Functional connectivity correlates of the hierarchical p-factor model in youth at neurodevelopmental risk
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Background
Emotional and cognitive difficulties often co-occur in neurodevelopmental conditions. While transdiagnostic, dimensional approaches offer a more precise framework for understanding mental health than diagnostic categories, their neural correlates in youth with learning difficulties remain poorly understood. This study investigates associations between transdiagnostic mental health dimensions and resting-state functional connectivity in struggling learners.
Methods
Cross-sectional behavioural data from the Centre for Attention, Learning and Memory (CALM) for struggling learners (N = 378) was used to replicate a hierarchical model of mental health from the Conners’ Parent Rating Short Form, the Revised Children’s Anxiety and Depression Scale and the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire. Functional connectomes were derived from resting-state fMRI data (N = 67), and partial least squares regression related mental health dimensions to connectivity within and between large-scale brain networks.
Results
The replicated model comprised a general p-factor, two broad domains (internalising and externalising), and three specific dimensions (specific internalising, neurodevelopmental and social maladjustment). Symptom severity was associated with two connectivity patterns: greater default mode network coupling to frontoparietal and attention networks, and reduced connectivity between visual and somatomotor systems. These effects were strongest for the neurodevelopmental and social maladjustment dimensions, respectively.
Conclusions
These findings align with population-level evidence linking mental health dimensions to brain network organization, extending it to struggling learners and offering new insight into the neural basis of mental health vulnerability in neurodevelopmentally at-risk youth.