Social Brain: A Movie-Based Exploration from childhood to adolescence
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In childhood and adolescence, functional brain networks go through different stages of development, and the levels of connectivity within and between these networks change with age. The developmental trajectory of these large-scale networks of the brain have been extensively investigated; however, many aspects of our social brain and its developmental patterns remain unclear. This study employed a cross-sectional design to investigate the brains of 753 children and adolescents (ages 5-15) while they watched a movie. This research investigates the functional distinctness and developmental synchronicity of brain areas implicated in social cognition, such as empathy and affective and cognitive theory of mind, across childhood and adolescence using generalized additive models and inter-region group analysis. Our findings suggest that social cognition components networks such as cognitive and affective theory of mind and empathy exhibit distinct developmental trajectories throughout childhood and adolescence. The findings support the theory that social cognitive networks are developmentally distinct from each other, even in the absence of task-specific paradigms.