% IMPORTANT: The following is UTF-8 encoded. This means that in the presence % of non-ASCII characters, it will not work with BibTeX 0.99 or older. % Instead, you should use an up-to-date BibTeX implementation like “bibtex8” or % “biber”. @ARTICLE{Bethlehem:905771, author = {Bethlehem, Richard AI and Seidlitz, Jakob and White, Simon R and Vogel, Jacob W and Anderson, Kevin M and Adamson, Chris and Adler, Sophie and Alexopoulos, George S and Anagnostou, Evdokia and Areces-Gonzalez, Ariosky and Astle, Duncan E and Auyeung, Bonnie and Ayub, Muhammad and Ball, Gareth and Baron-Cohen, Simon and Beare, Richard and Bedford, Saashi A and Benegal, Vivek and Beyer, Frauke and Bae, Jong Bin and Blangero, John and Cabez, Manuel Blesa and Boardman, James P and Borzage, Matthew and Bosch-Bayard, Jorge F and Bourke, Niall and Calhoun, Vince D and Chakravarty, Mallar M and Chen, Christina and Chertavian, Casey and Chetelat, Gael and Chong, Yap S and Cole, James H and Corvin, Aiden and Courchesne, Eric and Crivello, Fabrice and Cropley, Vanessa L and Crosbie, Jennifer and Crossley, Nicolas and Delarue, Marion and Desrivieres, Sylvane and Devenyi, Gabriel and Biase, Maria A Di and Dolan, Ray and Donald, Kirsten A and Donohoe, Gary and Dunlop, Katharine and Edwards, Anthony D and Elison, Jed T and Ellis, Cameron T and Elman, Jeremy A and Eyler, Lisa and Fair, Damien A and Fletcher, Paul C and Fonagy, Peter and Franz, Carol E and Galan-Garcia, Lidice and Gholipour, Ali and Giedd, Jay and Gilmore, John H and Glahn, David C and Goodyer, Ian and Grant, PE and Groenewold, Nynke A and Gunning, Faith M and Gur, Raquel E and Gur, Ruben C and Hammill, Christopher F and Hansson, Oskar and Hedden, Trey and Heinz, Andreas and Henson, Richard and Heuer, Katja and Hoare, Jacqueline and Holla, Bharath and Holmes, Avram J and Holt, Rosie and Huang, Hao and Im, Kiho and Ipser, Jonathan and Jack, Clifford R and Jackowski, Andrea P and Jia, Tianye and Johnson, Keith A and Jones, David T and Jones, Peter B and Kahn, Rene and Karlsson, Hasse and Karlsson, Linnea and Kawashima, Ryuta and Kelley, Elizabeth A and Kern, Silke and Kim, KW and Kitzbichler, Manfred G and Kremen, William S and Lalonde, Francois and Landeau, Brigitte and Lee, Subin and Lerch, Jason and Lewis, John D and Li, Jiao and Liao, Wei and Linares, Deirel P and Liston, Conor and Lombardo, Michael V and Lv, Jinglei and Lynch, Charles and Mallard, Travis T and Marcelis, Machteld and Markello, Ross D and Mazoyer, Bernard and McGuire, Philip and Meaney, Michael J and Mechelli, Andrea and Medic, Nenad and Misic, Bratislav and Morgan, Sarah E and Mothersill, David and Nigg, Joel and Ong, Marcus QW and Ortinau, Cynthia and Ossenkoppele, Rik and Ouyang, Minhui and Palaniyappan, Lena and Paly, Leo and Pan, Pedro M and Pantelis, Christos and Park, Min Tae M and Paus, Tomas and Pausova, Zdenka and Binette, Alexa Pichet and Pierce, Karen and Qian, Xing and Qiu, Anqi and Qiu, Jiang and Raznahan, Armin and Rittman, Timothy and Rollins, Caitlin K and Romero-Garcia, Rafael and Ronan, Lisa and Rosenberg, Monica D and Rowitch, David H and Salum, Giovanni A and Satterthwaite, Theodore D and Schaare, Lina and Schachar, Russell J and Scholl, Michael and Schultz, Aaron P and Schumann, Gunter and Sharp, David}, title = {{B}raincharts for the human lifespan}, reportid = {FZJ-2022-00994}, year = {2021}, abstract = {Over the past 25 years, neuroimaging has become a ubiquitous tool in basic research and clinical studies of the human brain. However, there are no reference standards against which to anchor measures of individual differences in brain morphology, in contrast to growth charts for traits such as height and weight. Here, we built an interactive online resource (www.brainchart.io) to quantify individual differences in brain structure from any current or future magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) study, against models of expected age-related trends. With the goal of basing these on the largest and most inclusive dataset, we aggregated MRI data spanning 115 days post-conception through 100 postnatal years, totaling 122,123 scans from 100,071 individuals in over 100 studies across 6 continents. When quantified as centile scores relative to the reference models, individual differences show high validity with non-MRI brain growth estimates and high stability across longitudinal assessment. Centile scores helped identify previously unreported brain developmental milestones and demonstrated increased genetic heritability compared to non-centiled MRI phenotypes. Crucially for the study of brain disorders, centile scores provide a standardised and interpretable measure of deviation that reveals new patterns of neuroanatomical differences across neurological and psychiatric disorders emerging during development and ageing. In sum, brain charts for the human lifespan are an essential first step towards robust, standardised quantification of individual variation and for characterizing deviation from age-related trends. Our global collaborative study …}, cin = {INM-7}, cid = {I:(DE-Juel1)INM-7-20090406}, pnm = {5251 - Multilevel Brain Organization and Variability (POF4-525)}, pid = {G:(DE-HGF)POF4-5251}, typ = {PUB:(DE-HGF)25}, url = {https://juser.fz-juelich.de/record/905771}, }