Overview
- The Nature Communications study identifies four turning points at roughly ages 9, 32, 66 and 83 that delineate five epochs from childhood to late ageing.
- Analysis of diffusion MRI tractography shows adolescent‑like structural change continues into the early thirties before a long period of architectural stability in adulthood.
- Later turning points correspond to gradual connectivity loss, with the late‑age epoch showing a shift toward more localized processing and sparser networks.
- Researchers quantified topology using 12 measures, finding rising global efficiency during adolescence and increasing modularity and segregation through adulthood.
- The authors note cross‑sectional limits, smaller samples in the oldest group, and context that the 32‑year endpoint reflects UK/US datasets, highlighting the need for longitudinal and cultural validation.