Spatiotemporal Variation in White-Matter Development Across Early Childhood
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Early childhood development is scaffolded by rapid maturation of brain white matter structure, believed to support the emergence of cognitive and socioemotional functions. Previous whole-tract studies have suggested patterns of white matter development occurring along posterior-anterior, deep-superficial and inferior-superior axes. However, little is known as to whether these patterns are evident within tracts. Using longitudinal diffusion imaging data from 133 children (4-8 years; 76 females), the present work characterizes along-tract patterns of white matter development across association, commissural and projection bundles using fixel-based analyses of microstructure and macrostructure. Within long range association bundles, faster age-related changes were observed for segments adjacent to the visual cortices relative to segments located near association regions, supporting a sensorimotor-association axis of brain development. An inferior-superior pattern was found for projection tracts, with faster age-effects observed for segments near the brainstem. Lastly, while several association and commissural bundles exhibited faster maturation within central segments; indicative of a deep-superficial axis, effects were mixed between micro- and macrostructure, underscoring the unique developmental timing of these different fiber properties. Our findings provide evidence that within-tract white matter maturation unfolds along key spatiotemporal axes and suggests that increased spatial precision can advance our understanding of early childhood brain development.