Using ABCD Study Data, Scientists Find Sex and Gender Identity Linked to Brain Connectivity
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New research from The Feinstein Institutes for Medical Research published in Science Advances shows neurobiological underpinnings of sex and gender in children to better understand how sex (assigned at birth) and gender (identity and expression) influence the brain, and ultimately a person’s health.
Led by Elvisha Dhamala, PhD, assistant professor in the Institute of Behavioral Sciences at the Feinstein Institutes, and in collaboration with Dani Bassett, PhD, professor at the University of Pennsylvania, Thomas Yeo, PhD, associate professor at the National University of Singapore, and Avram Holmes, PhD, associate professor of psychiatry at Rutgers University, the study analyzed data from nearly 4,800 children from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study – the largest long-term study of brain development and child health in the US. The study finds that sex and gender have unique and overlapping associations with brain functional connections. Specifically, sex is primarily linked to connectivity within motor, visual, control and limbic networks, while gender-related networks are more widely distributed throughout the brain. These sex and gender differences in brain connectivity might contribute to differences in brain-related illnesses.
“Sex and gender have traditionally been conflated in research when they should have been studied separately,” said Dr Dhamala. “This research sheds light on the complex and nuanced ways in which biological and environmental factors influence brain organization and shows the need to consider a person’s sex and gender to fully understand health and disease across the human lifespan.”
Over the last 20 years, scientists have studied how sex and neurobiology interact with behavior. Many of these studies have had differing results and have been hard to reproduce, suggesting there might be misunderstandings or biases in this research area. The focus on assigned sex, without consideration for gender, in the past, may have further limited the research.
Using machine learning to predict sex and gender based on brain connectivity, Dr Dhamala determined that the two are linked to different parts of the brain. This underscores that sex and gender are distinct from one another. Previous research in the biomedical sciences has primarily focused on sex, but these findings highlight the importance of accounting for gender as well.
Prior studies have found that people assigned female at birth are more likely to experience mood and anxiety disorders while people assigned male at birth are more likely to be diagnosed with substance use or attention deficit disorders. The present study shows that while sex is linked to specific brain networks, gender’s influence spreads more widely across the brain. Many of the brain networks shown to be related to sex and gender in this study are implicated in brain disorders. These findings that sex and gender have unique effects on brain connectivity might explain sex and gender differences in brain-related illnesses.
“Understanding how sex and gender affect the brain can help develop better therapies to treat mental health and other conditions,” said Anil K. Malhotra, MD, co-director of the Institute of Behavioral Science at the Feinstein Institutes. “Dr Dhamala’s findings are a step towards understanding the brain’s inner connections and impact on one’s overall health.”